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Loading... The Bloody Chamberby Angela Carter
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. Ten adult adaptations of fairy stories. These are most certainly not for the easily shocked. The title story 'The Bloody Chamber' is a retelling of the Bluebeard myth and is chilling indeed.'The Courtship of Mr Lyon' puts both Beauty and the Beast in a new light. 'The Lady of the House of Love' is a Vampire tale told from a completely different angle from the usual.'The Werewolf',although only two pages long,is a little gem,telling of Red Riding Hood and the Wolf,but yet again the well-known story is turned on its head.So all of these tales are full of horror told in Carter's very own unique style. Angela Carter - The Bloody Chamber: A very good collection of short stories. We had to read this for our English Literature course and I'm very glad I did. Carter is a very talented writer and this book deserves the recognition and awards it got. The best stories to watch out for are; The Bloody Chamber, The Tiger's Bride The Snow Child The Werewolf Carter's language is very elaborate, so if you're going to read it, do as my English tutor said; "Read actively. Have a pen in your hand and a dictionary next to you". Trust me, she was right. A very good read if you can understand what is going on. All the stories are based on old fairytales (i.e. The Tiger's Bride is based on Beauty and The Beast) so if you can work out how the story is similar and find links you should be able to appreciate the stories. Writing is beautiful, elaborate, highly perfumed. Carter revisits familiar fairy tales in a fascinating way., which some say is feminist. I guess it depends on what you mean by "feminist." I don't see it, but there's lots of sex, death, murder, magic. Do you have the courage to enter Angela Carter's quirky realm of magical realism? One shouldn't confuse her work as "retellings" of familiar European fairy tales; she in fact sees them as new stories churned out by taking inspiration from the former. I'm very happy to note that her writing style vaguely reminds me of Anne Rice's--lush & imaginative. The Bloody Chamber >> Bluebeard as a story totally came alive for me in this gothic tale. There are references to Marquis de Sade--of his "smell of spiced leather" and his well-stocked library full of sadistic pornography. Even Bill Willingham's character in his "Fables" series failed to capture the darkness that is Bluebeard. A lot of allusions to the habits of Elizabeth Bathory though. I miss my Jeanne Kalogridis books :( 2 Variations of "Beauty and the Beast": The Courtship of Mr. Lyon >> Finally a story that provides us with more than a one dimensional look at Beauty's "pure & chaste" personality. It is a story of the transformation of the Beast aided by Beauty. The Tiger's Bride >> "My earrings turned back to water and trickled down my shoulders..." Puss-in-Boots >> I laughed out loud to this story; where all the stock types and jokes of the commedia dell'arte are used. The cat himself is the narrator: a master of witty lines teeming with rhetorical questions and exclamations. The Erl-King >> an unfamiliar bit of fable since this one is based on the German legend of a goblin that haunts the Black Forest (reminds me of Baba Yoga) who lures wanderers to their doom. "...He piles up one on another against the wall, a wall of trapped birds." The Snow Child >> a new spin on the jealousy & incest that surrounds this child borne of a wish & that of the parents who supposedly sired her. The Lady of the House of Love >> "Can a bird sing only the song it knows, or can it learn a new song?" Do we have the capacity at all to learn something new, heedless of what the cards of life lay before us? 3 variations of "Red Riding Hood": The Werewolf >> What if you found out who is the real werewolf? Would you choose betrayal over survival? The Company of Wolves >> Red Riding Hood refuses to feel fear: "she burst out laughing; she knew she was nobody's meat." Wolf-Alice >> think Gothic castles & dank graveyards... Book Details: Title The Bloody Chamber Author Angela Carter Reviewed By Purplycookie no reviews | add a review
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While I'm certainly not one to generally complain about slow moving, there comes a point when my eyes glaze over and I start thinking "enough with the descriptions already, can we have some sort of plot soon?" (