Book description
Ghosts, precognition, suicide and the afterlife are all themes to
be found in these thrilling stories by some of the greatest Victorian
women writers from both Britain and the USA. Horace Walpole may have
started the Gothic-fiction movement, but it was three women who
popularized it Â-Clara Reeve, Mary Shelley and Anne Radcliffe.
Victorian women proved they had a talent for creating dark,
sensational and horrifying tales of the supernatural, and this
anthology showcases some of the best and most representative work by
female writers of the time, including Emily Brontë, Mary Braddon,
George Eliot and Edith Nesbit, as well as Elizabeth Gaskell, Charlotte
Riddell, Louisa Baldwin, Mary Penn, Violet Quirk and Elizabeth Stuart
Phelps. Editor Mike Ashley provides valuable insight into the authors'
lives and contextualizes each story Â-every one of which still has the
ability to shock and frighten Â-and shows how Victorian women
perfected and developed the Gothic genre.