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Horrid Mysteries

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Translator
  
Peter Will

Pages
  
c.200 pp

Author
  
Carl Grosse

Publisher
  
Minerva Press

2.8/5
Goodreads

Publication date
  
1796

Originally published
  
1796

Genre
  
Gothic fiction

Horrid Mysteries t1gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcSCPOrO6Lq5R3qjDV

Original title
  
Der Genius, Aus den Papieren des Marquis C* von G**

Media type
  
Print (Hardback & Paperback)

Similar
  
Gothic fiction books, Other books

The Horrid Mysteries, subtitled "A Story From the German Of The Marquis Of Grosse" is a translation by Peter Will of the German Gothic novel Der Genius by Carl Grosse. It was listed as one of the seven "horrid novels" by Jane Austen in her Northanger Abbey and also mentioned by Thomas Love Peacock in Nightmare Abbey. It was first published by the sensationalist Minerva Press in 1796. A later, two-volume edition published by Robert Holden and Co., Ltd. in 1927 includes a new introductory essay by Montague Summers. The books were bound in pictoral boards, and feature a period-style "advertisement" for Pears' Soap on the rear cover.

The hero of the tale, the Marquis of Grosse, finds himself embroiled in a secret revolutionary society which advocates murder and mayhem in pursuit of an early form of communism. He creates a rival society to combat them and finds himself hopelessly trapped between the two antagonistic forces. The book has been both praised and lambasted for its lurid portrayal of sex, violence and barbarism. H. P. Lovecraft, in his lengthy essay Supernatural Horror in Literature, dismissed it and others like it as "...the dreary plethora of trash like Marquis von Grosse's Horrid Mysteries..."

Editions

  • 1927, London: Robert Holden & Co Ltd, 2 volumes
  • 1968, London: Folio Society
  • References

    Horrid Mysteries Wikipedia