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21. Memoires of the last ten years
 
22. Notes on the poems of Alexander
 
23. Memoirs of the reign of King George
 
$240.00
24. Volume 40-42: Miscellaneous Correspondence,
$16.80
25. Horace Walpole and his world
 
26. Horace Walpole And His World select
$61.15
27. Horace Walpole's Strawberry Hill
 
$124.97
28. The Yale Editions of Horace Walpole's
$79.34
29. Memoirs of King George II: The
$3.97
30. The Castle of Otranto: A Gothic
31. The Prime Minister of Taste: A
 
32. Hieroglyphic Tales
 
33. Horace Walpole: A Reference Guide
 
34. Horace Walpole
 
$31.95
35. Horace Walpole and the Unconscious:
 
$8.98
36. Life of Horace Walpole
$26.22
37. Strawberry Hill: Horace Walpole's
 
38. Yale Edition of Horace Walpole's
 
39. Memoirs of King George II

21. Memoires of the last ten years of the reign of George the Second : From the original mss Volume 2
by Horace, 1717-1797 Walpole
 Paperback: Pages (2009-10-26)

Asin: B003O6PGS8
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22. Notes on the poems of Alexander Pope
by Horace, 1717-1797 Walpole
 Paperback: Pages (2009-10-26)

Asin: B003O6GAM4
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23. Memoirs of the reign of King George the Third. First published b
by Walpole. Horace. 1717-1797.
 Paperback: Pages (1894-01-01)

Asin: B002WTRH30
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24. Volume 40-42: Miscellaneous Correspondence, 1734-1797 (The Yale Edition of Horace Walpole's Correspondence)
by Horace Walpole
 Hardcover: 1382 Pages (1980-09-10)
list price: US$240.00 -- used & new: US$240.00
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0300026080
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25. Horace Walpole and his world
by Horace Walpole 1717-1797 Seeley L. B. (Leonard Benton) 1831-1893
Paperback: 322 Pages (1895-12-31)
list price: US$16.80 -- used & new: US$16.80
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: B003TXSZSO
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Editorial Review

Product Description
This reproduction was printed from a digital file created at the Library of Congress as part of an extensive scanning effort started with a generous donation from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation.The Library is pleased to offer much of its public domain holdings free of charge online and at a modest price in this printed format.Seeing these older volumes from our collections rediscovered by new generations of readers renews our own passion for books and scholarship. ... Read more


26. Horace Walpole And His World select passages from his Letters
by Horace, Earl of Orford, 1717-1797. edited by Seeley, Leonard Benton, 1831-1893 Walpole
 Hardcover: Pages (1111)

Asin: B001Q6MUMI
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27. Horace Walpole's Strawberry Hill (The Lewis Walpole Series in Eighteenth-C)
Hardcover: 356 Pages (2009-12-15)
list price: US$85.00 -- used & new: US$61.15
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0300125747
Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars
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Editorial Review

Product Description

Horace Walpole (1717-1797), as the youngest son of the powerful Whig minister Robert Walpole, grew up at the center of Georgian society and politics and circulated amongst the elite literary, aesthetic, and intellectual circles of his day. His brilliant letters and writings have made him the best-known commentator on the rich cultural life of 18th-century England. In his own day, he was most famous for his extraordinary collections of rare books and manuscripts, antiquities, paintings, prints and drawings, furniture, ceramics, arms and armor, and curiosities, all displayed at his pioneering Gothic Revival house at Strawberry Hill, on the banks of the Thames at Twickenham.

 

This timely and groundbreaking study of the history and reception of Walpole’s collection as it was formed and arranged at Strawberry Hill coincides with a planned restoration of this endangered house. Horace Walpole’s Strawberry Hill assembles an international team of distinguished scholars to explore the ways in which Strawberry Hill and its collections engaged with the creation of various and interconnected political, national, dynastic, cultural, and imagined histories.

... Read more

Customer Reviews (1)

4-0 out of 5 stars Horace's House
This is a serious coffee table book whose contents quite knowledgeably describe, in great detail, the extent and meaning of the collection assembled by the 18th century's Horace Walpole for his gothic fantasy residence. It has many lovely illustrations and pictures.

For those who hanker to know more about the famous English house, Strawberry Hill and/or the efforts of Walpole in assembling his varied collection of artistic and historical this and that, this book would be an excellent purchase.

However, the ordinary reader will probably be safe in not buying-- given the book's deep scholarly articles, a distant subject matter, and steep price.
... Read more


28. The Yale Editions of Horace Walpole's Correspondence, Volume 43: Additions and Correction (The Yale Edition of Horace Walpole's Correspondence)
by Horace Walpole
 Hardcover: 658 Pages (1983-06-10)
list price: US$125.00 -- used & new: US$124.97
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0300027117
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29. Memoirs of King George II: The Yale Edition of Horace Walpole`s Memoirs (Yale Edition of Horace Walpole's Memoirs, Vols 1-3)
by Horace Walpole
Hardcover: 840 Pages (1985-03-11)
list price: US$160.00 -- used & new: US$79.34
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0300031971
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30. The Castle of Otranto: A Gothic Story (Oxford World's Classics)
by Horace Walpole
Paperback: 176 Pages (2009-01-15)
list price: US$8.95 -- used & new: US$3.97
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0199537216
Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars
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Editorial Review

Product Description
First published pseudonymously in 1764, The Castle of Otranto purported to be a translation of an Italian story of the time of the crusades.In it Walpole attempted, as he declared in the Preface to the Second Edition, "to blend the two kinds of romance: the ancient and the modern."Crammed with invention, entertainment, terror, and pathos, the novel was an immediate success and Walpole's own favorite among his numerous works.The novel is reprinted here from a text of 1798, the last that Walpole himself prepared for the press. ... Read more

Customer Reviews (32)

3-0 out of 5 stars "Since I Cannot Give You My Son, I Offer You Myself..."
First published in 1764, Horace Walpole's dark and melodramatic novel is widely considered the very first Gothic novel, containing within its pages all the familiar (and by today's standards, clichéd) elements of the genre. Expect a spooky old castle, an ancient prophecy, dark portends, women that faint often and with little cause, a dysfunctional family whose members can't decide whether to love or hate each other, haunted portraits, secret tunnels and trapdoors, manic tyrants, endangered virgins, ghostly visages, and young heroes that put honor before reason, and whose obsession with virtue prevents them from doing anything particularly helpful. It's vintage Gothic: intense emotions running wild, thrill-seeking in the reader's pursuit of the supernatural horror, and a heavy, foreboding atmosphere.

The story was first purported to be a translation of an Italian document dated 1529 which in turn was a transcription of an older story that took place some time during the crusades. Walpole later amended this in a later preface, admitting that he wrote the story himself (in fact, his inspiration came from a dream in which he glimpsed a gigantic armored hand on a stairwell) and that his intentions were in blending the ancient and modern forms of Romance: "in the former all was imagination and improbability: in the latter, nature is always intended to be copied. Invention has not been wanting, but the great resources of fancy have been damned up, by strict adherence to common life. But if in the latter species Nature has cramped imagination, she did but take her revenge, having been totally excluded from old romances. The author of the following pages thought it possible to reconcile the two kinds."

Whether Wadpole was successful in this endeavor is incidental. The importance of "The Castle of Otranto" is that in this mingling of old and new, the Gothic genre was born.

Prince Manfred of Otranto has a faithful wife, a beautiful daughter, and a sickly son, yet as is often the way with tyrants, he is dissatisfied. His son is about to marry Princess Isabella, daughter of the Marquis of Vincenza, but on the day of the wedding Conrad is killed in mysterious circumstances. Actually, make that "bizarre" circumstances: he's been crushed under a giant helmet that seems to have fallen out of nowhere.

Cutting his losses, Manfred arrests a young man for the murder of his son, and decides to divorce his wife Hippolita and marry Isabella himself, a proposition that horrifies the girl who was to become his daughter-in-law. Isabella makes her escape into the shadowed catacombs of the palace, Hippolita and Matilda fret about their future, and the servants live in terror of the apparitions appearing throughout the castle: the oversized arms and legs of an armored giant (who is somehow finding a way to hide whenever anyone's back is turned).

It's difficult to really assess this book. It many ways it is totally outdated in terms of story and character, and is really only valuable for its historical significance. Although I could not say I "enjoyed" reading it, I nevertheless found it "entertaining," as odd as that distinction may seem. When it comes to the characters' emotions, there's a lot of telling rather than showing, and many of the main cast is thoroughly insipid, frustrating and unsympathetic (even those who are meant to be the heroes).

For example, Theodore is our male lead, who makes catastrophic mistakes throughout the story (usually due to an inability to keep his mouth shut) and who eventually makes the decision to be miserable for the rest of his life, desiring only to "forever indulge the melancholy that had taken possession of his soul." If a character is depressed, it's probably because they're in love; which is how Theodore experiences his ardor toward Matilda (even though I'm not entirely sure how he tells her apart from Isabella). All the women are submissive, delicate martyrs, who consider it an honor to be walked all over by their male counterparts, and sigh with angelic resignation in the face of mistreatment. Comic relief comes in the form of the shrewd and wily servants, who seem to be well-aware of how ridiculous their masters and mistresses are.

And some of the dialogue is downright hysterical, such as: "My dearest, gracious lord, what is it you see? Why do you fix your eyeballs thus?" Obviously, it's very easy to make fun of the Gothic genre (Jane Austen herself did it in Northanger Abbey) simply because it relies so much on melodrama. Despite the negative connotations, melodrama *can* be done well, and despite my heckling, Walpole pulls it off...for the most part. But don't just think it's 21st century cynicism casting its shadow over the literary past, even many of Walpole's contemporary critics dismissed "The Castle of Otranto" as an absurdity.

An absurdity it may well be, but keeping in mind the author's intentions and its place within the Gothic canon, Walpole's efforts are worthy of attention. This is not the heights of Gothic literature, but it is the forefather of the genre, and for that reason alone it has value.

3-0 out of 5 stars Oxford World Classics edition
I have to agree with the consensus of reviewers here:If you are looking for an excellent Gothic novel to read, this one is not it.If you are studying the history of Gothic literature and aesthetics, this novel is fundamental.

I want to recommend highly the introduction by E.J. Clery to the Oxford World Classics edition.Clery provides a survey of the various ways of interpreting the novel, and amply explains the novel's strengths and weaknesses in the context of the different interpretations.With this approach, the reader finds ways of making sense of the peculiar novel within the context of its time and its author's possible intentions.

3-0 out of 5 stars Powerful whimsy
This review refers to the Oxford World's Classics edition, edited by WS Lewis, with a 26-page introduction and eight pages of endnotes by EJ Clery. There is a select bibliography and a chronology of the author, Horace Walpole. Importantly, the book includes both the first and second editions' title-pages and prefaces.

The first edition, "The Castle of Otranto: A Story, translated by William Marshal", was published in December 1764 (but marked 1765 on the title-page). It's preface tried - and succeeded for awhile - to give the impression that the tale had been "found in the library of an ancient catholic family in the north of England" and had been "printed at Naples ... in the year 1529. ... The style is the purest Italian."

The style was instead the purest Walpole and he quickly confessed; so that in the rapidly-issued second edition of 1765 (the book was an immediate hit), the revised preface became, as EJ Clery makes clear, "a manifesto for a new type of writing", and the title-page was amended to "The Castle of Otranto: A Gothic Story".

The inclusion of the adjective into the story's title is fundamental to the book's reputation as being the well-spring of much (all?) that followed in subsequent western literature that effected to underscore its credentials with a Gothic - or Gothick - motif. One could argue that that includes 90% of western literature (as much Thomas Pynchon as Stephen King), but this is going too far; for as Walpole himself makes plain in his second preface, his work was an attempt to marry imagination with nature, fantasy with reality, and that he had progenitors in the essay: "That great master of nature, Shakespeare, was the model I copied."

The story itself - a tale of lordly tyranny, supernatural horror, and family feuding that would have interested Shakespeare himself in its dramatic possibilities - is told over five chapters, barely one hundred pages in total, and so can be read in a few hours. As the excellent introduction relates, Walpole himself thought the story a piece of whimsy, and did not attempt to savagely repudiate the criticisms raised about both the style of writing and about the narrative itself. He was aware of the novella's power, however, in creating a new species of romance.

The work today is as much read for its historic relevance than for its terror and sublime effects, but both of these aspects recommend it.

3-0 out of 5 stars Probably better in its day


This book, like Pamela for feminist literary history, is important due to the fact that it was the first gothic novel ever written. The voice is a good one for the story, deep, reverant, dramatic; the writing is of excellent breed as well. With that said, however, so much has been ripped-off from this novel, and into novels that we've already read, that the story itself comes off as a bit cliche, not to mention ridiculous. Although the hyperbole of the novel is based off sybolic intentions, the best that one can say about this piece is that it lit a torch for future great novels--not that it's so much a great novel on its own two feet. Worty of reading if you care about the history of novels in general, but if you're looking for a great gothic novel this shouldn't be a first choice.

3-0 out of 5 stars Walpole's Castle: More Historical Then Entertaining
When Horace Walpole published THE CASTLE OF OTRANTO in 1794, his reading public was unprepared for what was to them a floodtide of unrestrained emotion.It had only been recently that the concept of "sensibility" in writing had been in vogue. In novels of this type (later popularized by Austen) the protagonist, usually a well-born female, would be subject to a non-stop series of emotional excesses like fainting, weeping, and otherwise losing all restraint. And lying behind this relatively recent vogue of sensibility lay a much longer tradition of its polar opposite: the damming of all feeling in favor of a carefully controlled harmony between man and nature. With THE CASTLE OF OTRANTO, this harmony cracked into innumerable pieces that manifested themselves into what was soon to become staples of the genre: unexplained supernatural phenomenon, dark and dank castles that hinted at the equally dark and dank recesses of the human psyche, and a series of images that exploded into a cacophony of sound and sight.

The story is slight both in plot and theme. The evil Manfred, the usurping ruler of Otranto, plans to marry his weakened son solely to ward off a prophecy that suggests that unless he has male heirs, he will be deposed. Just before the nuptuals between his son and Manfred's choice for him, Isabella, a colossal helmet comes crashing down, crusahing his son to pieces. This tragedy does not deter Manfred as he then plans to marry the lovely Isabella himself. Isabella, aided by the peasant Theodore, helps Isabella escape. Theodore is captured, but the ghost of the previous owner of Otranto, Alonso appears and incredibly blasts his own castle to pieces, leaving Isabella to marry Theodore. Even for a nonsense story, the plot does not hold water. Further, the writing style is inexplicably formal, with all events, both mundane and preternatural, narrated in a pseudo-classic manner that fits in well enough in the Augustan mode but seems ill-suited to this new genre of emotional excess.Still, THE CASTLE OF OTRANTO is significant in that for those who care to learn the where and the how of the horror genre, then Walpole's innovative surge of novelistic emotion is a good place to begin. ... Read more


31. The Prime Minister of Taste: A Portrait of Horace Walpole
by Professor Morris Brownell
Hardcover: 364 Pages (2001-05-01)
list price: US$65.00
Isbn: 0300087160
Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars
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Editorial Review

Product Description
In this intriguing book, Morris Brownell offers a fresh account of the career and influence of Horace Walpole (1717-1797), the great English man of letters and art historian. Rejecting both the traditional view of Walpole as a trifling collector of curiosities and the more recent assessment of him as a sober social historian and connoisseur, Brownell argues that Walpole grew to become a serious patron, collector, and historian of the arts—the Prime Minister of Taste.

Drawing on vast Walpole archival materials and on his astonishing forty volumes of letters, Brownell describes the formation of young Walpole's taste and interest in the visual arts. Brownell argues that England's leading portrait engraver, George Vertue, converted Walpole from Grand Tour taste in painting to a life-long study of English portraits. The book discusses the significance of Walpole's collection of English historical portraits and French portraits of the ancien régime, and it analyzes Walpole's fascination with portraiture, comparing the painted portraits Walpole collected and wrote about to the literary portraits he penned in his letters. Walpole's passion for the art of portraiture was not the trifling pastime he pretended, Brownell says; in fact it was the source of his greatest literary achievement—a gallery of literary portraits of the English aristocracy as fine as the painted portraits of Reynolds and Gainsborough. ... Read more

Customer Reviews (2)

3-0 out of 5 stars A Very Narrow Biography
I bought the book thinking it a biography of Horace Walpole.A biography it is, but in a very narrow sense.It almost exclusively deals with Walpole's acquisition of art and the pieces themselves.I saw no discussion of his terms as MP. Also, nothing about his authorship of 'The Castle of Otranto' or the memoirs of George II and George III all of which are still in print today.Very little about his friends outside of art collecting.If your looking to find out about this specific portion of Walpole's life then the book is well written and thorough with many photographs of the pictures in his collection.A general biography it is not.

4-0 out of 5 stars Brownell Pleases the Palate with Prime Minister of Taste
This biography of Walpole is written by the foremost expert on Horace Walpole, Professor Morris Brownell.

There are interesting anecdotes, witty analogies and rare photographs and illustrations of the English commentator, Horace Walpole and his life and times.

This book is a must-have for anybody interested in English history, literature and monarchy, ... Read more


32. Hieroglyphic Tales
by Horace Walpole
 Paperback: 88 Pages (1993-10)
list price: US$12.95
Isbn: 1562790498
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Editorial Review

Product Description
The book has no illustrations or index. Purchasers are entitled to a free trial membership in the General Books Club where they can select from more than a million books without charge. Subjects: Fantasy fiction, English; Fantasy fiction, English; Fiction / General; Fiction / Literary; ... Read more


33. Horace Walpole: A Reference Guide (Reference Publication in Literature)
by Peter Sabor
 Hardcover: 304 Pages (1984-08)
list price: US$45.00
Isbn: 0816185786
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34. Horace Walpole
by Martin Kallich
 Textbook Binding: Pages (1971-06)
list price: US$7.95
Isbn: 0805715568
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35. Horace Walpole and the Unconscious: An Experiment in Freudian Analysis (Gothic Studies and Dissertations)
by Betsy P. Harfst
 Hardcover: 264 Pages (1980-08)
list price: US$31.95 -- used & new: US$31.95
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 040512645X
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36. Life of Horace Walpole
by Stephen Gwynn
 Hardcover: 285 Pages (1971-06)
list price: US$25.95 -- used & new: US$8.98
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 083695842X
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Editorial Review

Product Description
The 18th century author and historian comes to life in this narrative for the man and his times. The author discusses his travels, his sojourns on the Continent, his love affairs, and his love of fine printing which led to his establishing a private printing press at his country home. The author provides the reader with interesting insights into Walpole's personality and with excerpts from his correspondence. _"It is a biography that may be recommended alike to the student of the period and the general reader." NATIONILLUS.

THIS TITLE IS CITED AND RECOMMENDED BY:Books for College Libraries; Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature; Catalogue of the Lamont Library, Harvard College. ... Read more


37. Strawberry Hill: Horace Walpole's Gothic Castle
by Anna Chalcraft, Judith Viscardi
Hardcover: 160 Pages (2007-10-05)
list price: US$45.00 -- used & new: US$26.22
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0711226873
Average Customer Review: 2.0 out of 5 stars
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Editorial Review

Product Description

Strawberry Hill, Horace Walpole's 'Little play-thing house', became one of the wonders of the 18th-century architectural world. The authors take us round the house (now being restored) and room by room reveal the theatrical planning, the deliberate contrasts of light and colour and the love of drama invested in every detail of th building, its decoration and its furniture. The book is illustrated with photographs and with many of the engravings Walpole himself commissioned.
... Read more

Customer Reviews (1)

2-0 out of 5 stars Scarcely any photos--most disappointing!
Wow, what a tremendous disappointment!Big coffee table book, feels hefty, looks like it'll be a treasure trove of Gothic architecture . . . and yet not.The entire book has exactly ONE full-page, full-color photo of the interior of Strawberry Hill.The rest of the book is more like a scholarly work, with small photos of wallpaper fragments, engravings of Walpole and his family and friends, close-ups of some interesting bits and piece of architectural detail, and lots and lots of text.There's nothing wrong with that; but what a false carrot to dangle in front of the architecturally-inclined reader ("Gothic" and "castle" together in one title--be still, my heart!).If ever a book deserved a subtitle, it's this one--and it should have been something along the lines of, "A Scholarly Overview" or something equally dry, to suit the book.What a great opportunity the authors missed in not showing the world more of the WHOLE of Walpole's beautiful castle. ... Read more


38. Yale Edition of Horace Walpole's Correspondence: Volumes 44-48 : Complete Index (The Yale edition of Horace Walpole's correspondence)
by Horace Walpole
 Hardcover: 3002 Pages (1983-06)
list price: US$400.00
Isbn: 0300027184
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39. Memoirs of King George II
 Hardcover: Pages (1985-07)

Isbn: 0300034121
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

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