Books of Gothic fiction (Literary genre)

  • Historical Dictionary of Gothic Literature
    By William Hughes

    In Teaching the Gothic, edited by Anna Powell and Andrew Smith, 29-47. Basingstoke: Palgrave, 2006. ... 1: 109-11. "Horrid” (Northanger) Novels Glock, Waldo S. ”Catherine Morland's Gothic Delusions: Bibliography 287.

  • The Silent Companions
    By Laura Purcell

    Newly married, newly widowed Elsie is sent to see out her pregnancy at her late husband's crumbling country estate, The Bridge.

  • The Castle of Otranto: Vathek and Nightmare Abbey
    By Horace Walpole, Thomas Love Peacock, William Beckford

    Three classic Gothic novels: Horace Walpole's The Castle of Otranto, Thomas Love Peacock's Nightmare Abbey and William Beckford's Vathek

  • The House by the Churchyard
    By Sheridan Le Fanu

    Set in the village of Chapelizod, near Dublin, in the 1760s, the story opens with the accidental disinterment of an old skull in the churchyard, and an eerie late-night funeral.

  • Key Concepts in the Gothic
    By William Hughes

    'Professor Hughes has created an indispensable volume for anyone interested in Gothic studies. His scholarship is rich and elegant. This is a work to be used and cherished and frequently revisited, and will not be outgrown in years of use.

  • Key Concepts in the Gothic
    By William Hughes

    'Professor Hughes has created an indispensable volume for anyone interested in Gothic studies. His scholarship is rich and elegant. This is a work to be used and cherished and frequently revisited, and will not be outgrown in years of use.

  • Alan Moore and the Gothic Tradition
    By Matthew J. A. Green

    These essays identify the Gothic tradition as the cultural context for understanding texts dealing explicitly with terror and horror and works expressing Moore's interest in magic and psychogeography.

  • 21st-century Gothic: Great Gothic Novels Since 2000
    By Danel Olson

    Development ofthe Horror Genre (Jefferson, NC: McFarland, 2008); Cemetery Dance magazine; The Complete Review; Ellen Datlow's yearly “Summation” from The Years Best Fantasy and Horror (New York: St. Martin's, through the twenty-first ...

  • Gothic Heroines on Screen: Representation, Interpretation, and Feminist Inquiry
    By Tamar Jeffers McDonald, Frances A. Kamm

    Throughout the collection, the Gothic heroine's representation is explored within the medium, which brings together image, movement, and sound, and this technological fact takes on varied significance.

  • Gothic and Theory: An Edinburgh Companion
    By Jerrold E. Hogle

    De Manian deconstruction's Gothic reanimation of the machine as an autonomic nervous system can be set against the current techno-euphoria among posthumanists influenced by Deleuze and Guattari's theories of machinic assemblages.

  • Dracula
    By Bram Stoker

    There were many adventure writers at this time penning books about impending threat and invasion of the Empire and Dracula was well received.

  • Blood Will Tell: Vampires As Political Metaphors Before World War I
    By Sara Libby Robinson

    Robinson explores the ways in which writers, thinkers, and politicians used blood and vampire-related imagery to express social and cultural anxieties in the decades leading up to the First World War, forming a cohesive political and ...

  • Melmoth
    By Charles Robert Maturin

    The original tale of gothic horror, now with an introduction by Sarah Perry This sinister classic by Charles Robert Maturin, an eccentric Anglican priest from Ireland, has captured the imaginations of readers since its publication in 1820 ...

  • Horror: A Very Short Introduction
    By Darryl Jones

    Delving into the darkest corners of horror literature, films, and plays, Darryl Jones explores its monsters and its psychological chills, discussing why horror stories disturb us, and how they reflect society's taboos.

  • Horror: A Literary History
    By Xavier Aldana Reyes

    This book offers a chronological overview of the genre in fiction and explores its development and mutations over the past 250 years. It also challenges the common misjudgement that horror fiction is necessarily frivolous or dispensable.

  • Postcolonial Gothic Fictions from the Caribbean, Canada, Australia and New Zealand
    By Alison Rudd

    Uses Gothic criticism to explore the ways that writers, poets, and filmmakers use modes of the uncanny and the abject as narrative devices in order to articulate traumatic colonial histories or express the experience of living with legacies ...