Archive for the 'stories' tag

H.P Lovecraft goes to the movies

Posted July 5, 2012 2:36 pm by Louise Jack | Permalink

 

Monsters from beyond space and time! Alien invaders! Ghouls beneath the city streets! Mad scientists resurrecting the dead!

H.P. Lovecraft (1890-1937) is generally acknowledged as the most important American writer of macabre fiction since Edgar Allan Poe and one of the most influential writers of horror tales in the 20th century.

With more than 100 movies based on his writing, H.P. Lovecraft ranks among the most adapted authors in history–along with Edgar Allan Poe and Stephen King.
His unnervingly scary tales appeal to both diehard fans of horror and readers with mainstream tastes, and H.P. Lovecraft Goes to the Movies presents the very best of his filmed stories. This collection provides an enlightening historical introduction, short headnotes for each story calling out interesting trivia, and an appendix with credits for each screen version.
Further details of H.P. Lovecraft goes to the movies can be found on our catalogue.

The genius of Dickens

Posted February 7, 2012 9:39 am by Louise Jack | Permalink

(Photo credit: Duckworth Overlook)

Today, 7th February 2012, is the bicentenary of Charles Dickens’s birth.

Although a writer from the Victorian era, Dickens’s work transcends his time, language and culture. He remains a massive contemporary influence throughout the world and his writings continue to inspire film, TV, art, literature, artists and academia.

During his thirty-five years at the top of the literary tree in the English-speaking world, Dickens published fourteen and a half full-length novels and a great amount of shorter fiction, including five Christmas books and twenty Christmas stories as well as a mass of sketches, essays, topical journalism and other prose.

He also edited a monthly miscellany for two years and two successive weekly magazines for twenty years. He made dozens of eloquent and powerful speeches to a great variety of charitable organisations up and down the country and busied himself with an immense amount of work in this field including, for many years, actively overseeing the running of a ‘Home for homeless women’.

During the last twelve years of his life he also gave phenomenally successful public readings of his own work to enraptured audiences throughout Britain and in the north-eastern United States.

Michael Slater has spent half a century reading Dickens, writing about him and most of all enjoying him. In his inspiring book, The genius of Dickens, Slater captures the ideas and beliefs, the social and artistic ideals of  ‘Dickensian values’ and the ambition that helped shape Dickens’s prodigious output.

You can find further details of The genius of Dickens on our catalogue.