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Three Gothic Novels: The Castle of Otranto,…
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Three Gothic Novels: The Castle of Otranto, Vathek, The Vampyre (original 1966; edition 1966)

by Horace Walpole (Contributor), William Beckford, John Polidori, E. F. Bleiler (Editor)

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272497,490 (3.62)11
Full texts "Castle of Otranto," Walpole; "Vathek," Beckford; "The Vampyre," Polidori; "Fragment of a Novel," Lord Byron.
Member:Catreona
Title:Three Gothic Novels: The Castle of Otranto, Vathek, The Vampyre
Authors:Horace Walpole
Other authors:William Beckford, John Polidori, E. F. Bleiler (Editor)
Info:Dover Publications (1966), Edition: 2nd, Paperback, 331 pages
Collections:Your library
Rating:****
Tags:Gothic, Horror, Vampires

Work Information

Three Gothic Novels: The Castle of Otranto; Vathek; The Vampyre; and a Fragment of a Novel by Horace Walpole (Contributor) (1966)

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Showing 4 of 4
Originally read this as part of a Gothic novel class thirtysome year ago.

The Walpole story is an enjoyable piece of Romantic-period trash. Denizens of the titular Castle are disturbed by manifestations of a giant helmet, a giant leg, and so forth. A knight arrives with a giant sword to match. Characters are variouly revealed to be former nobility or the children of nobility, women enter convents since they don't have the right to vote, and so on.

Vathek chronicles the downfall of a Caliph, as he gets seduced from a life of simple material luxury to the pursuit of occult knowledge. All for the most part a bit silly, as Beckford's limited imagination did not allow him to conceive of truly horrific or diabolical acts. The downfall at the end, while rushed, is quite striking - though apparently Beckford stole the depiction from a preceding work.

Polidori, better known as "the other one" at the party-of-four that resulted in the writing of Frankenstein, contributes a vampire tale which will disappoint fans of the genre, but still has its interesting moments. There is perhaps some unintended humor in the naive rich boy who befriends a man noted for ruining the lives of naive rich boys, but what is unique in this story is the charming-yet-evil character of the vampyre himself. Lord Ruthven refuses charity to those in need, but grants it to those in seed, as it were: the drunkard or gambler or prostitute was certain of his generosity. Yet he spurned their company, preferring instead the innocent and naive, whose lives he took great delight in ruining - always by association, leading them astray rather than working directly to destroy them. The fact that Polidori does so little with this characterization (based, purportedly, on his association with Lord Byron) is not surprising, but one would expect it to crop up in the one or two vampire novels written in the centuries since.

Lord Byron's fragment ... goes nowhere and says nothing. It's clear "The Vampyre" stole a pivotal scene from this fragment, but it's not clear that Byron had in mind anything as ambitious as Polodori's tale. ( )
  mkfs | Aug 13, 2022 |
Vathek was by far the best novella out of the three. ( )
  AshleyDioses | Aug 1, 2015 |
The Castle of Otranto by Horace Walpole is a great huge mess of a story, one that is hard to tell just how seriously to take. According to the introductions, it's all meant to be taken seriously, but how a 21st century reader can do so, is beyond me.

The story opens with an impending wedding. Manfred's son, Conrad, a "homely and sickly youth" is to marry Isabella when suddenly a giant helmet falls from the sky smashing him to bits. (I am not making this up, Mr. Walpole is.) Frederic, a handsome peasant boy, is suspected of causing the death through sorcery and is imprisoned underneath the helmet; it is really big after all. Manfred then decides he should divorce his wife Hippolita and marry Isabella, who is now available. Isabella is horrified and runs off to the nearby convent via a secret tunnel. Inside the tunnel she finds Frederic who has escaped the helmet because its great weight broke through the floor of the courtyard into the secret tunnel. At the convent he discovers that the local priest, Father Jerome, is really his father.

Then things get really complicated. There is a painting that turns into a ghost, and ancient curse, a giant, and some other stuff too numerous to mention.

The Castle of Otranto was first published in 1764 and created quite a stir. There had not been anything quite like it before so it is credited with starting the trend of supernatural Gothic novels and with reigniting interest in the middle ages. It must have really set readers on end in its day and it is still an amusing read today, though for different reasons. I can't say that you'll find anything moving in The Castle of Otranto or even anything frightening, but it is still a fun read and at under 100 pages it can be an afternoon's amusement.

I'm giving The Castle of Otranto by Horace Walpole three out of five stars. ( )
  CBJames | Oct 4, 2008 |
A fantastic introduction to the origins of gothic literature. While the quality of the writing itself is largely questionable, the roots which this publication symbolizes is highly important in gothic studies. From the first English gothic tale to the first English vampire novella, the reading of this text is an experience worth enduring. ( )
  London_StJ | Dec 28, 2007 |
Showing 4 of 4
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» Add other authors (24 possible)

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Walpole, HoraceContributorprimary authorall editionsconfirmed
Beckford, WilliamContributormain authorall editionsconfirmed
Byron, LordContributormain authorall editionsconfirmed
Polidori, John WilliamContributormain authorall editionsconfirmed
Bleiler, E. F.Editorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
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This is Three Gothic Novels: The Castle of Otranto, Vathek, and Polidori's The Vampyre, published by Dover, ISBN: 0486212327 9780486212326.

Three Gothic Novels, published by Penguin, containing The Castle of Otranto, Vathek, and Shelley's Frankenstein, is a separate work.

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Full texts "Castle of Otranto," Walpole; "Vathek," Beckford; "The Vampyre," Polidori; "Fragment of a Novel," Lord Byron.

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One of the most interesting phenomena in the history of literature, the Gothic novel — which flourished from about 1765 to 1825 — still has much to offer to the modern reader. Supernatural thrills, adventure and suspense, colorful settings, and, in the better examples, literary quality are all present. Unfortunately, true Gothic novels (not simply modern detective stories called "Gothic") are extremely rare books, and have never been as available as they should be.
The first member in this collection, Horace Walpole's TheCastle of Otranto, published as a Christmas book for 1764, was the first and one of the greatest members of the genre. It has also been one of the most influential books in history. It motivated the Gothic revival in the arts, and it probably did more to usher in the early-19th-century Romanticism than any other single work. It also served as the model in plot, characterizations, settings, and tone for hundreds, perhaps thousands of successors.
Vathek, by the eccentric British millionaire William Beckford, is generally considered to be the high point of the Oriental tale in English literature. Certainly no one has ever written (in any European tongue) a story which better unifies the stirrings of Gothic romanticism with the color, poetry, and vivacity of the original Arabian Nights.
The third novel in this collection, John Polidor's Vampyre, emerged from the same soirées of ghost-story telling in Geneva that produced Mary Shelley's Frankenstein. The first full-length vampire story in English, it initiated a very important literary chain that also leads up to the present. Included with Polidori's novel is Lord Byron's little-known Fragment, from which Polidori (who was Byron's physician in Switzerland) plagiarized his plot.
These three novels (and the fragment) are still well worth reading. Generations of readers have found thrills and horrors in Walpole's fine work, while Vathek cannot be excelled in its unusual mixture of the bizarre, cruel irony, and masterful narration. Polidori's thriller still conveys chills, and the Fragment makes us all wish that Byron had completed his novel.
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