
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I found this entertaining and interesting, even surprising, and the language is often striking and sometimes beautiful. As a big fan of old timey Romantic poetry, I can get behind the descriptions of waterfalls and mountains and raging rivers hidden away on trails frequented by bandits. (I couldn't make myself read the poems scattered here, though, where she rhapsodizes on wind and nightfall or whatever.) And the gothic stuff, with many towers and dangerous castles and the like, has got a great vibe. I'd say the vibe was the heart of the book and probably the best reason to read it still.
I won't say that it's generally fun like a modern mystery or bestseller type novel. It is sometimes, but most of the time it is slower than that, and needs to be approached differently (if you want to enjoy it, I mean). This is like if Jane Austen had a baby book with Bram Stoker, or George Eliot with Sir Walter Scott, where we have both action of a sort and a novel of manners. It's like a roller coaster that goes really slow, or a slow-burn romance that spends most of the middle on a different story, one that's all gothic and no romance. : ) It's not a rollicking read, but it does supply some decent action, some maybe-ghosts, a couple dollops of romance, and a bunch of intrigue. I'm okay with the mix.
It could, however, be about half as long without missing anything. We get virtually the same scene over and over--the same reflections, the same conversations, the same fainting spells. This is why I think it's rather like a really, really, really long song. It has a bunch of verses that are pretty similar, with about a dozen choruses that repeat every few pages. (Valancourt asks if he has any hope with her; she tells him he must go. Over and over.)
To sum up the plot--Emily is sent to live with an uncaring aunt when her parents die, where she falls in love with Valancourt, and soon the aunt marries a very scary Italian guy, Mantano. Then Emily is dragged away with them, first to Venice and then to the famous Castle of Udolpho, where much of the spooky, frightening stuff happens. All along, her aunt's new husband is terrifying, and we eventually realize he's hooked up with bandits and criminals and is probably a murderer. Emily's aunt dies, leaving her totally alone in a castle in the wilderness, and Mantano presses her to sign over all of her inherited lands and holdings, threatening her. Emily fears he will kill her either way, but she does eventually sign the papers. All of these actions happen over hundreds of pages of repeated conversations, repeated threats, and nearly identical inner monologues. If the author could have cut out the repeated stuff, we could have had a much trimmer book. Alas.
There's a lot of Scooby Doo type mysteries with non-supernatural explanations, but there are also many genuine life-threatening dangers, so the stakes are real here even if the ghosts aren't. There are also wild, long-held family secrets that get squeezed out over the course of the novel. And the love story is a good model for a lot of later novels, with misunderstandings and rash judgments, and--spoiler... skip ahead a few lines if you don't want to see... still a spoiler coming... here it is--the happy ending that we got was almost a surprise to me. I liked it.
I found this well worth reading. I was disappointed I couldn't find a hardcover copy for a reasonable price (like on eBay) and finally had to read it from a paperback. I wonder if there's a movie.
If you read Jane Austen and are curious about the various horrid books and overwrought gothic novels they talk about in Northanger Abbey, take a look at this one. You might enjoy it. I liked it enough to go track down some of the others.
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