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Ladataan... Wieland or, The Transformation: An American Tale (vuoden 1969 painos)Tekijä: Charles Brockden Brown (Tekijä)
TeostiedotWieland (tekijä: Charles Brockden Brown)
![]() Ei tämänhetkisiä Keskustelu-viestiketjuja tästä kirjasta. ![]() ![]() An american gothic thriller. Quite close to giving this 4 stars but it does take quite a while to get going. It was almost exactly half-way through that things finally started to get to a the point. The story builds up quite a bit of tension despite the rather formal language. It's a surprisingly modern tale in terms of its violence, i suppose other gothic works like [b: Castle of Otranto|12923|The Castle of Otranto|Horace Walpole|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1390597628s/12923.jpg|46432] and [b: Vathek|859694|Vathek|William Beckford|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1338907992s/859694.jpg|980687] are violent too but its done in a much more over the top and less recognizable way. This felt in parts like an episode of Criminal Minds. The resolution and final reveal are much better than i was expecting however the explanation doesn't re-iterate past events with any detail, so if you weren't paying attention before it won't do you much good. If you want a properly dark and tragic mystery this might be for you, if you can get past the vocabulary. Also the very end is a sort of epilogue and felt quite pointless and a bit of a let down after the earlier climax. This is still pretty shocking in places for a modern audience, i can't imagine how it must have been received in 1798. Charles Brockden Brown (1771-1810) fue el primer escritor profesional americano, y Wieland o La Transformación -su primera novela (1798)-, además de ser un incomparable relato de «terror gótico», constituye el primer esfuerzo por crear una literatura americana sólida. Mary Shelley, cuyo espíritu armonizaba completamente con las creaciones de Brown, encontró en el personaje de Carwin, un precedente para Frankenstein. En una tierra desprovista de castillos y fantasmas -pero saturada de teocracia puritana y fanatismo religioso- Brown encontró materia para construir un relato gótico, recreando la extraña historia de un granjero, presa de una locura maníaca, que asesina sin piedad a su familia obedeciendo un inescrutable mandato divino. Directamente implicado en esta siniestra trama, destaca el personaje de Carwin, «el biloquista», un ser dotado de una facultad afín a la ventriloquía que le permite proyectar su voz a distancia, creando así un efecto de bilocación. Eh. It was all right. Started out as a very intriguing ghost story and I was looking forward to finding out what was really going on. But the ending was a let-down. There were a couple of plot holes, even though the last chapter read entirely as an attempt to fill a couple of them. But it would probably make a great PBS miniseries. I really didn't like this book. At first, I thought it was because of the style of writing. This book was written in 1798, and it is a little difficult to get used to some of the conventions of that time period. But that wasn't it. Even excusing the writing style, I didn't like this book. I didn't like the characters at all. Clara Wieland and her family all struck me as bored young men and women with nothing better to do than sit around gossiping. The "villian" of the piece, Carwin, reminded me of many of the villians in real life today who claim "It's not my fault. I couldn't help myself". He spent three chapters explaining how he just couldn't keep from using his "evil power" and came off sounding like a whiny adolescent. But, worst of all, this is a book where NOTHING happens. The reader isn't shown anything; we're told the whole story. And, there's no indication of the "invisible power and nameless fear" mentioned on the back cover. There's just nothing spooky or suspenseful about this story. I found the biography of the author from the 1856 Cyclopedia of American Literature, included in this volume, much more interesting than the novel. It seems Brown was quite prolific; as Wieland was his first published novel, it would be interesting to see if his later works improved. ei arvosteluja | lisää arvostelu
Wieland; or The Transformation (1798) ties revolutionary-era Gothic themes to struggles over the politics of Enlightenment on both sides of the Atlantic. This edition of Wieland includes Brown's Memoirs of Carwin the Biloquist and writings on Cicero, as well as his key essays on history and literature, and selections from contemporary German and other texts that figure in the novel's background and in the charged atmosphere of the late 1790s. Kirjastojen kuvailuja ei löytynyt. |
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