Extollager
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Aug 21, 2010
- Messages
- 9,229
In a sentence, so far Cousin Henry is about conflicts between what's perceived as duty, and love.
Okay, just downloaded it from Amazon on my Fire Tablet. (It was free if anyone is interested.)...And now, as I read, further, and Trollope shifts his attention to Cousin Henry -- whew -- this is powerful writing.
I don't know if modern writers in general could write this about the miseries of an abused conscience and of the fear of shame. Perhaps P. D. James could have, though Cousin Henry has (barely -- I suppose) avoided breaking the law.
Well, I did just order a copy of C. P. Snow's The Masters, which I hope will prove to be the Anchor paperback with the Edward Gorey design.
Once I get going on it, I'll probably start a thread on Snow -- whom I haven't read -- at the Literary Fiction place.
I'm not a Gorey collector or fan all that much, but some of his Anchor designs please me.
Just downloaded (for free) The Man-Wolf And Other Stories, thinking it contained a story called "The Spider Of Guyana" but just now figured out the $0.00 kindle edition doesn't have it, just the expanded paperback edition. Rats!I don't have the book, Dask, but I am pretty sure the story would be by Erckmann-Chatrian, and the title might be simply "The Spider."
Just downloaded (for free) The Man-Wolf And Other Stories, thinking it contained a story called "The Spider Of Guyana" but just now figured out the $0.00 kindle edition doesn't have it, just the expanded paperback edition. Rats!
Many thanks for this information J-Sun and for the links (The Strand magazine has its own website? Cool!). I located the book in Extollager's post on Amazon but it's kinda pricey at the moment. But I'll snoop around for some Gotthelf.You can read "The Spider of Guyana" here. (They also wrote "The Crab Spider" but I don't know if that's around.) Unfortunately, neither of those seem to be the right one. The only spider story in that volume (by title) is "The Black Spider" by Jeremias Gotthelf. That doesn't seem to have made it into public domain English but I could have missed it.