Markheim, Jekyll And The Merry Men

Shorter Scottish Fiction

Fiction & Literature, Classics
Cover of the book Markheim, Jekyll And The Merry Men by Robert Louis Stevenson, Canongate Books
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Robert Louis Stevenson ISBN: 9781847675927
Publisher: Canongate Books Publication: July 1, 2010
Imprint: Canongate Books Language: English
Author: Robert Louis Stevenson
ISBN: 9781847675927
Publisher: Canongate Books
Publication: July 1, 2010
Imprint: Canongate Books
Language: English

Shorter Scottish Fiction. Introduced by Roderick Watson. Ever since its first appearance in 1886, Robert Louis Stevenson’s Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde has proved itself to be a tale of undiminished power for readers all over the world. It remains one of the great masterpieces of psychological fiction and yet it is not alone in Stevenson’s work, for he had explored similar themes in several other stories too, all inextricably linked with his native country. This collection makes a strong case for the essentially Scottish origins of Stevenson’s best short fiction, derived as it is from Calvinism’s feeling for the immanence of evil, and driven by a sense of man’s darker, divided self which goes back to Hogg’s Justified Sinner. Thus it is that the story of the respectable Dr Jekyll, even in a London setting, has links that stretch back to the narrow wynds of Edinburgh and the bleak moors and shores of the North. In this company stories of possession, doubleness and terror such as ‘The Merry Men’, ‘The Body Snatcher’, ‘Markheim’, ‘Thrawn Janet’ and others, reveal more clearly than ever their Scottish roots, and that fascination with the uncanny which brought the creator of Mr Hyde screamingly awake one winter’s night over a hundred years ago.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Shorter Scottish Fiction. Introduced by Roderick Watson. Ever since its first appearance in 1886, Robert Louis Stevenson’s Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde has proved itself to be a tale of undiminished power for readers all over the world. It remains one of the great masterpieces of psychological fiction and yet it is not alone in Stevenson’s work, for he had explored similar themes in several other stories too, all inextricably linked with his native country. This collection makes a strong case for the essentially Scottish origins of Stevenson’s best short fiction, derived as it is from Calvinism’s feeling for the immanence of evil, and driven by a sense of man’s darker, divided self which goes back to Hogg’s Justified Sinner. Thus it is that the story of the respectable Dr Jekyll, even in a London setting, has links that stretch back to the narrow wynds of Edinburgh and the bleak moors and shores of the North. In this company stories of possession, doubleness and terror such as ‘The Merry Men’, ‘The Body Snatcher’, ‘Markheim’, ‘Thrawn Janet’ and others, reveal more clearly than ever their Scottish roots, and that fascination with the uncanny which brought the creator of Mr Hyde screamingly awake one winter’s night over a hundred years ago.

More books from Canongate Books

Cover of the book Walking Wounded by Robert Louis Stevenson
Cover of the book My Dear Bessie by Robert Louis Stevenson
Cover of the book Cloud Howe by Robert Louis Stevenson
Cover of the book The Scottish Enlightenment by Robert Louis Stevenson
Cover of the book Witch Wood by Robert Louis Stevenson
Cover of the book The People Of The Sea by Robert Louis Stevenson
Cover of the book Childish Things by Robert Louis Stevenson
Cover of the book The Ghost Rider by Robert Louis Stevenson
Cover of the book Clear Light by Robert Louis Stevenson
Cover of the book Why the Net Matters by Robert Louis Stevenson
Cover of the book The Story of My Boyhood and Youth by Robert Louis Stevenson
Cover of the book Lanark by Robert Louis Stevenson
Cover of the book A Sudden Death in Cyprus by Robert Louis Stevenson
Cover of the book Safe as Houses by Robert Louis Stevenson
Cover of the book The Bruce by Robert Louis Stevenson
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy