poliphilo: (Default)
poliphilo ([personal profile] poliphilo) wrote2022-09-30 08:15 am

The Haunted Hotel: Wilkie Collins

 Wilkie Collins wrote two books that are acknowledged classics and two more that should be. The rest of his oeuvre- which is considerable- has a an unsettled status. Much of it remains in print but no-one talks about undiscovered masterpieces. He is uneven. He can be dreary and he can be druggy- and the Haunted Hotel is sometimes one and sometimes the other. It has a virtuous heroine who interests us as little as she interests him- and a villainess who is fun. There's an ingenious plot and a haunting and a great deal of oddity, randomness and skipping from mood to mood. Collins was not a well man and took great quantities of laudanum, and sometimes he's writing to earn a living- and inspiration be hanged- then suddenly his imagination takes wing. You have to tolerate a lot of bad writing to get to the good bits. All in all The Haunted Hotel has the qualities of a fever dream- dreadfully boring and then suddenly lapel-grabbing. It's crummy, it's weird, it's wonderful. 
lokbiiviing: (Default)

[personal profile] lokbiiviing 2022-10-02 06:06 am (UTC)(link)
"The Woman in White" made a huge impression on me when I was a child. I did wonder a little bit about the female protagonist who kept saying that she is "only a woman" so much, that even the male protagonist found it odd. But then, that was what all the heroine's in old stories said, so I didn't dwell on it too much.