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I'm Kelsea and this is my blog about Gothic Literature.

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Romance of the Forest Part Two

I still wish Adeline would quit fainting but at least the book is starting to get interesting. When Adeline makes her plan with Peter to escape and ends up at the Marquis’ home is where things really start to become interesting. Her flight with Theodore and the journey that eventually leads her to his family is a lot more exciting and the use of the sublime in the parts that talk about her time with La Luc make one thing about nature differently. I enjoyed Radcliff’s vivid descriptions and the book starts to feel a little less gothic and a little more romantic. However comparing how far I am in the book with the number of pages still left to read, I knew that something was going to change. I was a bit disappointed in how Radcliff choose to tie everything together. After reading the entire book and with thirty pages left it didn’t seem right to give all the back ground information and tie up all the loose ends in one shot. I felt like I had become so invested in the book (partly because it was rather long) and to have everything in my opinion, so matter of factly tied up made me a bit sad. I wanted to be able to gradually learn what had happened to Adeline’s father and what would become of Theodore and LaMotte but summing it all up together took the fun out of guessing what would happen. Romance of the Forest while not one of my favorite books wasn’t awful; Radcliff really progresses what it means to write a novel. Her use of literary elements makes the book not only longer but adds another layer of horror and suspense. Along with that it also adds length, which would my biggest complaint, it really could have been summed up in about a hundred less pages, however, I’m sure the middle class readers of the time period would beg to differ

2 comments:

  1. Yes, I understand your frustrations on the novel and the denouement. Remember that narratology is faily new--we've developed it quite a bit since the 18th century :)

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  2. I couldn't have put this better myself. You and I are definitely on the same wavelength. I feel that this novel probably had the best overall story of any that we have read so far, but after you have invested so much time in such a novel, it ends in hurry. Not that I was really having a great desire to read another 50 pages, but if she would have drawn it out just a little more, in order to give us some sort of "less sudden moral closure" it would have been nice.

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