Pharos, the Egyptian
Uitgelicht
|
11,30 |
Naar shop
|
|
11,30 |
Naar shop
|
|
11,30 |
Naar shop
|
Beschrijving
Bol
Pharos, the Egyptian is a fin-de-siècle Gothic romance of mesmerism, contagion, and imperial unease, in which the painter Cyril Forrester is drawn under the baleful influence of the ancient and enigmatic Pharos. Moving from London drawing rooms to Egypt and across plague-haunted Europe, the novel combines sensation fiction, occult fantasy, and adventure narrative. Its ornate, suspenseful style reflects late-Victorian fascinations with Egyptology, degeneration, hypnotic power, and the return of repressed antiquity. Guy Boothby, the Australian-born novelist and traveller, brought to his fiction a cosmopolitan imagination shaped by colonial mobility and popular serial culture. Best known for the Dr Nikola stories, he specialised in charismatic villains, exotic settings, and plots of occult conspiracy. Pharos, the Egyptian clearly emerges from these interests, as well as from the period's Egyptomania following archaeological discoveries and Britain's political presence in Egypt. Readers interested in Victorian Gothic, imperial adventure, and supernatural fiction will find this novel a revealing and entertaining work. It is especially valuable for those who want to understand how late nineteenth-century popular literature transformed archaeological wonder into psychological terror and imperial anxiety.
Pharos, the Egyptian is a fin-de-siècle Gothic romance of mesmerism, contagion, and imperial unease, in which the painter Cyril Forrester is drawn under the baleful influence of the ancient and enigmatic Pharos. Moving from London drawing rooms to Egypt and across plague-haunted Europe, the novel combines sensation fiction, occult fantasy, and adventure narrative. Its ornate, suspenseful style reflects late-Victorian fascinations with Egyptology, degeneration, hypnotic power, and the return of repressed antiquity. Guy Boothby, the Australian-born novelist and traveller, brought to his fiction a cosmopolitan imagination shaped by colonial mobility and popular serial culture. Best known for the Dr Nikola stories, he specialised in charismatic villains, exotic settings, and plots of occult conspiracy. Pharos, the Egyptian clearly emerges from these interests, as well as from the period's Egyptomania following archaeological discoveries and Britain's political presence in Egypt. Readers interested in Victorian Gothic, imperial adventure, and supernatural fiction will find this novel a revealing and entertaining work. It is especially valuable for those who want to understand how late nineteenth-century popular literature transformed archaeological wonder into psychological terror and imperial anxiety.
AmazonPagina's: 148, Paperback, Sharp Ink