1817 Northanger Abbey: Jane Austen
Return to the Gothic Novel list
Share the joy of collecting old books
Return to the Gothic Novel list
Frankenstein has been reprinted many times over the last 200 years and has been the inspiration for many film, television and stage portrayals of the monster, most famously by Boris Karloff in the film which was released in 1931, 100 years after the publication of the Colburn and Bentley edition.
Return to the Gothic Novel list
The Gothic novel has a key place in the history of English literature from the mid 18th century until today. Below is a list of my twenty-one most desirable examples of Gothic Literature from a book collector’s perspective. In this article, I will briefly discuss elements of the publication history of each of the twenty-one works that I have chosen. I will also nominate which edition I would select as the most desirable to have in my Gothic Library. Although to most book collectors, the first edition of any book is often the most desirable, that is not necessarily the case, and I will try to explain here why I think each “most desirable” edition that I have nominated has its special appeal. The choice is of course entirely personal.
This will be the sixth year for this festival of all things book and printing, and as usual will culminate in the Melbourne Rare Book Fair at Wilson Hall at The University of Melbourne from the 7th until the 9th of July 2017.
More than 50 events, all free to the public, will be held during Melbourne Rare Book Week and the full program will ne available from Monday 22nd May 2017.
From Monday 22nd May 2017, you can log on to the Melbourne Rare Book Week 2017 web site to see the program and to book for the events that you wish to attend.
You will find Melbourne Rare Book Week 2017 at
and the Melbourne Rare Book Fair at
Among the highlights of Melbourne Rare Book Week will be an exhibition dedicated to Jane Austen called
which will run from June 5th until July 23rd inclusively at The Library at the Dock, Victoria Harbour, Docklands.
More information on both Rare Book Week and the exhibition will be available here shortly.