Showing posts with label Romance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Romance. Show all posts

False Memory Summary

Dean Koontz, Contemporary, Crime, Fiction, Horror, Literature, Psychological, Romance, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller

False Memory

Published: 1999
Author: Dean Koontz
Genre: Contemporary, Crime, Fiction, Horror, Literature, Psychological, Romance, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Martie Rhodes assists her friend Susan Jagger, who has agoraphobia, in attending appointments with psychotherapist Dr. Ahriman. Dusty, Martie's spouse, attempts to aid his brother Skeet by giving work in his painting business. 

Skeet, who had previously been in drug recovery, relapses, and attempts suicide by jumping from a roof. Dusty falls from the roof while trying to save Skeet and chooses to return his brother to rehab.

Martie has a puzzling case of autophobia and comes home, only to be terrified by her own mirror. Later, her condition increases, and she quickly develops a fear of sharp items, despite the fact that she is truly scared of the harm she may wreak with them. 

When Dusty leaves Skeet in the recovery facility, he observes a shadow in his brother's room window. Strange phenomena, such as Skeet, Martie's autophobia, and hypnotism, begin to occur for both Dusty and Martie.

The pair finally realizes that they have both been gradually indoctrinated and trained to obey Dr. Ahriman, a sexual psychopath who poisons and indoctrinates his victims before raping or ordering them to commit murders or suicide for his delight. 

After realizing that she had recorded him having sex with her, Dr. Ahriman ordered Susan to commit herself by cutting her wrists. Skeet has also been programmed by the doctor, resulting in his incapacity to fully heal from drug usage and skewed thinking. 

Dr. Ahriman creates control by mentioning a name and then reciting a haiku to patients, almost quickly putting them in a detached state of awareness. He tries to explain this by claiming that by directing specific patients to commit heinous crimes like as mass murders, bombings, and random shootings, he may compel laws to make the world a "better place."

Dr. Ahriman is finally slain by another patient who was terrified of Keanu Reeves' portrayal in The Matrix. Dr. Ahriman, the lady suspects, is one of the Machine operatives attempting to manipulate her. 

Dusty and Martie acquire a sizable sum from Susan's bequest and gradually attempt to rebuild their damaged lives.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Best Friend, Fear Nothing, Friend Susan, Main Characters, Manchurian Candidate, Martie And Dusty, Mind Control, Seize The Night, Stephen King, Twists And Turns


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Cold Fire Summary

Dean Koontz, American, Contemporary, Fantasy, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Literature, Psychic, Psychological, Romantic, Science Fiction, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller

Cold Fire

Published: 1991
Author: Dean Koontz
Genre: American, Contemporary, Fantasy, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Literature, Psychic, Psychological, Romance, Science Fiction, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Jim Ironheart, a recently retired teacher, puts his life in danger to help others. In Portland, he rescues a small kid from an inattentive drunk driver in a van. He saves a toddler from an underground explosion in Boston. He disarms a guy in Houston who was attempting to shoot his own wife – and he isn't just lucky to be in the right location at the right time. He receives "inspiration" and knows he needs to go somewhere quickly. 

To the amazement of people around him, he hurries off to call a cab or board a plane, abandoning whatever he's doing at the time. He has no idea where or why these visions occur, but he feels he must be a God-sent guardian angel with a celestial ability.

Holly Thorne, a reporter, was in Portland to write a dull story on a school teacher who had produced a book of poetry full of poems Holly believes to be pure transcendental rubbish - but such is Holly's lot in life. 

She is a terrific writer, but she is failing as a reporter because she has too much ethics and compassion. As she walks away, she sees Jim rescue the child from the drunk driver and notices something fishy about Jim's statements of how he began rushing for the child before seeing or hearing the vehicle approaching. 

She finds that a mystery good Samaritan called Jim with blue eyes has performed 12 last-minute rescues in different newspapers during the previous three months.

Holly is drawn to Jim and his intense but chilly blue eyes — eyes that burn with a passionate, cold fire, hence the title of the tale.

Holly agrees to accompany this humble yet enigmatic savior on his next "mission." Unbeknownst to Jim, she rushes to the airport and joins a United Airlines DC-10 flight heading for Chicago. 

She goes to face him and discovers Jim's weird yet incredible abilities. Jim informs her that he has been sent by God to save a woman and a kid on the plane - he has no idea why God has selected these two in particular, but he does know that they must swap seats or they will perish in the awful plane accident of which he has seen a vision. 

Holly is impressed by Jim's notion that he possesses some mystical power bestowed upon him by God.

Holly takes a more skeptical approach, arguing how silly such notions are. She wonders why "God" would choose to save these two people while killing 151 other passengers, as Jim predicted. There must be much more deserving individuals on board, and why would God allow the plane to crash at all? Holly encourages Jim to do more than simply inform the couple to relocate, but to notify the pilot and maybe rescue everyone on board. 

Jim first resists, and he is adamant about not questioning his visions. He just informs Holly that God sends him and that he solely follows the instructions - anything else would be going against God's plan. 

Who else, he wonders, could be sending him visions to save lives just in time? Holly talks him down and assures him that there is no reason for Jim (or God) to let someone die in vain. 

The plane, however, is beyond repair and crashes, reducing the number of deaths from 151 to 47.

Holly is able to earn Jim's trust after the tragedy. They are drawn to each other, but Holly is intrigued by Jim's unusual visions. She intends to find out how, why, and who, just as any reporter would. 

However, the more she probes, the stranger things get. Almost all of Jim's childhood memories are gone, save for the fact that his parents died when he was nine at his grandparents' ranch. He just has hazy memories of his youth and becomes irritated when Holly asks him. 

She realizes that his odd skills are related to his childhood and the absence of memory from that time. For numerous nights, she hears him mumble in his sleep, "There is an Enemy. It is on its way. It's going to kill us all. It is unrelenting." 

She and Jim begin to have identical terrifying nightmares surrounding the old mill from his grandparents' ranch, and during one of these "nightmares," they are both fully conscious and fighting some eerie force coming at them from the walls and ceiling – needless to say, they are convinced the force behind it all is neither God nor benign.

Holly certainly thinks they must return to the ranch to locate the cause of everything, despite her terror of what they may discover. Jim is first hesitant, but as they get closer to the ranch, he becomes increasingly persuaded that the entity is something truly big and strong — something not of this world.

Once inside the scary tower chamber of the windmill, the alien emerges from the neighboring pond, first through noises similar to church bells and then through a captivating show of swirling colors and bursting lights. 

The creature then begins to materialize as a voice by magically using a pen and paper to make words appear. It introduces itself as THE FRIEND from ANOTHER WORLD. When asked why, it responds, "TO OBSERVE, STUDY, AND ASSIST MANKIND." 

Holly questions why it assaulted them the night before, to which THE FRIEND responds that it was the work of its opposite half, THE ENEMY. 

When queried about the bells and lights, it responds, "FOR DRAMA?" When Holly starts asking questions as to why certain individuals are selected but not many others, THE FRIEND reveals that someone will solve all deadly diseases, another will become a fine leader, someone else will become an incredible spiritual leader, and on and on. 

While Jim is overjoyed, Holly cannot trust the answers since they do not make logical sense and appear banal, fanciful, and infantile to her. 

While Jim is out of the room, Holly asks THE FRIEND probing questions about him. All of the responses are too predictable to accept, and it ultimately responds to her pestering with threats, and then, most surprisingly, with the words "I," "MY," and "ME." 

At that point, it is determined that Jim is the source of both THE FRIEND and THE ENEMY, that it is he, not God or some foreign entity, who is generating the nightmares. 

After Jim's parents died, he got infatuated with a novel about an extraterrestrial in a pond close to a windmill – so enthralled that the youngster never grew up until one day, an adult-in-body Jim moved away and began a purportedly regular life. 

Holly assists Jim in dealing with his past, and the two embark on a new life together.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Character Development, Great Read, Highly Recommend, Holly Thorne, Jim And Holly, Jim Ironheart, Koontz Books, Koontz Novels, Odd Thomas, Page Turner, Stephen King


Rating: 90/100
Recommended: 100/100 Yes.

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Phantoms (1998) (R)

The Servants Of Twilight (1991) (R)

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The Mask Summary

The Mask

Published: 1981
Author: Dean Koontz (Written as Owen West)
Genre: American, Family Life, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Literature, Romance, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

On a busy day, an amnesic blonde girl arrives in the midst of traffic. Carol and Paul, a married couple, are drawn to her and take her in, picturing her as the kid they never had.

Carol then begins to experience dreams involving terrible noises in the middle of the night, a bloodied visage in a mirror, and a razor-sharp ax.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Best Work, Character Development, Ever Read, Favorite Authors, Feel Like, Good Book, Great Read, Koontz Books, Loose Ends, Love Dean, Supernatural Elements


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Odd Interlude Summary

Dean Koontz, American, Fantasy, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Literature, Murder, Psychic, Romance, Suspense, Thriller

Odd Interlude

Published: 2012
Author: Dean Koontz
Genre: American, Fantasy, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Literature, Murder, Psychic, Romance, Suspense, Thriller
Book 4.1 of 7: Odd Thomas

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Harmony Corner, a beautiful roadside town nestled on a lonely stretch of the Pacific coast, has everything a tired traveler needs—a nice cafe, a convenient service station, a cluster of cottages... and the Harmony family farmhouse reigning over it all. 

When Odd Thomas and his companions settle for the night, they learn that there's more to this lonely refuge than meets the eye—and that there's something more terrifying than either life or death. A more detailed summary will be published as soon as I get the time.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Another Great, Forward To The Next, Fry Cook, Good Read, Harmony Corner, Looking Forward, Page Turner, Thomas Series


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You Are Destined to Be Together Forever Summary

Dean Koontz, Fantasy, Murder, Mystery, Paranormal, Romance, Science Fiction, Short Story, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller

You Are Destined to Be Together Forever

Published: 9, December 2014
Author: Dean Koontz
Genre: Fantasy, Murder, Mystery, Paranormal, Romance, Science Fiction, Short Story, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller
Book 6.1 of 7: Odd Thomas

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

This short novella returns to the central character's origins to examine the beginnings of his romance with Stormy Llewellyn

The spirit of Elvis returns here, as does another ghostly character who will lead the young couple into an adventure that will culminate in their obtaining the prophecy that they will spend forever with one another. Saint Odd, the series' final full-length novel, was scheduled to be released in January 2015.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Destined To Be Together, Final Book, Gypsy Mummy, Last Book, Looking Forward, Odd And Stormy, Quick Read, Short Story, Thomas Series, Together Forever


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The Taking Summary

Dean Koontz, Action, Adventure, Fiction, Ghost, Gothic, Horror, Occult, Psychological, Romance, Science Fiction, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller

The Taking

Published: 2004
Author: Dean Koontz
Genre: Action, Adventure, Fiction, Ghost, Gothic, Horror, Occult, Psychological, Romance, Science Fiction, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Molly Sloan awakens in the middle of the night in the midst of an unusually rapid heavy rainstorm. She leaves her husband Neil in bed, unable to sleep, and goes downstairs to work on a screenplay she is working on.

Coyotes from the adjacent woodland gather on her doorstep in huddles. She wonders what could have terrified such creatures into fleeing the safety of the deep forests and exposing themselves to human contact. 

She walks outdoors, disturbed, to stand among the wild beasts, and is terrified — not by the animals, but by the unusual, strangely glowing rain. She recognizes, instinctively, that the rain is dirty.

Molly and Neil scour the news for information once she returns home. They can only gather that the same phenomena are occurring all around the planet before all contact is lost. 

They decide to abandon their remote house, meeting with the people of a nearby little mountain town to prepare a resistance, despite the fact that they have no idea what they would be fighting against. 

The rain finally stops after ten hours of pouring. A heavy, gloomy fog has replaced it, obscuring everything and transforming trees and buildings into towering shadows. 

Molly and Neil are now in the local bar, where about 60 people have come with their pets and children. The occurrence is said to be the result of an extraterrestrial invasion.

Unusual sounds and lights are heard and observed. Strange fungi sprout in a local tavern's lavatory, and a terrifying fungus spreads on trees, lawns, buildings, and people alike. 

Huge things glide above the scared populace from time to time, and people feel as though they are entirely known by whatever or whoever fills these aerial ships - assuming the quiet, drifting objects are crafts of some type. 

Molly and Neil set off on a quest to rescue the town's youngsters, many of whom are trapped in their houses, accompanied by a stray dog named Virgil. Meanwhile, the tavern's patrons, divided into warring groups, battle the strange menace that has engulfed their town. 

Surprisingly, Virgil appears to be able to tell when and where particular youngsters are in danger. Later, it is discovered that other animals are directing rescue attempts to save other youngsters.

As they seek answers, the townsfolk come to the conclusion that they are under attack by extraterrestrial invaders who have arrived as an advanced group to reverse-terraform the Earth so that its changed atmosphere will support their alien body’s needs. 

However, while doing so, they will poison the planet's human inhabitants, who must die in order for the invaders to exist. 

Molly feels that the invaders are of the most malignant sort and that they seek nothing but devastation at all times. 

Even when they face the most horrifying and twisted animals on their quest, Molly and Neil are able to save 13 children with the assistance of Virgil and other animals after going through many tragedies. 

Molly is certain that the aliens permitted them to save the children in order to harvest them for some more heinous purpose; yet, a series of circumstances lead her to feel that there is still hope and that the children have been spared for a unique cause. 

After 36 hours of rain, mist, and darkness, a new rain falls, much to the satisfaction of the characters, and wipes away all the monsters, fungi, and sick alien presences on the planet.

Molly, Neil, and eight of the children they rescued had been living in a house for at least a year. Society has begun a sluggish process of restoration; the majority of survivors are children and those who saved them, as well as dogs and animals that assisted in the rescues. 

Molly is now a teacher, and Neil has returned to his church job. Most people don't talk about what happened, and the reasons for the aliens' departure are never mentioned. 

However, while the identity or origin of the invaders is never fully addressed, towards the conclusion of the novel, Molly discovers that the invaders were not aliens at all, but they had really lived through the biblical apocalypse and that the monsters were demons sent to Earth to exterminate mankind. 

Only a few would be saved, like on Noah's Ark, to rebuild a better world. Several facts in the story corroborate her opinion.

The novel concludes on a lighter note, with Molly resolving to write another book — this time for her soon-to-be-born son or daughter, rather than for publication. When Neil asks her what the book will be about, she responds, "Hope."


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Alien Invasion, Black Lake, Husband Neil, Koontz Books, Left Behind, Molly And Neil, Odd Thomas, Waste Of Time, Years Ago


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Saint Odd Summary

Dean Koontz, Fantasy, Fiction, Ghost, Literary, Mystery, Paranormal, Psychic, Romance, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller, Urban

Saint Odd

Published: 13, January 2015
Author: Dean Koontz
Genre: Fantasy, Fiction, Ghost, Literary, Mystery, Paranormal, Psychic, Romance, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller, Urban
Book 7 of 7: Odd Thomas

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Odd Thomas returns to Pico Mundo only to be attacked by surviving members of the demonic organization he encountered in earlier books. 

He survives the first attempt on his life by escaping a huge SUV as he rides the rural roads on a hefty motorbike. Odd goes off-road and lures the SUV's driver into driving into a steep gully, killing everybody inside as the SUV explodes. 

Odd initially flies to the mall where Stormy and 18 others were murdered, just evading three cultists who, coincidentally or with Odd's psychic attraction, are visiting the mall where the cult's members nearly killed hundreds. 

After meeting Mrs. Fischer, Odd rides his bike to a safe home maintained by the same group he aided in the last novel. 

The safe house is operated by an older couple who tell him they've been married for years and have only had "5 terrible days in all those years," according to the husband. His wife disagrees, adding, "There were six, you need to figure out where we're disagreeing." 

Odd sleeps in the house's guest room and his dreams of Pico Mundo are filled with glimpses of people, both recognizable and unknown, floating by him with angry looks. 

He realizes that the cult has gathered enough C4 to destroy a neighboring dam after reconciling with Chief Porter and author Ozzy Boone

Destroying the dam would flood the town partially, but not enough to inflict the damage and death he envisioned. When he goes to the dam, he experiences an epiphany after sighting coyotes.

Odd returns to the safe home to discover it under siege by the cultists, all of whom are killed by the caretakers. 

Mrs. Fischer and a "Cleaning Crew" come and make the safe home look as if no one has ever lived there, while Odd and Mrs. Fischer meet in her limo. 

He is then forced to engage in a bloody cat-and-mouse game with the fanatics. A paramilitary attack squad pursues him through an almond orchard, and when they can't find him, they start blowing up the orchard's structures. 

Using the explosions to his advantage, Odd catches two cultists discussing the ritual rape and slaughter of a little family that owns a property nearby. 

Odd kills the cultists and rushes to the home in time to save the family in the barn. Odd hides in the landscape and then enters the home, following the cultists when they make their entrance. 

Odd eventually kills all of the cult members, including a girl he describes as having an "innocent child's face." 

Odd receives a terrible knife wound from the female cultist before she dies, and then sees her spirit waiting for him. Odd ignores her, causing her to go into a poltergeist rage while Odd flees the house. 

Odd observes that the demons ("Bodachs") who had previously collected in preparation of violent occurrences are no longer present. He eventually deduces that the cult intends to spread a lethal strain of the rabies virus via hoax air blasts emerging from a funhouse in a visiting carnival. The Bodachs have not appeared because they are solely concerned with immediate violence and not with sickness. 

He is able to foil the scheme, but only at the expense of a fatal gunshot wound. He is reunited with his girlfriend Stormy Llewellyn after death, who educates him on what he will confront in the hereafter. 

His literary friend then discovers the manuscript of this book printing inexplicably on his laser printer.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Final Book, Fitting End, Fry Cook, Great Series, Last Book, Loose Ends, Pico Mundo, Sad To See, See It End, Sorry To See, Thomas Series, Together Forever


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Emma Summary

Emma Summary

Emma

Published: 23, December 1815

Author: Jane Austen

Genres: Classic, Comedy & Humor, Drama, European, Family Life, Fiction, Friendship, Historical, Literature, Regency, Romance, Rural Fiction, Small Town, Teen, Victorian, Young Adult


Check out the review of this book here:



Summary

Miss Taylor, Emma Woodhouse's former governess, has recently married Mr. Weston. Emma takes credit for their marriage after introducing them and thinks she enjoys matchmaking. Emma defies her sister's brother-in-law, Mr. Knightley, and pursues her new passion after going home to Hartfield with her father. She tries to pair Harriet Smith, her new acquaintance, with Mr. Elton, the town vicar.

Despite Harriet's liking for Robert Martin, a decent, educated, and well-spoken young farmer, Emma persuades her to decline his marriage proposal. Mr. Elton, a social climber, makes the mistake of thinking Emma loves him and proposes to her. He is enraged when Emma confesses she thought he was attached to Harriet since he considers Harriet to be socially inferior.

Mr. Elton travels to Bath after Emma rejects him and returns with a pompous, nouveau-riche wife, just as Mr. Knightley predicted. Harriet is crushed, and Emma is remorseful for deceiving her.

Mr. Weston's son, Frank Churchill, comes for a two-week visit and makes a lot of acquaintances. Frank was adopted by his affluent and controlling aunt and has only had a few chances to visit her. Mr. Knightley informs Emma that Frank has a superficial persona, despite being educated and entertaining.

Jane Fairfax also arrives to spend a few months with her aunt, Miss Bates, and grandmother, Mrs. Bates, before beginning a governess job owing to her family's financial predicament. Colonel Campbell, her father's friend, gave her a superb education when she was the same age as Emma.

Emma has kept herself apart from her because she admires Jane's brilliance and is irritated by everyone praising her, even Mrs. Weston and Mr. Knightley. Mrs. Elton, who is patronizing, takes Jane under her wing and promises to find her the ideal governess position before it is needed. Emma sympathizes with Jane's position.

Emma thinks that Jane and Colonel Campbell's new son-in-law, Mr. Dixon, are drawn to each other, which is why she arrived earlier than intended. She tells Frank, who met Jane and the Campbells at a vacation resort a year before, and he seems to agree with Emma.

Jane receives a piano from an unidentified source, which adds to her suspicions. Emma begins to fall in love with Frank, but it only lasts until his second visit. The Eltons are cruel to Harriet, culminating in Mr. Elton openly snubbing her at the Westons' gala in May. Mr. Knightley, who had hitherto avoided dancing, begs Harriet to dance gallantly.

Frank brings Harriet to Hartfield the day after the ball because she passed out following a nasty encounter with local gypsies. Harriet's thanks to Frank is misinterpreted by Emma as her love for him. Meanwhile, Mrs. Weston worries if Mr. Knightley has feelings for Jane, but Emma rejects the possibility.

Emma disagrees with Mr. Knightley when he thinks he sees a connection between Jane and Frank because Frank looks to be wooing her instead. Jane arrives late to a Donwell event in June, while Frank arrives late. The next day, Frank and Emma are joking about at Box Hill, a local picturesque area, when Emma casually attacks Miss Bates.

Emma feels embarrassed when Mr. Knightley chastises her for disrespecting Miss Bates. She sees Miss Bates the next day to make amends for her terrible behavior, impressing Mr. Knightley. Emma learns during the visit that Jane has taken a governess post from one of Mrs. Elton's friends. When Jane is unwell, she refuses to meet Emma or accept her presents.

Meanwhile, Frank has been visiting his aunt, who, unlike any other character in Austen's books, dies soon after his arrival. He and Jane had been secretly engaged since September, but Frank knew his aunt would be against the union.

Maintaining the concealment put a burden on the conscientious Jane, causing the pair to argue, resulting in Jane terminating the engagement. Frank's laid-back uncle gladly approves of the pairing. Emma is disappointed to learn that she was so incorrect as the engagement is made public.

Emma expects Harriet to be devastated by Frank's engagement, but she instead declares her love for Mr. Knightley, and while she recognizes the match is too unequal, Emma's support and Mr. Knightley's generosity have given her hope.

Emma is taken aback when she realizes she is in love with Mr. Knightley as well. Mr. Knightley returns to comfort Emma after the engagement of Frank and Jane, supposing her to be distraught. He proposes to her when she recognizes her folly, and she accepts. Harriet accepts Robert Martin's second proposal, and the two marry for the first time.

Frank and Jane pay a visit to the Westons, and Jane and Emma reconcile. They will marry after Frank's aunt's grieving time is through. Emma and Mr. Knightley get married before the end of November, with the promise of "perfect bliss."


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords:

Alan Cumming, Ann RadcliffeAnn Ward, Anya Taylor-Joy, Austen Books, Austen Criticized It In Northanger, Autumn De Wilde, Carey Mulligan, Catherine Morland, Classics Edition, Douglas McGrath, Drama, Emma Woodhouse, Even Though, Felicity Jones, Frank Churchill, General Tilney, Giles Foster, Gothic Romance, Gothic, Great Story, Gwyneth Paltrow, Handsome Clever, Harriet Smith, Henry Tilney, Jane Austen, Jane Fairfax, JJ Feild, John Thorpe, Johnny Flynn, Jon Jones, Josh O'Connor, Katharine Schlesinger, Kindle Edition, Literature, Mansfield Park, Miss Bates, Miss Taylor, Mrs Allen, Mrs Elton, Mysteries Of UdolphoNorthanger Abbey, Oxford World, Peter Firth, Pride And Prejudice, Robert Hardy, Romance, Sense And Sensibility, Toni Collette, World Classics, Worth Reading, Young Lady, Young Man


Rating: 90/100
Recommended: 95/100 Yes.

Buy the Kindle version here:


Free with free Audible trial:


The Complete Works of Jane Austen:


Emma. (2020) (13+):


Emma (1996) (PG):


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Northanger Abbey Summary

Northanger Abbey

Published: December 1817

Author: Jane Austen

Genres: Classic, Drama, Fiction, Historical, Literature, Regency, Romance, Victorian


Check out the review of this book here:



Summary

Catherine Morland, seventeen, is one of ten children of a rural pastor. Although she was a tomboy as a youngster, by the age of 17 she is "in preparation for a heroine" and enjoys reading Gothic books, particularly Ann Radcliffe's Mysteries of Udolpho.

Catherine is asked to join the Allens (her richer Fullerton neighbors) in visiting Bath and partaking in the city's winter season of balls, theatre, and other social joys. Soon after, she meets Henry Tilney, a charming young guy with whom she dances and converses. Mrs. Allen meets Mrs. Thorpe's daughter Isabella, a bright and provocative young lady, through Mrs. Allen's old school friend Mrs. Thorpe, and the two immediately become friends. Catherine's elder brother, James, is a friend of Mrs. Thorpe's son, John, at Oxford, where they are both students.

Catherine's connection with the Tilneys irritates the Thorpes, who correctly see Henry as a competition for Catherine's affections, despite Catherine's lack of interest in the crass John Thorpe. Catherine seeks to retain her ties with both the Thorpes and the Tilneys, despite John Thorpe's constant attempts to ruin her Tilney relationship. This causes multiple misunderstandings, forcing Catherine to explain herself to the Tilneys in an unpleasant situation.

Isabella and James decide to get married. James' father approves of the match and gives his son a rural parson's living of £400 per year, but they must wait two and a half years for him to get the benefice. Isabella is displeased, but she misrepresents her dissatisfaction to Catherine as being exclusively due to the delay, rather than the worth of the cash. 

Isabella starts flirting with Henry's older brother, Captain Tilney, right away. Catherine, who is innocent, is baffled by her friend's behavior, but Henry, who knows his brother's nature and habits, is all too aware of it.

Catherine is invited to stay with the Tilneys at Northanger Abbey for a few weeks. Catherine anticipates the monastery to be exotic and terrifying, based on her novel reading. Henry taunts her about it, as Northanger Abbey turns out to be delightful rather than Gothic. The mansion, however, has a mystery suite of rooms that no one ever visits; Catherine discovers that they were Mrs. Tilney's quarters, which she discovered nine years ago. Catherine concludes that General Tilney may have murdered her or imprisoned her in her chamber since he looks unaffected by her death.

Catherine realizes that her overactive imagination has led her misled since nothing about the apartments is weird or upsetting. Unfortunately, Henry interrogates her; he deduces and informs her that his father loved his wife in his own special manner and that her death really affected him. She walks away, weeping, fearful that she has completely lost Henry's respect. Catherine realizes how dumb she has been and concludes that, while novels are enjoyable, their content is unrelated to practical life. Henry never brings up the issue with her again.

James writes to tell her that he is not engaged with Isabella and that she is engaged to Captain Tilney instead. Henry and Eleanor Tilney have significant doubts about their brother's engagement to Isabella Thorpe. Catherine is deeply disappointed after discovering Isabella's dishonesty. A letter from Isabella herself later confirms the Tilney siblings' suspicions, demonstrating that Frederick Tilney was only flirting with Isabella. 

The General departs for London, and the mood at Northanger Abbey lightens and becomes more cheerful as a result of his departure. Catherine spends many pleasant days with Henry and Eleanor until the General arrives in a rage when Henry is out. He has Catherine leave early the next morning to return home, a surprising, unfriendly, and dangerous decision that compels Catherine to make the 70-mile (110-kilometer) trek alone.

Catherine is bored and miserable at home. Henry unexpectedly makes a visit and explains what has transpired. General Tilney had mistakenly considered her to be extremely wealthy as the Allens' potential heiress, and hence a good match for Henry, based on John Thorpe's disinformation. In London, General Tilney came upon Thorpe again; who, enraged and spiteful by Catherine's rejection of his half-made marriage proposal, claimed that she was on the verge of starvation. 

Enraged, General Tilney came home to evict Catherine (again, based on John Thorpe's disinformation). When Henry returned to Northanger, his father told him what had happened and prohibited him from thinking about Catherine ever again. When Henry discovers how she was handled, he defies his father and tells Catherine that despite his father's displeasure, he still wants to marry her. Catherine is overjoyed, but when Henry asks her parents for their blessing, they inform the young couple that ultimate permission would only come if General Tilney agrees.

General Tilney eventually agrees since Eleanor has married a wealthy and titled man, and he realizes that the Morlands, while not affluent, are far from poor.


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Rating: 85/100
Recommended: 90/100 Yes.

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The Mysteries of Udolpho Summary

The Mysteries of Udolpho Summary
The Mysteries of Udolpho

Published: 8, May 1794

Author: Ann Ward Radcliffe

Genres: 80/100, Adventure, Classic, Education, Fiction, Gothic, History, Horror, Literary, Literature, Mystery, Romance, Supernatural


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The Mysteries of Udolpho is a classic Gothic tale, full of physical and psychological terrors such as lonely decaying castles, supposedly supernatural happenings, a brooding, plotting villain, and a persecuted heroine.

Radcliffe added extended descriptions of exotic landscapes in the Pyrenees and Apennines, as well as Venice, none of which she had visited, to which modern editors point out that only about a third of the novel takes place in the titular Gothic castle, and that the tone and style of the work vary significantly between sections. She depended on travel guides for specifics, which resulted in various inaccuracies.

The story, set in southern France and northern Italy in 1584, follows Emily St. Aubert, a young French woman orphaned by her father's death. Signor Montoni, an Italian brigand who has married her aunt and guardian Madame Cheron, has her imprisoned at Castle Udolpho. Emily's relationship with the dashing Valancourt is thwarted by him and others. Emily also looks into her father's relationship with the Marchioness de Villeroi and how it relates to Castle Udolpho.

Emily St. Aubert is the sole child of a wealthy rural family on the verge of bankruptcy. Emily and her father have a very strong relationship based on their common love of nature. Following her mother's death from sickness, they become further closer. She travels with him from their home Gascony to the Mediterranean coast of Roussillon, passing through several rugged regions. During their travels, they meet Valancourt, a dashing young man who has a mysterious connection with nature. Emily and Valancourt develop feelings for one another.

Emily's father passes away after a lengthy illness. Emily, who is now orphaned, is forced to live with her aunt, Madame Cheron, who has no interest in Emily's hobbies and displays no compassion for her. Her aunt marries Montoni, a shady Italian aristocrat. He wants to marry Emily's friend, Count Morano and attempts to force him on her. Montoni invites Emily and her aunt to his secluded castle of Udolpho after finding Morano is virtually demolished.

Emily is concerned that she has lost Valancourt for good. Morano looks for Emily and attempts to smuggle her away from Udolpho in the dark, but Emily's heart belongs to Valancourt, and she refuses. Montoni discovers Morano's attempted escape and wounds him before chasing him away. Montoni threatens his wife with violence in the months following, attempting to get her to sign up her possessions in Toulouse, which would otherwise pass to Emily upon his wife's death. Madame Cheron dies of a serious illness brought on by her husband's harshness without renouncing her inheritance.

In the castle, many terrifying yet fortuitous incidents occur, but Emily tries to leave with the assistance of a hidden lover, Du Pont, who is also a prisoner there, and the servants Annette and Ludovico. When Emily returns to her aunt's house, she discovers that Valancourt has fled to Paris and squandered his fortune. Despite this, she gains control of the land and is eventually reunited with Valancourt.


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Rating: 80/100
Recommended: 90/100 Yes.

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The Monk Summary

The Monk Summary

The Monk

Published: 1796

Author: Mathew Lewis

Genres: 95/100, Adult, Classic, Drama, Fantasy, Fiction, Gothic, Horror, Literature, Magic, Romance, Suspense


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Summary

There are two primary plotlines in The Monk. The first is about the monk Ambrosio's corruption and demise, as well as his contacts with the demon-in-disguise Matilda and the virtuous virgin Antonia. The relationship between Raymond and the nun Agnes is the focus of the subplot. The story also features numerous extensive accounts of people with Gothic backstories who share their stories at various moments.

Antonia, who has just arrived in Madrid, goes to hear a sermon by Ambrosio, who was abandoned at the monastery as a child and is now a well-known monk. She meets Lorenzo, who is smitten by her. Lorenzo pays a visit to his sister Agnes, who is a nun at the convent nearby. He notices someone bringing a letter from Raymond to Agnes. Nuns, including Agnes, later pay Ambrosio a visit for confession. When Agnes admits to being pregnant with Raymond's kid, Ambrosio sends her to her abbey's Prioress for punishment.

Among the monks, Ambrosio's closest buddy exposes himself to be a woman named Matilda, who disguised herself to be near Ambrosio. Ambrosio is bitten by a snake while selecting a rose for her and becomes fatally ill. Matilda looks after him. Matilda explains that she swallowed the poison from Ambrosio's wound and is now dying herself as he recovers. Matilda asks him to make love to her right before she dies, and he gives in to the temptation.

Raymond's connection with his sister Agnes is brought up by Lorenzo. Raymond recounts their lengthy relationship together. Raymond was traveling across Germany when he was stuck in a home owned by a robber who kills and robs travelers due to a carriage mishap. Raymond avoided being slain thanks to a warning from the bandit's wife and escaped with a Baroness who was also staying at the cottage. After that, when visiting the Baroness, Raymond fell in love with her niece Agnes. The Baroness, on the other hand, was madly in love with Raymond, and when he turned down her overtures, she made plans to transfer Agnes to a convent.

Raymond and Agnes decided to marry on the spur of the moment. Agnes intended to dress up as the Bleeding Nun, a ghost that haunts the castle and leaves at midnight. Raymond had an unintentional elopement with the real-life spirit of the real-life Bleeding Nun. The Wandering Jew was needed to help exorcise the ghost of the Bleeding Nun. When he was released, he went to the monastery and met Agnes. He seduced Agnes there. She begged him to help her flee when she found out she was pregnant.

Lorenzo offers to assist Raymond in eloping with Agnes when Raymond concludes his narrative. He obtains a papal bull that frees Agnes from her vows as a nun, allowing her to marry Raymond. When he brings it to the Prioress, however, she informs Lorenzo that Agnes had died a few days previously. Lorenzo doesn't believe it, but Agnes hasn't been heard from in over two months. Meanwhile, Lorenzo has obtained his family's approval for his marriage to Antonia.

Matilda heals herself of the poison by performing a ceremony at the graveyard after having sex with Ambrosio. She and Ambrosio remain secret lovers, but Ambrosio has had enough of her. When Ambrosio first meets Antonia, he is immediately drawn to her. He begins paying regular visits to Antonia's mother, Elvira, in the hopes of seducing Antonia. Ambrosio hugs Antonia on a visit, but she refuses. Elvira greets him and urges him to go. Matilda informs Ambrosio that she can assist him in obtaining Antonia's charms, in the same manner, she was cured of the poison: through witchcraft.

Ambrosio is in a state of shock. He accepts, though, when she shows him a magical mirror in which Antonia is swimming. Matilda and Ambrosio return to the cemetery, where Matilda summons Lucifer, a youthful and attractive figure. He provides Matilda with a magical myrtle twig that allows Ambrosio to access any door and satisfy his passion for Antonia without her realizing who is the ravisher. Ambrosio accepts without selling himself to the devil, he believes.

Raymond's servant disguises himself as a beggar and visits the monastery in an attempt to locate Agnes. Mother St. Ursula hands him a basket of goodies as he walks away, hiding a message instructing Raymond to have the cardinal arrest both Mother St. Ursula and the Prioress for Agnes' murder.

Ambrosio enters Antonia's bedroom with the magical bough. He is about to rape her when Elvira arrives and confronts him. Ambrosio kills Elvira in a frenzy and returns to the convent, dissatisfied with his passion and frightened that he has now become a murderer. Antonia, bereaved by her mother's death, encounters her mother's spirit. Antonia faints from fear and is discovered by her landlady, who summons Ambrosio for assistance. Matilda assists Ambrosio in obtaining a mixture that would place Antonia in a deathlike stupor. Ambrosio delivers the poison while caring for Antonia and Antonia seems to die.

Lorenzo returns to Madrid, accompanied by an Inquisition official. The Prioress is detained during a procession honoring Saint Clare. Agnes' death at the hands of the sisters is publicly described by Mother St. Ursula. The parade throng turns into a raging mob when they learn that the Prioress is a murderer. They assassinate the Prioress, assault other nuns, and set fire to the monastery. Lorenzo discovers a group of nuns and a young woman called Virginia sheltering in the crypt among the chaos.

Lorenzo finds Agnes alive and carrying the lifeless body of the infant she had given birth to while abandoned in the dungeon. Lorenzo saves Agnes and the other nuns from the vault with Virginia's aid. Meanwhile, in the crypt, Antonia awakens from her drugged slumber, and Ambrosio rapes her. After that, he's just as disgusted with Antonia as he was with Matilda, the woman who came to warn him about the incident. In an attempt to flee, Ambrosio murders Antonia.

Virginia pays Lorenzo a visit when he is grieving, and the two become closer. Agnes goes into great detail about her dreadful time in the prison. Agnes and Raymond marry, and the couple goes with Lorenzo and Virginia from Madrid to Raymond's castle, where they subsequently marry.

The Inquisition summons Ambrosio and Matilda to appear before it. Matilda admits her guilt and is condemned to death by fire. She sells her soul to the devil in return for her freedom and life before the punishment is carried out. Ambrosio is tormented because he insists on his innocence. Matilda appears to him and advises him to surrender his soul to Satan. Ambrosio protests his innocence again, but after being tortured, he admits to rape, murder, and magic, and is sentenced to death by fire.

Ambrosio, in desperation, requests Lucifer to spare his life, but he is told that it would cost him his soul. Ambrosio is hesitant to give up hope of God's forgiveness, but Lucifer assures him that it isn't possible. Ambrosio finally agrees to the contract after considerable deliberation. Lucifer takes him out of his dungeon and into the forest. Lucifer reveals that Elvira was his mother, making Antonia his sister, and adding incest to his list of sins. Ambrosio then discovers that he accepted Lucifer's offer only minutes before being pardoned.

Lucifer says that gaining Ambrosio's soul has been his objective for a long time, and Matilda was a demon assisting him. Lucifer then points out a flaw in Ambrosio's deal: Ambrosio simply wanted to be released from his confinement. Lucifer has completed his half of the contract and is now free to murder Ambrosio and take his soul. He lifts Ambrosio into the air and lands him on the cliffs below. Ambrosio endures for six days before dying alone and eternally cursed.


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Rating: 95/100
Recommended: 100/100 Yes.

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The Time Traveler's Wife Summary

The Time Traveler's Wife

The Time Traveler's Wife

Published: 2003

Author: Audrey Niffenegger
Genres: Adult, Fiction, Literary, Romance, Science Fiction, Time Travel


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Summary

The story recounts the lives of Henry DeTamble, a librarian at Chicago's Newberry Library, and his wife, Clare Anne Abshire, a paper sculpture artist, through alternate first-person narratives. Henry has a rare inherited ailment known as Chrono-Impairment. Because of his condition, Henry unwittingly travels across time. Clare, 20, encounters 28-year-old Henry at the Newberry Library in 1991, and despite the fact that she has known him for most of her life; he has never seen her before.

At the age of five, Henry begins time travel, going ahead and backward in his own history. He has no control over when he vanishes, where he travels, or how long his journeys will endure. His vacation locations, on the other hand, are linked to his subconscious—he frequently visits places and periods from his own past. Henry's time travel is triggered by certain situations, such as stress, and he often goes running to be calm and in the present.

In the future, he looks for medications that might help him regulate his time travel. He also consults with Dr. Kendrick, a geneticist. Henry can't carry anything with him into the future or the past, thus he always comes nude and has to fend for himself in terms of clothes, shelter, and food. Lock-picking, self-defense, and pick-pocketing are among the survival skills he has acquired. He learns a lot of this from previous incarnations of himself.

Henry begins to travel to Clare's infancy and adolescence in South Haven, Michigan, beginning in 1977 when she is just six years old when their timelines "naturally" overlap at the library—their first encounter in his chronology. Henry provides Clare a list of the dates he will appear on one of his early trips (from Clare's perspective), which she puts in a notebook so she would remember to supply him with clothing and food when he arrives.

Henry mistakenly mentions that they will marry in the future during another visit. They form a tight bond over time. Henry assists Clare in frightening and humiliating a boy who has harmed her. In 1989, on Clare's eighteenth birthday, Henry pays her a visit, during which they make love for the first time. After that, they are separated for two years until they reunite in the library.

Clare and Henry marry in the end. Clare has problems carrying a pregnancy to term soon after their marriage, owing to the genetic defect Henry is likely passing on to the baby. After six miscarriages, Henry decides to get a vasectomy to spare Clare any more suffering. However, a past-incarnation of Henry pays Clare a visit one night and the two make love; she later gives birth to a daughter called Alba.

Alba, like Henry, possesses Chrono-Impairment, although she has some control over where she goes through time. Henry travels to the future and meets his ten-year-old daughter on a school field trip before she is born. Unfortunately, he learns during this journey that he will die when Alba is five years old.

Henry time travels to a Chicago parking garage on a chilly winter night when he is 43, during what is to be his final year of life when he is unable to find refuge. His feet are amputated when he returns to the present day as a result of the hypothermia and frostbite he gets while sleeping in the parking garage. Henry and Clare both know that if he doesn't have the capacity to escape when he time travels, he'll die within the next several leaps. Henry time travels into the Michigan woods in 1984 on New Year's Eve 2006 and is inadvertently shot by Clare's brother, a situation foretold previously in the novel. In Clare's embrace, Henry returns to the present day and dies.

Henry's death has left Clare saddened. She subsequently discovers a note from Henry, in which he asks her to "stop waiting" for him while also describing a time in the future when she will see him again. When Clare is 82 years old and Henry is 43, the couple reunites. The novel's last scene has Clare, who is well into her senior years, waiting for Henry as she has done for much of her life.


Rating: 100/100
Recommended: 100/100 Yes.

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The Time Traveler's Wife 2009 (PG-13):


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