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Loading... Haunted Women: The Best Supernatural Tales by American Women Writersby Alfred Bendixen (Editor)
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. This anthology was referenced several times in "The History of the Gothic: American Gothic" by Charles L. Crow, a book I very much enjoyed last year, so I chased the anthology down. "Haunted Women" contains thirteen stories, which date from the 19th through the early 20th century, by eleven different authors. As the editor notes, “the treatment of the supernatural has been a liberating force in American literature…often enabling writers to explore subjects they could not have addressed any other way.” And American women writers were among the “liberated.” The Gothic provides the, “ideal framework for a complex exploration of moral and psychological issues.” With this in mind, I read twelve of the thirteen stories, skipping only Gilman’s “The Yellow Wallpaper,” because of having studied it in the past. The stories include some conventional ghost stories, but also others that are more psychological hauntings, such as Kate Chopin’s “Her Letters,” where the protagonist allows himself to be haunted by the letters of his dead wife. I particularly enjoyed the two stories by Edith Wharton (one written early in her career, one much later), the two stories by Mary Wilkens Freeman, and Gertrude Atherton’s 1905 “The Bell in the Fog,” which I think is the most ambitious story in the collection. Atherton’s story is a Jamesian ghost story, with a character clearly based on Henry James. As the editor notes, what may have begun as a tribute ends as an “intense questioning of both James’s values and of a literary tradition dominated by men.” no reviews | add a review
Contains
An anthology of 13 supernatural stories with a tinge of the gothic all by American women writers of the nineteenth century. No library descriptions found.
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.0872Literature English (North America) American fiction By type Genre fiction Adventure fiction Mystery fictionLC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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Hope you have more collections coming! ( )