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The Legend of Sleepy Hollow and Other Macabre Tales

door Washington Irving

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872310,210 (3.5)6
Horror rides astride a shadowy steed and fantastic beings haunt daylit settings in The Legend of Sleepy Hollow & Other Macabre Tales, a collection of the best weird fiction of Washington Irving. Blending sly humor with supernatural thrills, these tales are among the best loved of all American literature. In the thirteen stories gathered for this volume, Irving evokes the colorful landscapes of his Hudson Valley hometown, and conjures characters and creatures from its historical past for a unique kind of weird tale that speaks directly to America's experience as a fledgling nation fashioning its own folk heritage. Selections include: "Rip Van Winkle"--When Rip bowls ninepins with the strange little men of the Kaatskills, he has no idea how high the stakes of the game will be. "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow"--The Headless Horseman who haunts the Hudson River Valley finds his perfect victim in Ichabod Crane, a man as gullibly superstitious as he is book-learned. "The Adventure of the German Student"--How could the scholar know that the beautiful woman he rescued from the Reign of Terror was beyond saving in any mortal sense?  "The Devil and Tom Walker"--When the Devil steers Tom Walker to the treasure of Captain Kidd, the mean-spirited miser uses his ill-gotten gains to ruin many a fellow countryman. "Guests of Gibbet Island"--The tipsy pirate boldly offered to host his dead comrades at his home, never imagining that they actually would take him up on it. This volume includes several of Irving's fanciful retellings of classic continental folktales and legends. As colorful and imaginative as any of his American tales, they reveal Irving to have been one of the most creative writers to have bridged the European and American gothic traditions.… (meer)
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Toon 2 van 2
I liked the book. The faves are all there. "Rip Van Winkle", "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow". A few I had never heard of before. Good stuff. Glad I read it. ( )
  Arkrayder | Apr 22, 2016 |
Washington Irving’s famous story, “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow”, both anchors and outshines all of the other stories in this collection. Everyone knows the story of the headless horseman. But what is surprising here is the ambiguity in explanation in Irving’s story. Is the headless horseman a real demon, or is Ichabod Crane the brunt of a rival suitor’s frightening practical joke?

In many of the other ‘macabre’ tales collected here, Irving strikes the same ambiguous tone, falling short of embracing the supernatural. He leaves just enough of a possibility that the explanation for the odd events is an overactive imagination or a misunderstanding. For instance, in “The Adventure of the Mysterious Picture”, the narrator reveals that the host of a ghost-telling party had purposefully planted a seed in the mind of the guests to see how many of them could work themselves into a frightened frenzy. And in “The Spectre Bridegroom”, the ‘ghost’ is a man who purposely holds himself out as a dead man in order to gain access to a young lady.

Besides “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow”, my favorite story was “The Adventure of the German Student”. In this tale, the ambiguity in the telling of the story is whether the young German student is of sound mind and body, given a great deal of isolation and depression, when he brings home a bride who has literally just lost her head.

Well over half of the ‘macabre’ tales are really pirate or swashbuckling tales. And while there is always a good deal of the supernatural with pirates, these stories are not as much fun as the darker, more gothic ones.

Bottom Line: A fun collection of ghost and odd tales, though fans of the pirate genre will be happy to find over half the collection devoted to buried treasure and the like.

3 ½ bones!!!! ( )
  blackdogbooks | Sep 25, 2011 |
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Horror rides astride a shadowy steed and fantastic beings haunt daylit settings in The Legend of Sleepy Hollow & Other Macabre Tales, a collection of the best weird fiction of Washington Irving. Blending sly humor with supernatural thrills, these tales are among the best loved of all American literature. In the thirteen stories gathered for this volume, Irving evokes the colorful landscapes of his Hudson Valley hometown, and conjures characters and creatures from its historical past for a unique kind of weird tale that speaks directly to America's experience as a fledgling nation fashioning its own folk heritage. Selections include: "Rip Van Winkle"--When Rip bowls ninepins with the strange little men of the Kaatskills, he has no idea how high the stakes of the game will be. "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow"--The Headless Horseman who haunts the Hudson River Valley finds his perfect victim in Ichabod Crane, a man as gullibly superstitious as he is book-learned. "The Adventure of the German Student"--How could the scholar know that the beautiful woman he rescued from the Reign of Terror was beyond saving in any mortal sense?  "The Devil and Tom Walker"--When the Devil steers Tom Walker to the treasure of Captain Kidd, the mean-spirited miser uses his ill-gotten gains to ruin many a fellow countryman. "Guests of Gibbet Island"--The tipsy pirate boldly offered to host his dead comrades at his home, never imagining that they actually would take him up on it. This volume includes several of Irving's fanciful retellings of classic continental folktales and legends. As colorful and imaginative as any of his American tales, they reveal Irving to have been one of the most creative writers to have bridged the European and American gothic traditions.

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