Welcome back book lovers! It's time for another archival post, this time my review of a classic, gothic romance novel, and as I consider myself a dark / horror literature fanatic, I like to look at some of the earliest examples of this type of literature to see how far we've come! In this case (spoiler alert) the book ended up not being my favorite, so this is one of my somewhat rare, not-so-positive book reviews! This was originally posted on 10 Apr. 2017 at The Primitive Entertainment Workshop, and is being reposted here as part of my project to archive all of my Read a Damn Book reviews on the Steem blockchain! Thanks for reading!!!
“Read a Damn Book – 021: The Woman in White”
For the last four decades or so, I’ve been a terrible sleeper. My poor wife, until my 40th birthday, had to deal with me, three or four times per week, failing to fall sleep, rolling over, and turning on a light so that I could read until I could calm my brain down enough to try and get back to Dreamland. For my 40th, however, she got me a back-lit e-reader, and the days of me needing to flip a light on at 2:00 A.M. (and interrupting HER sleep) were mostly over. Since that day, and through much trial and error, I’ve discovered that Victorian literature has a very calming effect on me and can remarkably DECREASE the amount of time that I remain awake when insomnia strikes, and my most recent “night book” was SO EFFECTIVE at inducing unconsciousness that it took me nearly FIVE MONTHS of reading to finished it. Welcome, my friends, to The Woman in White…
[This is a photograph that I took of the actual digital book that I read. The image is included for review purposes only!]
Wilkie Collins – The Woman in White (1859-1860)
The Woman in White was originally published as a serialized story in a couple of subscription magazines of the day, and was eventually published as a 500+ page novel in 1860. I decided to read this book partially because it’s considered a gothic classic (an early detective story) and partially because I thought it was going to be a ghost story. Sadly, there were no ghosts, although there was one woman who always dressed in white and had escaped from a mental hospital, and that’s something, I guess. There were also some classic gothic atmospherics: an old, dark, run-down manor house; a sinister plot; secret societies; a few nice deaths; and a well written and extremely detailed story, but overall, it seemed a bit ELONGATED for my taste. The prose was readable, the descriptions evocative, and a few of the characters interesting enough, I suppose—particularly the rich, misanthropic, invalid uncle whose nerves where so disturbed that even talking with his own niece for a few moments was enough to shatter him, mentally and physically, for a full week.
Unfortunately, however, the overall story was dull, and I lost interest long before the novel was over. It took an act of extreme willpower for me to push through to the end. The book is considered a classic, and a gothic classic at that, so I felt it was my duty to finish it, but unless you are a REAL fan of Victorian romances, I don’t think I’d recommend it. There are some GREAT books from around this time which I really loved: Varney the Vampire (1847), House of Seven Gables (1851), The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1886), and Carmilla (1872), to name just a few, so it’s not that I don’t care for Victorian gothics, but personally, I just found The Woman in White to be a bit less interesting than I’d hoped. (To be fair, I really didn’t care for Wuthering Heights, either, despite the fact that it DID have a ghost in it.) So, final words: The Woman in White wasn’t my thing. It was too long, and not enough happened in it to keep me interested, although I CAN suggest it if you’re looking for a powerful, non-narcotic sleep aid. It consistently, night after night, knocked my butt right out!
—Richard F. Yates
(Primitive Thoughtician and Supreme Bunny Lord of The P.E.W.)
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I've been on the Steemcleaners Dischord chat messaging back and forth with the folks in charge there asking them to stop this cheetah bot harrassment, but they don't think it's a big deal. I DO, but they don't care. (I archived my conversation with one of the Steemcleaners, in case this shit ever goes to court. I don't care what they say, suggesting that I am claiming materials that are not my own is defamatory.) I deleted the blog that this bot says I am stealing from (it was MY blog,) so if you follow the link it has mentioned, there's nothing there. I am so frustrated and infuriated by this I could scream, but I have no idea how to stop the mad bot, since the people in charge of it are indifferent to my frustration. They couldn't give a shit. I even got an "lol" from one of them, when I tried to tell them how upset I am by this constant suggestion that I am stealing content. IT'S MY CONTENT! I WROTE IT! I PUBLISHED IT! I AM REPOSTING IT FOR ARCHIVAL PURPOSES AND STATING CLEARLY THAT THIS IS A REPOST. What else am I supposed to do---and why, if it's my content, do I have to jump through a bunch of fucking hoops in order to post it on my own blog??? If anyone knows a creators' rights lawyer who is willing to work for cheap or free, seriously, please contact me. I'm ready to take this shit to court.
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