
More about the book
Nightmare Abbey is a novella by Thomas Love Peacock, first published in 1818, widely considered to be Peacock’s most enduringly popular work. The narrative centres on Christopher Glowry, a miserly widower, his son Scythrop and a host of dismal-sounding servants in his family pile, Nightmare Abbey. Recovering from an ill-fated love affair, Scythrop dreams up various schemes to reform and regenerate the human species, but misanthropy lurks around every corner, and everything changes when a mermaid is spotted and a strange woman appears in his chamber. Although fundamentally a Gothic novel, and rich in allusion – from Pope to Dante, Rossini to Mozart – Nightmare Abbey is, at heart, a satire, as Peacock makes clear in the preface to a later edition, in which he describes the characters – allusions to his friends – as ‘status-quo-ites’, ‘morbid visionaries’, ‘romantic enthusiasts’ and ‘lovers of good dinners’. 'Every quarter century, like clockwork, there is a Peacock revival.' — Gore Vidal 'Great mental powers on display in such lightly told tales.' — Christopher Hawtree, The Guardian
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Nightmare Abbey, Thomas Love Peacock
- Language
- Released
- 2021
- product-detail.submit-box.info.binding
- (Paperback)
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- Title
- Nightmare Abbey
- Language
- English
- Authors
- Thomas Love Peacock
- Publisher
- Renard Press Ltd
- Released
- 2021
- Format
- Paperback
- ISBN10
- 1913724077
- ISBN13
- 9781913724078
- Series
- Rating
- 3.5 out of 5
- Description
- Nightmare Abbey is a novella by Thomas Love Peacock, first published in 1818, widely considered to be Peacock’s most enduringly popular work. The narrative centres on Christopher Glowry, a miserly widower, his son Scythrop and a host of dismal-sounding servants in his family pile, Nightmare Abbey. Recovering from an ill-fated love affair, Scythrop dreams up various schemes to reform and regenerate the human species, but misanthropy lurks around every corner, and everything changes when a mermaid is spotted and a strange woman appears in his chamber. Although fundamentally a Gothic novel, and rich in allusion – from Pope to Dante, Rossini to Mozart – Nightmare Abbey is, at heart, a satire, as Peacock makes clear in the preface to a later edition, in which he describes the characters – allusions to his friends – as ‘status-quo-ites’, ‘morbid visionaries’, ‘romantic enthusiasts’ and ‘lovers of good dinners’. 'Every quarter century, like clockwork, there is a Peacock revival.' — Gore Vidal 'Great mental powers on display in such lightly told tales.' — Christopher Hawtree, The Guardian
