
In this new edition Nick Groom examines the reasons for its extraordinary impact and the Gothic culture from which it sprang. Chilling coincidences, ghostly visitations, arcane revelations, and violent combat combine in a heady mix that terrified the novel's first readers. The virgin Isabella flees through a castle riddled with secret passages. After the grotesque death of his only son, Conrad, on his wedding day, Manfred determines to marry the bride-to-be. Professing to be a translation of a mysterious Italian tale from the darkest Middle Ages, the novel tells of Manfred, prince of Otranto, whose fear of an ancient prophecy sets him on a course of destruction. It inaugurated a literary genre that will be forever associated with the effects that Walpole pioneered. The Castle of Otranto (1764) is the first supernatural English novel and one of the most influential works of Gothic fiction. 'Look, my lord! See heaven itself declares against your impious intentions!'


Up-to-date bibliography and notes, drawing on the latest scholarship.Nick Groom's wide-ranging introduction explores the novel's Gothic context in the cultural movement that affected political and religious thinking before Walpole developed it as a literary style, helping to explain the novel's impact on contemporaries, its importance, and Walpole's pioneering innovations.A new edition of one of the earliest and most influential Gothic novels, the best introduction to the work that inaugurated a literary genre.


Oxford Research Encyclopedias: Global Public HealthĮdited by Nick Groom Oxford World's Classics.The European Society of Cardiology Series.Oxford Commentaries on International Law.
