F. Anstey (1856–1934)
Author of Vice Versa
About the Author
Works by F. Anstey
The Statement of Stella Maberly, and An Evil Spirit (Valancourt Classics) (2017) 18 copies, 1 review
The Pariah 4 copies
Bayard from Bengal 1 copy
Paleface and Redskin, and other stories ... — Pseudonym — 1 copy
Statement of Stell a Maberly 1 copy
Mr. Punch's young reciter: (Burglar Bill, and other pieces.) With introductions, remarks, and stage-directions (1897) 1 copy
Voces Populi (2 vols.) 1 copy
Фантастические сказки 1 copy
Associated Works
Isaac Asimov's Magical Worlds of Fantasy, Volume 11: Curses (1939) — Contributor — 58 copies, 1 review
The Dedalus Book of British Fantasy: 19th Century (European Literary Fantasy Anthologies) (1991) — Contributor — 47 copies
Christmas Ghosts: Seventeen Great Ghost Stories in the Christmas Tradition (1987) — Contributor — 46 copies
The Third Ghost Story Megapack: 26 Classic Ghost Stories (2013) — Contributor — 18 copies, 2 reviews
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Guthrie, Thomas Anstey
- Birthdate
- 1856-08-08
- Date of death
- 1934-03-10
- Gender
- male
- Education
- King's College, London
University of Cambridge (Trinity Hall) - Occupations
- Called to the Bar
author
journalist (Punch) - Nationality
- England
UK - Birthplace
- Kensington, Middlesex, England, UK
- Places of residence
- Kensington, Middlesex, England, UK (birth)
- Place of death
- London, England, UK
- Associated Place (for map)
- England, UK
Members
Reviews
WOW.
How is this little gem not up there with Dracula and Turn of the Screw in popularity? This is brilliant. Stella, our narrator, is from the get-go, a psychological mess full of envy, jealousy and low self-esteem, pushing people away. She attaches herself to Evelyn, who is beautiful, refined, lovely, patient, and apparently devoted to Stella despite her perverseness. All seems well until Hugh comes into the picture and Stella perceives that it is inevitable that Hugh will marry Evelyn and show more take her only friend from her.
With this unreliable narrator, it is hard to know what is truth and what is madness in what follows. According to Stella, she finds Evelyn undeniably dead. She prays to God to revive her, but when that doesn't have any effect, she prays to "whatever power there might be--good or evil, angel or devil, on earth or in hell" and shortly afterward, Evelyn flutters back to life. The question then becomes, but is it really Evelyn, or has some wandering, wicked spirit answered the prayer and taken possession of Evelyn's body?
Published in 1896, this short story of 103 pages is gripping and fresh, a terrific gothic horror. Included in this volume is the play version of the story plus the draft for another version of the story. A pity five stars is the max. I'd give it more if I could. show less
How is this little gem not up there with Dracula and Turn of the Screw in popularity? This is brilliant. Stella, our narrator, is from the get-go, a psychological mess full of envy, jealousy and low self-esteem, pushing people away. She attaches herself to Evelyn, who is beautiful, refined, lovely, patient, and apparently devoted to Stella despite her perverseness. All seems well until Hugh comes into the picture and Stella perceives that it is inevitable that Hugh will marry Evelyn and show more take her only friend from her.
With this unreliable narrator, it is hard to know what is truth and what is madness in what follows. According to Stella, she finds Evelyn undeniably dead. She prays to God to revive her, but when that doesn't have any effect, she prays to "whatever power there might be--good or evil, angel or devil, on earth or in hell" and shortly afterward, Evelyn flutters back to life. The question then becomes, but is it really Evelyn, or has some wandering, wicked spirit answered the prayer and taken possession of Evelyn's body?
Published in 1896, this short story of 103 pages is gripping and fresh, a terrific gothic horror. Included in this volume is the play version of the story plus the draft for another version of the story. A pity five stars is the max. I'd give it more if I could. show less
I'm really quite amazed how few people have Vice Versa in their libraries! For those who are interested in tracing an idea in children's fiction: this is a grand-parent of the parent-child swap novel.
Fictional novel that deals with a woman suffering from paranoia (early schizophrenia?) and being consumed by it and ends tragically. Some supernatural elements. Very insightful reading especially since it was written in the 1890s. I recommend this book to those that love psychological studies.
The story looks like it will be entertaining, but I don't think I can stand a whole book with the mc.
Lists
Awards
You May Also Like
Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 40
- Also by
- 24
- Members
- 367
- Popularity
- #65,578
- Rating
- 3.5
- Reviews
- 4
- ISBNs
- 150
- Languages
- 3
- Favorited
- 2















