• Blog
    • Novels by Post Number
    • Novels by Author
    • Novels by Year
    • Crosswords by Post Number (Ascending)
    • Crosswords by Post Number (Descending)
    • Crossword Solutions by Post Number (Descending)
    • Crossword Solutions by Post Number (Ascending)
    • Crosswords Published Elsewhere
  • About
  • FAQ
  • Contact
  • Subscribe
  • Donate
Menu

New Crosswords / Old Novels

Street Address
City, State, Zip
Phone Number

Your Custom Text Here

New Crosswords / Old Novels

  • Blog
  • Indices
    • Novels by Post Number
    • Novels by Author
    • Novels by Year
    • Crosswords by Post Number (Ascending)
    • Crosswords by Post Number (Descending)
    • Crossword Solutions by Post Number (Descending)
    • Crossword Solutions by Post Number (Ascending)
    • Crosswords Published Elsewhere
  • About
  • FAQ
  • Contact
  • Subscribe
  • Donate
New Title Page cropped.jpg

Blog

Novel 050: J. Sheridan Le Fanu, Uncle Silas (1864)

October 29, 2018 David Bywaters
Atkinson Grimshaw, Arriving at the Hall

Atkinson Grimshaw, Arriving at the Hall


A shy young heiress is left in the care of her uncle, a suspected murderer.


J. Sheridan Le Fanu (1814-1873), an Irish journalist and novelist, wrote some 20 novels beginning in 1845; he specialized in the creation of eerie atmosphere.

Though sometimes strained and improbable, this novel “is rather to be taken as a highly wrought romance than as a picture of mere every-day life and its issues.  Enough that the novel is well-written, paints some strongly-wrought dream figures, and one or two very well-drawn characters of real substantial life, that it also excites curiosity, and sustains a very strong interest from the beginning to the end."  Examiner, December 24, 1864.

“Mr. Le Fanu has the gift of working upon the imagination of his readers, until every description of still life—a room, a picture, a piece of furniture, the entire house—becomes instinct with significance. . . .  The author’s artistic imagination touches every object, however small or apparently insignificant, giving them a meaning like a song without words.” Athenaeum, January 7, 1865.

La Fanu “is feverishly intent on producing a series of Rembrandt effects. . . . Seen through this ghostly medium, all the characters, from the principals to the merest supernumerary, appear more or less weird or unearthly.”  Saturday Review, February 4, 1865.

Download this week's novel:

https://archive.org/details/unclesilastaleof00lefa_0

 

In Novels
← Crossword 050: Experts' NicknamesCrossword 049: Masked Masks →