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A carregar... Great God Pan (original 1890; edição 2003)por Arthur Machen (Autor)
Informação Sobre a ObraThe Great God Pan por Arthur Machen (1890)
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Indescribable horrors are hinted at but never described except in their effects on various unfortunates who come in contact with a woman corrupted by an ambitious and unscrupulous doctor's experiment. Horror in the Mind of the Beholder Review of the Public Domain Kindle eBook edition (May 16, 2012) excerpted from the John Lane hardcover original (1894*). The greatest horror tales I ever read is a tie between “The Great God Pan,” by Arthur Machen (novella) and "The Ceremonies," by T.E.D. Klein. - tweeted by Stephen King on February 9, 2024. While doing research for my review of Stephen King's Holly (2023), I chanced upon the above statement in between the constant stream of King's anti-Trump tweets. Having read neither of the books mentioned, I immediately grabbed a free public domain copy of The Great God Pan. Klein's The Ceremonies (1984) with a rare used paperback listed at $102.55 Cdn. 😮 will have to wait its turn. You shouldn't expect anything very explicit from this Victorian novella. It primarily consists of the conversations or the recorded letters of various paranormal investigators, doctors, scholars and such. The title villain and its progeny are never directly encountered but are constantly spoken about. The horror of it all is the extent to which your imagination will take you. The greatest horror for me was actually in the first chapter where a diabolical experiment is performed on a hapless young woman in order for her to "see" into the other world. This "operation" consists of a method which pre-figures lobotomies (which weren't invented until 1935) by 45 years! The resulting spawn is unleashed upon the world until steps are taken to eradicate it. See title page at https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/6e/Title_page--The_great_... Title page from the John Lane 1894 edition with an illustration by Aubrey Beardsley. Image sourced from Wikipedia. Footnote * Goodreads shows 1890 as the year of first publication, but that was only an early version of Chapter 1 which appeared in The Whirlwind magazine. The full novella was not published until 1894 when it was paired with Machen's short story The Inmost Light. Trivia and Link The Great God Pan is in the Public Domain and can be read at various online sources such as Project Gutenberg. The Public Domain Kindle eBook is available free at Amazon. A couple of times does that thing where it builds up and then when you think it's going to finally describe something, just cuts out. It's pretty pathetic, although I know a lot of people are cool with that sort of thing. To me it kind of blew the atmosphere. Which is a shame because it IS a very good atmosphere and it's pretty suspenseful. Even with that, though, it was enjoyable and I thought the ending was pretty alright considering it was of that style. Despite myself I was kept in suspense and if you don't mind anti-climaxes like that you'll enjoy this quite a bit I think. Good stuff slightly marred by a bit of poor writing. sem críticas | adicionar uma crítica
Está contido emThe Caerleon edition of the works of Arthur Machen. Volume 1: The Great God Pan; The Inmost Light; The Red Hand. por Arthur Machen The Caerleon edition of the works of Arthur Machen por Arthur Machen (indirecta) Arthur Machen Collection Volume 1 4 Books The Great God Pan, The Inmost Light, The Shining Pyramid, The Three Impostors. por Arthur Machen The Hill of Dreams | The House of Souls por Arthur Machen (indirecta) É uma versão expandida deTem um comentário sobre o texto
Fiction.
Horror.
Short Stories.
Thriller.
HTML: If you consider yourself a fan of the horror genre, you need to add Arthur Machen's short novel The Great God Pan to your library. Cited by Stephen King and numerous other writers as one of the greatest horror stories ever published, this fantastical tale recounts the bizarre experiments conducted by mad scientist Dr. Raymond in an attempt to call forth a manifestation of the pagan god Pan. As is often the case, these unholy undertakings engender consequences that no one could have predicted. .Não foram encontradas descrições de bibliotecas. |
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