The Haunted House Audiobook By Charles Dickens, Elizabeth Gaskell, Wilkie Collins, Hesba Stretton, George Augustus Sala, Adelaide Anne Proctor cover art

The Haunted House

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The Haunted House

By: Charles Dickens, Elizabeth Gaskell, Wilkie Collins, Hesba Stretton, George Augustus Sala, Adelaide Anne Proctor
Narrated by: Philip Bird
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About this listen

On Christmas Eve, a party of friends descends on a purportedly haunted country retreat, charged with the task of discovering evidence of the supernatural. Sequestered in their rooms for the holiday, the friends reconvene on Twelfth Night at a great feast and share their stories of spectral encounters.

"The Mortals in the House" by Charles Dickens provides the framework for the tales, which include two more of his own stories. Counting Elizabeth Gaskell and Wilkie Collins among its other contributors, The Haunted House examines quintessentially Victorian themes - sex and longing, nostalgia and loss - in ways that continue to resonate today.

Ingeniously conceived and written, and spiked with flashes of Dickensian humor, this volume is a strange and sheer delight.

1: "The Mortals in the House" - Charles Dickens
2: "The Ghost in the Clock Room" - Hesba Stretton
3: "The Ghost in the Double Room" - George Augustus Sala
4: "The Ghost in the Picture Room" - Adelaide Anne Procter
5: "The Ghost in the Cupboard Room" - Wilkie Collins
6: "The Ghost in Master B's Room" - Charles Dickens
7: "The Ghost in the Garden Room" - Elizabeth Gaskell
8: "The Ghost in the Corner Room" - Charles Dickens

©2008 Summersdale Publishers Ltd (P)2008 Summersdale Publishers Ltd
Anthologies Anthologies & Short Stories Fiction Haunted Scary Celebration Ghost Witty Short Story
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Not Scary--But Rather Romantic

What did you like best about The Haunted House? What did you like least?

The best part of this book were the colorful characters and dry humor. The worst part was that it isn't really a legitimate collection of ghost stories. Although the titles of the stories offered start with "The Ghost . . ." most of the stories are simply colorful Victorian romances and humerous sketches.

Has The Haunted House turned you off from other books in this genre?

The Haunted House has not turned me off to other books in this genre--which I would consider Victorian Romance--what turned me off was that I I feel the title and the vague framework that Dickens tied it all together with was misleading. I was expecting really scary stories, like Dicken's "The Signalman"--but the book failed to produce that type of tale.

Which character – as performed by Philip Bird – was your favorite?

The narrator was my favorite character.

Was The Haunted House worth the listening time?

This book is worth the listening time if one is aware of what type of book it really is--namely not a collection of scary stories--but rather a collection of witty Victorian sketches.

Any additional comments?

If you like books like those written by Jane Austin and the Bronte Sisters you would probably be pleased with the selection offered here--but if you want bone chilling tales of terror you definitely won't find it here and would be better off with an Edgar Allen Poe anthology.

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11 people found this helpful