But this time, the creepy old house really is full of gothic dread. There’s the family curse and some truly insufferable flesh-and-blood relatives, not to mention sightings of ghostly grey lady, an anonymous warning letter left for Catherine, medical mysteries, insane relatives, and all kind of creepy things. At one point, young bride Catherine is informed that family tradition requires a member of the family to stay with a newly-deceased relative, which means she’s about to spend the night alone with a corpse. There’s also a death by impalement on architectural decor, a truly gothic way to go.
In Northanger Abbey, Jane Austen flips the Gothic novel, setting up hints of ghostly activity and then giving a mundane explanation. Here, Diana Birchall flips it back, putting a more mature Catherine into an extremely Gothic horror story, with ghosts and curses and imprisonment. But it’s also a reversal of modern haunted-house horror movie, since it’s the wife, not the husband, who ignores any evidence of supernatural disturbance in the house, looking for a rational explanation and insisting that everything is fine.
The Bride of Northanger is a horror novel homage with a twist that plays on what readers expect from a haunted-house heroine. Janeite readers can’t help thinking Austen would approve.
Thanks for including me in the Bride of Northanger Blog Tour!
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I like that you mention that it is usually the wife "who ignores any evidence of supernatural disturbance in the house..." I enjoyed that everything is flipped in this continuation. Austen would approve of that irony. Thanks for the great review of a fun read Meg.