The House of the Seven Gables
Books | Fiction / Classics
3.9
(93)
Nathaniel Hawthorne
In the final years of the seventeenth century in a small New England town, the venerable Colonel Pyncheon decides to erect a ponderously oak-framed and spacious family mansion. It occupies the spot where Matthew Maule, `an obscure man', had lived in a log hut, until his execution for witchcraft. From the scaffold, Maule points his finger at the presiding Colonel and cries `God will give him blood to drink!' The fate of Colonel Pyncheon exerts a heavy influence on his descendants in the crumbling mansion for the next century and a half. Hawthorne called his novel a `Romance', drawing on the Gothic tradition which embraced and exploited the thrills of the supernatural. Unlike The Scarlet Letter, with its unrelentingly dark view of human nature and guilt, Hawthorne sought to write `a more natural and healthy product of my mind', a story which would show guilt to be a trick of the imagination. The tension between fantasy and a new realism underpins the novel's descriptive virtuosity. ABOUT THE SERIES: For over 100 years Oxford World's Classics has made available the widest range of literature from around the globe. Each affordable volume reflects Oxford's commitment to scholarship, providing the most accurate text plus a wealth of other valuable features, including expert introductions by leading authorities, helpful notes to clarify the text, up-to-date bibliographies for further study, and much more.
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Author
Nathaniel Hawthorne
Pages
368
Publisher
OUP Oxford
Published Date
1998-05-07
ISBN
0191611182 9780191611186
Community ReviewsSee all
"Honestly probably wouldn’t have even bothered to rate this two stars if it hadn’t been for the fact I had the wonderful opportunity last month to visit the “real” House of the Seven Gables. In an example of life imitates art, the book was so wildly popular that by the late 19th/early 20th century, the owner updated the house to more accurately reflect what was in the book. It was a tourist attraction (think movie filming sites in today’s world) whose proceeds funded education programs for immigrants, and they still do that today! If you have the chance to visit Salem, I highly recommend the tour (Nina was our guide and she was incredible), since it still does important work that’s needed.<br/><br/>That being said, this was pretty terrible, in a hilarious kind of way. I mostly listened to it as a sleep story because it kept putting to sleep, and then I would skim what I missed. Sometimes I would wake up snd think, “there was no way that happened,” and it totally did. It read like a fever dream, and I don’t mean that as a compliment (is that ever a compliment? I’m not sure).<br/><br/>Still, glad I read it (I got some great sleep), and definitely recommend learning more about the house than reading the story."
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Allie Peduto
"I've visited salem MA a ton and always stop at the house of the seven gables. They used to do an interpretation of the book with live actors which I adored as a child. I've also taken the historical house tour and garden tour. It's so lovely to be able to imagine the location so vividly and to know that I've stood in the exact places that are spoken of. It gives me chills. I highly recommend this one to read after "the crucible"."
"Dark and strange, but also boring and unbelievable. I'm not sure whether the characters are meant to be inmates in an asylum or just violently repressed New Englanders. The writing is quite old-fashioned and Hawthorne doesn't hesitate to throw in rare (and antiquated!) vocabulary - I was looking up a word every few pages. I don't understand why this work is so famous."