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The Haunted Woman

Gelesen von Phil Benson

(4,214 Sterne; 35 Bewertungen)

Isabel Loment is engaged to the affectionate, but unemotional, Marshall Stokes. House-hunting for her aunt, she comes to Runhill Court, an ancient home with a mysterious staircase that is only visible to those with eyes to see it. Ascending the staircase, she meets Henry Judge, the owner of Runhill Court, and a passionate relationship develops, which neither can recall once they have descended the staircase and returned to the everyday world. The Haunted Woman was Lindsay's attempt to write a more commercial novel than its fantasy predecessor, A Voyage to Arcturus. Though neither book was successful in its day, both became cult classics. The Haunted Woman was reprinted as the fourth volume of the celebrated Newcastle Forgotten Fantasy Library. (Phil Benson) (6 hr 37 min)

Chapters

Marshall returns from America

28:10

Read by Phil Benson

The visit to Runhill Court

22:58

Read by Phil Benson

In the upstairs corridor

18:43

Read by Phil Benson

The legend of Ulf's Tower

18:05

Read by Phil Benson

Isbel sees herself

23:11

Read by Phil Benson

Judge appears on the scene

15:23

Read by Phil Benson

The dinner-party

18:07

Read by Phil Benson

The picnic

18:31

Read by Phil Benson

What happened in the second room

22:21

Read by Phil Benson

Blanche speaks out

18:04

Read by Phil Benson

Isbel visits Worthing

19:06

Read by Phil Benson

Mrs. Richborough's errand

19:01

Read by Phil Benson

The lunch at the Metropole

16:26

Read by Phil Benson

In the second chamber again

26:23

Read by Phil Benson

The music of spring

13:35

Read by Phil Benson

The musician departs

16:01

Read by Phil Benson

In the twilight

20:40

Read by Phil Benson

A catastrophe

21:02

Read by Phil Benson

The flash of day

20:29

Read by Phil Benson

Marshall's journey

20:44

Read by Phil Benson

Bewertungen

20th century Brighton meets 7th century Saxony

(4 Sterne)

This is an eerie "fantasy/gothic romance". The author creates a tangible air of suspense and mystery by the juxtaposition of the prosaic, with the fantastical. In this story, the house (not the characters) is the main protagonist. The legend has it, that the original owner and his house were punished by the trolls for building on their sacred land. It is this "curse", which makes the house unusual, creepy, and not of this earth. Anyone who enjoys F&SF, will find this well worth reading. I would have given this book five stars, if I had not wished for a different ending. However, I concede that other people will probably find the authors ending quite satisfying. Additionally, this British fantasy is enhanced by the British accent of the reader, who does a really good job of narration.

Exquisite Storytelling!

(5 Sterne)

The book is not your typical "haunted house" tale. It’s a gripping look into the rather uncertain friendship of two people constrained by the social mores of the time. Set in post-Great War England there is an otherworldly feel to the story that promises more and it delivers grandly. The Haunted Woman is beautiful at times and often exquisitely so. Isabel and Judge are inextricably drawn to each other can the secret room guide them to a passion they dare not even imagine? Phil Benson narrates the story flawlessly as usual. Mr. Benson was born to read this fascinating tale!

The Haunted Woman

(5 Sterne)

A little gem. Great psychological depth and a pleasing non sentimental ending. The extra dimensional stuff nicely underplayed. And Isbel’s unfolding and self discovery well handled. excellent reading performance. Don’t miss this!

Good story

(4,5 Sterne)

I very much enjoyed the storu, but as several other reviewers have written, I was disappointed by the ending.

Very enthralling

(5 Sterne)

Very well read. Classic setting in an old house . Very Victorian setting and characters.

(5 Sterne)

Good Gothic read with excellent reader but ending didn't answer all the questions the story presented

good title

(3,5 Sterne)

but why did it end so abruptly?

very good reader.

(3 Sterne)

yep! the story does feel incomplete.