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Pippin's Journal
Pippin's Journal | Rohan O'Grady
2 posts | 1 read | 2 to read
"Slowly, and not without a certain inexplicable feeling of foreboding, I limped up the weed-grown gravel path to the door of Cliff House?..." John Montrolfe, malformed and malevolent, the latest inheritor of the family curse, has come to England to claim his ancestral inheritance. He is grudgingly admitted to the Gothic mansion by a toothless old crone, and night after night his dreams are haunted by the phantom image of a beautiful young maiden. When he reaches out to touch the girl, the spectre's head falls grotesquely to one side and she vanishes as he awakes in horror.Montrolfe happens upon a secret drawer containing an old journal, written by the girl whose ghost has haunted him. In its pages a strange and horrible story unfolds, a tale of murder and buried treasure, a story that will finally reveal young Pippin's terrible fate and the origin of the Curse of the Montrolfes ...A spellbinding Gothic page-turner, Rohan O'Grady's Pippin's Journal (1962) received rave reviews on its initial publication and returns to print at last to enchant and terrify a new generation of readers."A story that should be read at a sitting, preferably when the wind whistles like a demon around the house and curtains are drawn against rain-splashed windows ... O'Grady writes in the tradition of the Gothic novelists and the story she tells might have been written by Edgar Allan Poe or a Bront ... Sheer reading enjoyment." - Pittsburgh Press"An engaging tale of horror." - New York Herald Tribune"There is a lurid fascination about the yarn, which instills a blood-chilling impatience to learn what happens next." - Chicago Tribune"Elegance and sinister poetry ... O'Grady manages the romantic macabre with dancing gusto [and] moves naturally in the language and atmosphere of the eighteenth century of her ghosts." - Daily Herald (London)"Who could resist the pursuit of the Montrolfe curse? ... [T]ruly in the spirit and tradition of Otranto." - Baltimore Sun"A natural, well-wrought, well-written shocker." - Buffalo News
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review
Bookwomble
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Pickpick

I've seen this shelved as a children's book, but it really, really isn't, unless you're ok with exposing your kids to themes of sexual threat, murder and execution (I'd say no, personally). As an adult book, it is tense and gripping for the most part, and I was drawn into the story, which takes place in both the author's present ('60s), and the 1700s. Gorey was a good pick for illustrator, given his penchant for literary child endangerment. 4⭐

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Bookwomble
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I remembered this little treasure was lying unread on a shelf. It's a first British edition, 1964, illustrated by Edward Gorey 😊
I'm about a third of the way through, and it's a wonderful melange of themes: a gothic mansion, a ghostly maiden, a found journal with a tale of hidden loot and cutthroat thieves, in a Jamaica Inn meets the opening of Treasure Island setting. I'm not sure what direction it's going in, but I'm enjoying the finding out!

batsy This wonderful description had definitely piqued my interest! 2y
Bookwomble @batsy It's also been published as "The Curse of the Montrolfes" and "The Master of Montrolfe Hall", if you were to look for it ? 2y
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