The ghoulish misdeeds and conflicted psychology of the undead are memorably explored in this classic supernatural thriller, published in England in 1983 and previously unavailable in the US.]]In the terse, atmospheric opening pages, an unnamed narrator finds a partially charred manuscript in the vicinity of an abandoned country house in Cornwall that has mysteriously burned to the ground. It's the "Narrative of John Richard Le Perrowne," born in 1830 to middle-agedparents, sickly and reclusive throughout a lonely childhood?and the chosen victim of his ancestress Helena, a vampire whose seductive presence leads]John into a thrilling new anti-world of empowerment and glamour. But the initiate vampire retains a conscience, and Farrington expertly contrasts his reluctant surrender to the lure of the night with the amoral Helena, a coven of inordinately bloodthirsty fellow creatures, and the young farm girl (Elizabeth) who becomes John's creation, far outdistancing him in calculated villainy. The story is exactly as baroque and lurid as it needs to be, and its most effective set pieces (John awakening in bed to find Helena lying beside him; a feverish dream that's prelude to an equally appalling reality) have a truly cinematic intensity. Farrington's prose is]pitched agreeably high, and his protagonist's increasingly fearful intuitions are expressed with vivid emotion and mordant irony ("Death . . . seems much sweeter when you know you cannot have it"). And the closing]sequences build impressively, as Perrowne discovers the truth of the ancestral secret that has shaped his fate, travels to Ireland in search of the "Master Revenant" rumored to be the father of them all, undertakes a]climactic "journey to Hell," and experiences a grotesque parody of theResurrection. Thus summarized, it sounds egregiously flamboyant; in fact, it's smashingly effective.
I love this novel; everything about it! The style in which it was written, the attention to detail (without droning on and on with tedius superfluous descriptions), the story, the characters, etc. The main character, John, is easy to identify with. He seems like a realistic character to me (despite being a century year old vampire lol). I felt i could relate to his situations, both when he was a weak awkward human and when he was a powerful struggeling revenant; this goes to show how well Farrington succeeds in taking us into the character's mind. I loved this the most about how he writes! He goes into so much depth concerning the protagonist's state of mind and inward struggle that it made me care for the character. I also thought the character development was done extremely well! The transition in John was so believable and yet so extreme. This novel isn't really a horror novel in the classic sense. The main character is not pure evil manifested. He is instead like all of us; struggling at times to perceive right from wrong. But that is what i love so much about the novel. You get the sense that you're struggling along with the character to make sense of everything. This novel does contain a lot of gore though so it's pretty scary as well. I totally recommend it to any horror fans or any fiction fan in general.
Horror At Its Best!
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 21 years ago
Book is written after the style of LeFanu. You will think thisauthor was born in the 1800's as he attempts and achieves this style of classic horror writing. Vampire books ordinarily are not high on my list of horror reads but this one has changed that!
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