Showing posts with label George Reynolds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label George Reynolds. Show all posts

Monday 27 February 2023

OUT NOW: Penny Dreadfuls and the Gothic: Investigations of Pernicious Tales of Terror, edited by Nicole C. Dittmer and Sophie Raine (University of Wales Press, 2023)

A new academic collection of essays exploring penny dreadfuls, including my chapter on Wagner the Wehr-Wolf and the work of George Reynolds...


Penny Dreadfuls and the Gothic breaks new ground in uncovering penny titles which have been hitherto largely neglected from literary discourse revealing the cultural, social and literary significance of these working-class texts. The present volume is a reappraisal of penny dreadfuls, demonstrating their cruciality in both our understanding of working-class Victorian Literature and the Gothic mode. This edited collection of essays provides new insights into the fields of Victorian literature, popular culture and Gothic fiction more broadly; it is divided into three sections, whose titles replicate the dual titles offered by penny publications during the nineteenth century. Sections one and two consist of three chapters, while section three consists of four essays, all of which intertwine to create an in-depth and intertextual exposition of Victorian society, literature, and gothic representations.

Contents:

- Introduction: Dreadful Beginnings by Nicole C. Dittmer and Sophie Raine

Section One: The Progression of Pennys; or, Adaptations and Legacies of the Dreadful

- Penny Pinching: Reassessing the Gothic Canon Through Nineteenth-Century Reprinting by Hannah-Freya Blake and Marie Léger-St-Jean
- “As long as you are industrious, you will get on very well”: Adapting The String of Pearls’ Economies of Horror by Brontë Schiltz
- “Your lot is wretched, old man”: Anxieties of Industry, Empire and England in George Reynolds’s Wagner, the Wehr-Wolf by Hannah Priest

Section Two: Victorian Medical Sciences and Penny fiction; or, Dreadful Discourses of the Gothic

- ‘Embalmed pestilence’, ‘intoxicating poisons’: Rhetoric of Contamination, Contagion, and the Gothic Marginalisation of Penny Dreadfuls by their Contemporary Critics by Manon Burz-Labrande
- “A Tale of the Plague”: Anti-Medical Sentiment and Epidemic Disease in Early Victorian Popular Gothic Fiction by Joseph Crawford
- “Mistress of the broomstick”: Biology, Ecosemiotics, and Monstrous Women in Wizard’s The Wild Witch of the Heath; or the Demon of the Glen by Nicole C. Dittmer

Section Three: Mode, Genre, and Style; or, Gothic Storytelling and Ideologies

- A Ventriloquist and a Highwayman Walk into an Inn... Early Penny Bloods and the Politics of Humour in Jack Rann and Valentine Vaux by Celine Frohn
- Gothic Ideology and Religious Politics in James Malcolm Rymer’s Penny Fiction by Rebecca Nesvet
- “Muddling about among the dead”: Found Manuscripts and Metafictional Storytelling in James Malcolm Rymer’s Newgate: A Romance by Sophie Raine

For more information, please visit the University of Wales website.

Tuesday 8 November 2016

Victorian Gothic Faust Penny Dreadful – OUT NOW


Issue 1 of the Digital Periodicals edition of George Reynolds's Faust is available now - and it only costs £1! The next issue will be out on Friday, but there's still plenty of time to catch up with Issue 1 before then... and it's pretty wild stuff too...


The year is 1493, and a penniless young student has made a momentous bargain to save himself from the noose. He says he did it for love... but will the lure of power and vengeance be too great?

Elsewhere, another young man is summoned by the Vehm - a secret tribunal that takes the law into its own hands and conducts clandestine trials and punishments. What do they want with Charles Hamel? And does this have anything to do with Count Manfred's dubious claim to Linsdorf Castle?

On top of all this, Manfred has attacked Rosenthal Castle! And Theresa has been abducted! Has she bought herself enough time? Or will the dastardly Manfred force her into marriage? And just why does that old portrait look so much like Theresa's handmaiden?


This is the first modern edition of the classic penny dreadful version of Faust, and it's fully illustrated and compatible with all e-readers. Issues will be released fortnightly and are available exclusively from the publisher's website. Check out the video trailer here:

Sunday 2 October 2016

Coming Soon: Faust


On 28th October, Digital Periodicals (the Victorian Gothic department of Hic Dragones) will be launching the first issue of George Reynolds's 1847 penny dreadful Faust. The eBook serial will be published in 12 fortnightly instalments, each costing just £1. This freshly transcribed and fully illustrated serial is the only modern edition of Reynolds’ action-packed tale of deadly sin, imperilled virtue and political intrigue.

To have everything your heart desires – what price would you pay?

From the author of Mysteries of London and Wagner the Wehrwolf comes a unique take on the legendary story of Faust. In the 1490s, amidst the secretive tribunals and power games of Europe, an impoverished student enters into a pact that will twist his mind and shatter his spirit. The promise of power, wealth and vengeance comes at a terrifying cost – but can true love conquer the demon’s hold? and what fate awaits a man who would sell his very soul?

Find out more on the Hic Dragones website.

And check out the brand new Faust trailer (with music by the fantastic Digital Front)!