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#gothic-romance — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #gothic-romance, aggregated by home.social.

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  1. I think these are cute, maybe to send to someone? I can't have any. #Promo #SO
    But, my SM Friend, Mme. Le Mew
    (‪@mmelemew.bsky.social‬) makes
    | Crochet Creatures | Patterns | Curses |

    Anatomical, creepy, shipped in a box

    Now with Gift Wrapping!✨

    🥀Show someone you truly care by sending them an anatomical heart 🫀

    💋Find it here: mmelemew.my-online.store/produ
    & make sure someone is thinking of you 🖤

    #anatomy #gothgirlsdoitbetter #heartbroken #gothicromance

  2. I think these are cute, maybe to send to someone? I can't have any. #Promo #SO
    But, my SM Friend, Mme. Le Mew
    (‪@mmelemew.bsky.social‬) makes
    | Crochet Creatures | Patterns | Curses |

    Anatomical, creepy, shipped in a box

    Now with Gift Wrapping!✨

    🥀Show someone you truly care by sending them an anatomical heart 🫀

    💋Find it here: mmelemew.my-online.store/produ
    & make sure someone is thinking of you 🖤

    #anatomy #gothgirlsdoitbetter #heartbroken #gothicromance

  3. Micallef Ventures into Gothic, Finds Vampire Wants to Expire

    Shaun Micallef's new book, De'Ath Takes a Holiday, features a vampire who wants to die. It explores why life is precious because it ends. Published recently.

    #ShaunMicallef, #VampireNovel, #NewBook, #GothicRomance, #AustralianAuthor

    newsletter.tf/shaun-micallef-v

  4. Big Fan of Wuthering Heights I Am Not: An Opinion

    Speaking of romantic heroes…

    Catching all these glimpses of teasers and trailers for the latest film adaptation of Wuthering Heights1 inevitably reminded me how much I disliked the novel all those decades back when I read it. Still vividly recalling the experience of it, I have to admit that my sentiments have not changed. It left a long-lasting impression of horror and… disappointment. My expectations were betrayed…

    I remember being so exhausted by all that tedious descriptions of passions of the heart. It felt so… artificial, so made-up. Naively imagined rather than experienced from the core of one’s being…

    That was definitely my main, but not the only, complaint. It irked me that, in spite of the changing point of views, all the narrators—servant or gentry—spoke in the same “voice”… Plus, underdeveloped characters and unrealized storylines… And the pervasive fixation with multi-generational sadistic cruelty… How is it “one of the greatest novels to be written in English”?

    But it’s not just the literary merits issue, isn’t it?

    The shock value

    Honestly, I’ve always thought that the Brontë sisters were determined to shock the narrow-minded circles of the polite society by exposing its weaknesses, blemishes, and hidden longings. As former governesses, they surely had plenty of reasons to feel vengeful. After all, the tradition of mistreating people in one’s private employ, especially women, persists even in our supposedly “more liberal” times. It is very likely that the ensuing critical outrage was an intended aim.

    However, fictionalizing societal perversity and challenging audience’s morality for the sake of pure shock value rarely results in coherent storytelling. More frequently than not the outcomes are messy, disjointed, and… hmm… for the luck of a better word… unpleasant. And if that what Emily Brontë was after, she truly succeeded. The sum of the negative emotions she evoked with her writing is epic.

    Actually, of the three sisters, only Charlotte managed to create a groundbreaking masterpiece of true Gothic romance. It is populated by relatable, emotionally rich characters, whose story arcs actually keep the readers captivated throughout the entire book.

    I believe that Jane Eyre’s literary strength and enduring readership has a lot to do with the fact that its Mr. Rochester is an authentic romantic hero. The kind of a man who is willing to violate human laws and condemn his soul to damnation so that he is united with the woman he loves… A noble man who keeps caring for his insane, violent wife. As well as a responsible guardian to his minor charge Adele.

    Where the romantic hero at?

    On the other hand, Heathcliff is marred by his toxic obsession and all-consuming thirst for revenge… Drowning in the hatred of self and others, burning with ruthless cruelty—he obliterates lives around him. How can a person like that have any claims on Love?

    Whether she knew it or not, her depiction of what we recognize today as a clinical behavioral pattern of the abused victim becoming an abuser can definitely be counted as Emily Brontë ‘s achievement. I hope there are some Brontë scholars out there who acknowledge the fact that Heathcliff is at the center of this abuse cycle. A position of incredible pain and darkness. His brutality is by no means excusable, but at least it’s psychologically graspable.

    Of course, cerebral comprehension has nothing to do with our emotional response to violence. I am still able to relive the heartache I experienced while reading how this tragic demon moved to hit the bewildered, kidnapped, and held captive Cathy Linton. After hundreds of pages worth of drivel and hearsay, the narrative finally made a powerful impact. I’m sure that the particular horror of that moment was poured onto the page out of a firsthand trauma—borne or witnessed.

    That said, I hope that you agree with me that even under the darkest of Gothic canons, Heathcliff cannot be defined as a “romantic hero”. After all, the subgenre of Gothic romance is usually distinguished by the dark and arduous ordeals a heroine endures to be with her beloved, not by the horrors the protagonist dispenses on everyone around him. And it doesn’t matter if his violence is motivated by his obsessive passion. Maybe the reason the Victorian readers felt confused and unsettled by the novel was precisely because the author placed this brutal beast at the centre of an amorous plot…

    It is also quite frustrating that his storyline is incredibly underdeveloped and neglected. Maybe for the sake of the mysterious aura, but most likely because the author simply didn’t have enough material to flesh it out… Where did he go? What happened to him while he was away? How did he made his fortune? Most importantly—what kind of struggles are brewing inside?

    Give credit where credit is due…

    The contemporary critics—those who insist on keeping the Brontë flame alive—have a tendency of labeling Wuthering Heights “controversial for its times”. And, yes, it was divisive alright as the majority of readers were appalled by it. But not for the reasons the modern analysts outline.

    For example, in an attempt to give the novel “broader” significance, the depiction of mental and physical cruelty towards children is frequently cited. Yet, I can’t accept that claim. Let me remind you that ten years before this book came out, Victorian readers have already embraced Dickens. They cried their hearts out over the terrible mistreatment that befell poor Oliver Twist.

    Another recurrent tribute concerns Brontë’s largely convoluted dealings with the complexities of the property, inheritance, and widowhood laws. You need to be well-read in the history of the British estate code in order to untangle the knotty threads of Heathcliff’s dirty ownership manipulations. Alternatively, you can just skim through the pages and leave the matter as muddled as is. Isn’t that what most of the adapters do?

    Let me remind you, though, that thirty five years before the Brontës, Jane Austin was far more compelling and heartbreaking (as well as romantic) about the plight of women under the discriminatory property laws, which denied them the independent ownership. The plots of her first two novels—Sense and Sensibility (1811) and Pride and Prejudice (1813)—are firmly rooted in the common scenario of daughters being forced out of their homes and into poverty upon their father’s death. As clear as a bell.

    Some of the more recent overthinkers go even as far as to mythologize Wuthering Heights as a feminist antithesis to Milton’s “patriarchal” Paradise Lost… Puh-lease! I’m not going to dignify these pseudo-philosophers by arguing against them.

    But here is a real controversy for your consideration…

    The prevailing liberal consensus is that the obscurity of Heathcliff’s origins is a deliberate writing tool. It emphasizes his position of an outsider and his role of a wrecking ball— crushing the Establishment around him. Hmm… Very advanced thinking. And maybe I would agree with this point of view… If only his enigma was limited to his introduction into the story. Picked off the streets—no name, no parents, no memories…

    Yet, it’s not like Ms. Brontë tastefully leaves it at that. No, he is found in Liverpool—back at the story’s outset of 1771 still very much the hub of the slavery trade. And he is “dark” with “black eyes”. A gypsy? Mulatto? Some oriental “royalty” as Nelly foolishly suggest (I mean, there is not a shred of nobility in the beast)? Oh, no—a Middle-Easterner? Why is it not clearly disclosed? What is the implication here? Is that where his savagery comes from?

    The young, impressionable, politically and ethnically persecuted Soviet Jew that I was at the time of the reading—I simply couldn’t help myself seeing straight into the heart of that bigotry. And all these years later, I hadn’t changed my mind. Whether my contemporaries pretend not to see it or not, I believe that it’s exactly what Emily Brontë wrote. Heathcliff’s untamed passions and his monstrous brutality are both ethnically determined.

    And it’s possible that the post-abolition Victorian society was just as appalled by that notion as I was. Well, that plus the clashing of their literary expectations against the idea of a despicable abuser as a romantic hero.

    Adaptation by sterilization

    It’s my understanding that this latest adaptation attempts to dilute the violence by introducing the Fifty-Shades aspects into Heathcliff’s relationship with his unfortunate wife… It’s misguided, of course. Technically, the one enduring the pain should have all the power and all poor Isabella wanted was to escape. Still, I’ve got to give it to the creative team behind it: at least they acknowledge the presence of the Gothic terror. Which is more than can be said about the majority of the previous adaptations.

    Believe it or not—practically all of the prior translators of the novel into the performing arts chose to sanitize Heathcliff’s violence out. Many of them (with only one or two exceptions) just dropped the second—the brutal one—half of the story altogether. And with it, I must note, the second generation of characters and their—far more compelling—romantic aspirations. I wonder what would Emily herself think of that? She is probably turning in her grave…

    And I am not exaggerating either: there are genuinely “many” movies, series, and even a play. I know of at least thirty produced in different countries from 1920 to now. And I’m sure there are more… You can’t even imagine how many people conglomerated images from these numerous adaptations into their own collages. They are far more elaborate than mine. And I’m sure there are plenty of blog posts about them as well…

    Considering that in the past 100 years the general public largely transitioned from reading to viewing, I believe that these pick-and-choose popularizers are the ones responsible for the misinterpretation of the novel as “romantic”. And yet, no matter how much they push, no one has succeeded in making neither the audience or the critics to truly fall in love… Mixed reviews” is the most they can plow out of Emily Brontë’s opus… Am I surprised?

    Hmm… But maybe, just maybe… Is it possible that Ms. Fennell is onto something here? I mean, the Fifty Shades products targeted the most basic of audience’s instincts and garnered wild popularity! Perhaps Emily Brontë was the forerunner of such British female writers as E.M. Hull and E.L. James, who achieved a widespread international readership precisely because of the sexual perversity of violent beatings and abuse…

    Is this why Wuthering Heights endures? Is that what the uninhibited by the cultural revolution public really wants? Is this the reason why the novel suddenly got labeled a “masterpiece” in the 20th century? Is that’s why the romanticized adaptations don’t succeed —because the contemporary audience is disappointed by their lack of violence?

    What do you think?

    Interested to see how William McGrath diametrically differs from Heathcliff as a romantic hero, visit the novel’s Landing Page–>Fireworks and Other Illuminations

    1. Written and directed by Emerald Fennell – the actress who played young Camilla Parker Bowles in the two middle seasons of Peter Morgan’s The Crown. Her father is a famous jewelry designer—hence, the name, I’m guessing. ↩︎

    #Books #emilyBronte #GothicRomance #WutheringHeightsAdaptations #WutheringHeightsMovie #WutheringHeightsNovel #wutheringHeights
  5. Big Fan of Wuthering Heights I Am Not: An Opinion

    Speaking of romantic heroes…

    Catching all these glimpses of teasers and trailers for the latest film adaptation of Wuthering Heights1 inevitably reminded me how much I disliked the novel all those decades back when I read it. Still vividly recalling the experience of it, I have to admit that my sentiments have not changed. It left a long-lasting impression of horror and… disappointment. My expectations were betrayed…

    I remember being so exhausted by all that tedious descriptions of passions of the heart. It felt so… artificial, so made-up. Naively imagined rather than experienced from the core of one’s being…

    That was definitely my main, but not the only, complaint. It irked me that, in spite of the changing point of views, all the narrators—servant or gentry—spoke in the same “voice”… Plus, underdeveloped characters and unrealized storylines… And the pervasive fixation with multi-generational sadistic cruelty… How is it “one of the greatest novels to be written in English”?

    But it’s not just the literary merits issue, isn’t it?

    The shock value

    Honestly, I’ve always thought that the Brontë sisters were determined to shock the narrow-minded circles of the polite society by exposing its weaknesses, blemishes, and hidden longings. As former governesses, they surely had plenty of reasons to feel vengeful. After all, the tradition of mistreating people in one’s private employ, especially women, persists even in our supposedly “more liberal” times. It is very likely that the ensuing critical outrage was an intended aim.

    However, fictionalizing societal perversity and challenging audience’s morality for the sake of pure shock value rarely results in coherent storytelling. More frequently than not the outcomes are messy, disjointed, and… hmm… for the luck of a better word… unpleasant. And if that what Emily Brontë was after, she truly succeeded. The sum of the negative emotions she evoked with her writing is epic.

    Actually, of the three sisters, only Charlotte managed to create a groundbreaking masterpiece of true Gothic romance. It is populated by relatable, emotionally rich characters, whose story arcs actually keep the readers captivated throughout the entire book.

    I believe that Jane Eyre’s literary strength and enduring readership has a lot to do with the fact that its Mr. Rochester is an authentic romantic hero. The kind of a man who is willing to violate human laws and condemn his soul to damnation so that he is united with the woman he loves… A noble man who keeps caring for his insane, violent wife. As well as a responsible guardian to his minor charge Adele.

    Where the romantic hero at?

    On the other hand, Heathcliff is marred by his toxic obsession and all-consuming thirst for revenge… Drowning in the hatred of self and others, burning with ruthless cruelty—he obliterates lives around him. How can a person like that have any claims on Love?

    Whether she knew it or not, her depiction of what we recognize today as a clinical behavioral pattern of the abused victim becoming an abuser can definitely be counted as Emily Brontë ‘s achievement. I hope there are some Brontë scholars out there who acknowledge the fact that Heathcliff is at the center of this abuse cycle. A position of incredible pain and darkness. His brutality is by no means excusable, but at least it’s psychologically graspable.

    Of course, cerebral comprehension has nothing to do with our emotional response to violence. I am still able to relive the heartache I experienced while reading how this tragic demon moved to hit the bewildered, kidnapped, and held captive Cathy Linton. After hundreds of pages worth of drivel and hearsay, the narrative finally made a powerful impact. I’m sure that the particular horror of that moment was poured onto the page out of a firsthand trauma—borne or witnessed.

    That said, I hope that you agree with me that even under the darkest of Gothic canons, Heathcliff cannot be defined as a “romantic hero”. After all, the subgenre of Gothic romance is usually distinguished by the dark and arduous ordeals a heroine endures to be with her beloved, not by the horrors the protagonist dispenses on everyone around him. And it doesn’t matter if his violence is motivated by his obsessive passion. Maybe the reason the Victorian readers felt confused and unsettled by the novel was precisely because the author placed this brutal beast at the centre of an amorous plot…

    It is also quite frustrating that his storyline is incredibly underdeveloped and neglected. Maybe for the sake of the mysterious aura, but most likely because the author simply didn’t have enough material to flesh it out… Where did he go? What happened to him while he was away? How did he made his fortune? Most importantly—what kind of struggles are brewing inside?

    Give credit where credit is due…

    The contemporary critics—those who insist on keeping the Brontë flame alive—have a tendency of labeling Wuthering Heights “controversial for its times”. And, yes, it was divisive alright as the majority of readers were appalled by it. But not for the reasons the modern analysts outline.

    For example, in an attempt to give the novel “broader” significance, the depiction of mental and physical cruelty towards children is frequently cited. Yet, I can’t accept that claim. Let me remind you that ten years before this book came out, Victorian readers have already embraced Dickens. They cried their hearts out over the terrible mistreatment that befell poor Oliver Twist.

    Another recurrent tribute concerns Brontë’s largely convoluted dealings with the complexities of the property, inheritance, and widowhood laws. You need to be well-read in the history of the British estate code in order to untangle the knotty threads of Heathcliff’s dirty ownership manipulations. Alternatively, you can just skim through the pages and leave the matter as muddled as is. Isn’t that what most of the adapters do?

    Let me remind you, though, that thirty five years before the Brontës, Jane Austin was far more compelling and heartbreaking (as well as romantic) about the plight of women under the discriminatory property laws, which denied them the independent ownership. The plots of her first two novels—Sense and Sensibility (1811) and Pride and Prejudice (1813)—are firmly rooted in the common scenario of daughters being forced out of their homes and into poverty upon their father’s death. As clear as a bell.

    Some of the more recent overthinkers go even as far as to mythologize Wuthering Heights as a feminist antithesis to Milton’s “patriarchal” Paradise Lost… Puh-lease! I’m not going to dignify these pseudo-philosophers by arguing against them.

    But here is a real controversy for your consideration…

    The prevailing liberal consensus is that the obscurity of Heathcliff’s origins is a deliberate writing tool. It emphasizes his position of an outsider and his role of a wrecking ball— crushing the Establishment around him. Hmm… Very advanced thinking. And maybe I would agree with this point of view… If only his enigma was limited to his introduction into the story. Picked off the streets—no name, no parents, no memories…

    Yet, it’s not like Ms. Brontë tastefully leaves it at that. No, he is found in Liverpool—back at the story’s outset of 1771 still very much the hub of the slavery trade. And he is “dark” with “black eyes”. A gypsy? Mulatto? Some oriental “royalty” as Nelly foolishly suggest (I mean, there is not a shred of nobility in the beast)? Oh, no—a Middle-Easterner? Why is it not clearly disclosed? What is the implication here? Is that where his savagery comes from?

    The young, impressionable, politically and ethnically persecuted Soviet Jew that I was at the time of the reading—I simply couldn’t help myself seeing straight into the heart of that bigotry. And all these years later, I hadn’t changed my mind. Whether my contemporaries pretend not to see it or not, I believe that it’s exactly what Emily Brontë wrote. Heathcliff’s untamed passions and his monstrous brutality are both ethnically determined.

    And it’s possible that the post-abolition Victorian society was just as appalled by that notion as I was. Well, that plus the clashing of their literary expectations against the idea of a despicable abuser as a romantic hero.

    Adaptation by sterilization

    It’s my understanding that this latest adaptation attempts to dilute the violence by introducing the Fifty-Shades aspects into Heathcliff’s relationship with his unfortunate wife… It’s misguided, of course. Technically, the one enduring the pain should have all the power and all poor Isabella wanted was to escape. Still, I’ve got to give it to the creative team behind it: at least they acknowledge the presence of the Gothic terror. Which is more than can be said about the majority of the previous adaptations.

    Believe it or not—practically all of the prior translators of the novel into the performing arts chose to sanitize Heathcliff’s violence out. Many of them (with only one or two exceptions) just dropped the second—the brutal one—half of the story altogether. And with it, I must note, the second generation of characters and their—far more compelling—romantic aspirations. I wonder what would Emily herself think of that? She is probably turning in her grave…

    And I am not exaggerating either: there are genuinely “many” movies, series, and even a play. I know of at least thirty produced in different countries from 1920 to now. And I’m sure there are more… You can’t even imagine how many people conglomerated images from these numerous adaptations into their own collages. They are far more elaborate than mine. And I’m sure there are plenty of blog posts about them as well…

    Considering that in the past 100 years the general public largely transitioned from reading to viewing, I believe that these pick-and-choose popularizers are the ones responsible for the misinterpretation of the novel as “romantic”. And yet, no matter how much they push, no one has succeeded in making neither the audience or the critics to truly fall in love… Mixed reviews” is the most they can plow out of Emily Brontë’s opus… Am I surprised?

    Hmm… But maybe, just maybe… Is it possible that Ms. Fennell is onto something here? I mean, the Fifty Shades products targeted the most basic of audience’s instincts and garnered wild popularity! Perhaps Emily Brontë was the forerunner of such British female writers as E.M. Hull and E.L. James, who achieved a widespread international readership precisely because of the sexual perversity of violent beatings and abuse…

    Is this why Wuthering Heights endures? Is that what the uninhibited by the cultural revolution public really wants? Is this the reason why the novel suddenly got labeled a “masterpiece” in the 20th century? Is that’s why the romanticized adaptations don’t succeed —because the contemporary audience is disappointed by their lack of violence?

    What do you think?

    Interested to see how William McGrath diametrically differs from Heathcliff as a romantic hero, visit the novel’s Landing Page–>Fireworks and Other Illuminations

    1. Written and directed by Emerald Fennell – the actress who played young Camilla Parker Bowles in the two middle seasons of Peter Morgan’s The Crown. Her father is a famous jewelry designer—hence, the name, I’m guessing. ↩︎

    #Books #emilyBronte #GothicRomance #WutheringHeightsAdaptations #WutheringHeightsMovie #WutheringHeightsNovel #wutheringHeights
  6. Great New Gothic Romances You Should Definitely Read

    Love an atmospheric vibe and a dark story that involves romantic love? Then one of these 6 great new gothic romances will be for you!
    bookriot.com/great-new-gothic-

    #KissingBooks #RomanceErotica #darkromance #gothicfiction #gothicromance

  7. Great New Gothic Romances You Should Definitely Read

    Love an atmospheric vibe and a dark story that involves romantic love? Then one of these 6 great new gothic romances will be for you!
    bookriot.com/great-new-gothic-

    #KissingBooks #RomanceErotica #darkromance #gothicfiction #gothicromance

  8. Love That Brooding Feeling? 4 Free Gothic Romances to Watch if you Loved Wuthering Heights

    Captivated by the Gothic romance, tragedy, and windswept drama of Wuthering Heights? These public domain classics will satisfy your craving for more tales of doomed love, dark secrets, and emotional intensity. Rebecca (1940) Alfred Hitchcock's masterpiece starring Laurence Olivier and Joan Fontaine brings Daphne du Maurier's haunting Gothic novel to life. Like Wuthering Heights, it features a brooding male lead haunted by the past. A naive heroine and the ghost of a former love that […]

    communitybroadcasting.network/

  9. Love That Brooding Feeling? 4 Free Gothic Romances to Watch if you Loved Wuthering Heights

    Captivated by the Gothic romance, tragedy, and windswept drama of Wuthering Heights? These public domain classics will satisfy your craving for more tales of doomed love, dark secrets, and emotional intensity. Rebecca (1940) Alfred Hitchcock's masterpiece starring Laurence Olivier and Joan Fontaine brings Daphne du Maurier's haunting Gothic novel to life. Like Wuthering Heights, it features a brooding male lead haunted by the past. A naive heroine and the ghost of a former love that […]

    communitybroadcasting.network/

  10. When I finish this oddity/curiosity ‘terrarium’ piece I’m going to sell it. I’m hoping to make it STUNNING and hopefully it’s absolutely dreamy when I’m fully done. #goth #goththings #oddity #curiosity #skull #terrarium #gothicromance #gothsky

  11. When I finish this oddity/curiosity ‘terrarium’ piece I’m going to sell it. I’m hoping to make it STUNNING and hopefully it’s absolutely dreamy when I’m fully done. #goth #goththings #oddity #curiosity #skull #terrarium #gothicromance #gothsky

  12. Watched "Wuthering Heights" (2026) with Lara and Liza. During the closing credits I pulled up this photo I crafted 15 years ago in Mexico. Funny twist: when I first posted it, a wedding client commented and titled it "Wuthering Heights." After seeing the film, you instantly get the vibe. Light-and-airy fits most weddings, but some couples chase drama and art.

    #WutheringHeights #CinematicVibes #MoodyPortraits #DarkRomance #StormyLove #MoodyWedding #GothicRomance #ArtOverTrends #ZorzStudios

  13. Seeking refuge from complicated emotions, Jim arrives at an isolated autumn estate. But its enigmatic owner, Andrew, draws him into a quiet, unsettling dance. What secrets does the manor hold? #GothicRomance #Enigma #AutumnVibes #NewMystery

    artsincubator.ca/bl-stories/sl

  14. Which reminds me...

    We'll meet at the cemetery (aka on Zoom) THIS SATURDAY!

    Tix still available, and they cover access to the live event as well as recordings of everything you might've missed to, y'know, go on that hot date or something: eventbrite.co.uk/e/writing-the

    #writers #writing #books #reading #horror #darkfantasy #death #mortality #love #romance #darkromance #gothicromance #gothic #gothicfiction #gothictales #wutheringheights

  15. Which reminds me...

    We'll meet at the cemetery (aka on Zoom) THIS SATURDAY!

    Tix still available, and they cover access to the live event as well as recordings of everything you might've missed to, y'know, go on that hot date or something: eventbrite.co.uk/e/writing-the

    #writers #writing #books #reading #horror #darkfantasy #death #mortality #love #romance #darkromance #gothicromance #gothic #gothicfiction #gothictales #wutheringheights

  16. Writing the Occult: Love & Death happens online on 14 February. We record the whole thing - but only for ticket holders, so you don't have to miss out even if you have big plans with loved ones. Early bird prices end tomorrow, Saturday 7 February, so get in quick!

    Tickets and details: writingtheoccult.carrd.co

    #gothic #gothicfiction #wutheringheights #emilybronte #horror #ghoststories #fantasy #romance #gothicromance #writing #writers #books #creativity

  17. It's a personal annual tradition for me to re-watch the gothic romance/horror film "Crimson Peak" by Guillermo del Toro (from 2015).
    I did so today, with the lights out, just some tealights burning. I very much enjoyed it.

    imdb.com/de/title/tt2554274/

    #CrimsonPeak #GuillermoDelToro
    #Halloween #gothicRomance #GothicHorror #gothic

  18. It's a personal annual tradition for me to re-watch the gothic romance/horror film "Crimson Peak" by Guillermo del Toro (from 2015).
    I did so today, with the lights out, just some tealights burning. I very much enjoyed it.

    imdb.com/de/title/tt2554274/

    #CrimsonPeak #GuillermoDelToro
    #Halloween #gothicRomance #GothicHorror #gothic

  19. #BuchMesseZuHause

    Ihr mögt Gothic Novels? Dann habe ich eine passende Novelle für euch: "Geisterhaft" 👻
    Hier ist ein Beitrag rund um das Buch, unter anderem erkläre ich darin, was Gothic Novels sind und das Phänomem #Gaslighting:
    amalia-zeichnerin.net/rund-um-

    Falls euch der Beitrag zu lang ist,
    hier ist die Seite zum Buch mit einer Leseprobe:
    amalia-zeichnerin.net/schauerl

    #Gothic #GothicNovel #GothicRomance #Geisterhaft #geistergeschichten #geister #halloween #spookySeason #lesen #buch #FediBookShop

  20. #BuchMesseZuHause

    Ihr mögt Gothic Novels? Dann habe ich eine passende Novelle für euch: "Geisterhaft" 👻
    Hier ist ein Beitrag rund um das Buch, unter anderem erkläre ich darin, was Gothic Novels sind und das Phänomem #Gaslighting:
    amalia-zeichnerin.net/rund-um-

    Falls euch der Beitrag zu lang ist,
    hier ist die Seite zum Buch mit einer Leseprobe:
    amalia-zeichnerin.net/schauerl

    #Gothic #GothicNovel #GothicRomance #Geisterhaft #geistergeschichten #geister #halloween #spookySeason #lesen #buch #FediBookShop

  21. Skull & rose in Romantic Goth 2 of 2:

    This pairing is a fundamental element of the Romantic Goth aesthetic. Romantic Goth, as an artistic and cultural style, deeply appreciates:

    * Poignant Beauty: It finds profound allure in sadness, age, and deeper emotions
    * Historical Echoes: Often draws from Victorian era customs, ancient mysticism, and classic narratives
    * Rich Experience: Values lush textures, profound colors, and striking contrasts
    * Awe & Wonder: A fascination with powerful, sometimes unsettling, natural and emotional encounters
    * Contrasts: Life and passing, brightness and shadow, love and sorrow, purity and complexity


    The skull and roses border perfectly captures these ideas, serving as a visual narrative around Crissy’s image. It enhances the portrait, placing it within a story that celebrates depth, enigma, and a lasting appreciation for the intricate beauty of existence.

    #symbolism #MementoMori #SkullandRoses #GothicRomance #RomanticGoth #ArtisticPortrait

  22. Skull & rose in Romantic Goth 2 of 2:

    This pairing is a fundamental element of the Romantic Goth aesthetic. Romantic Goth, as an artistic and cultural style, deeply appreciates:

    * Poignant Beauty: It finds profound allure in sadness, age, and deeper emotions
    * Historical Echoes: Often draws from Victorian era customs, ancient mysticism, and classic narratives
    * Rich Experience: Values lush textures, profound colors, and striking contrasts
    * Awe & Wonder: A fascination with powerful, sometimes unsettling, natural and emotional encounters
    * Contrasts: Life and passing, brightness and shadow, love and sorrow, purity and complexity


    The skull and roses border perfectly captures these ideas, serving as a visual narrative around Crissy’s image. It enhances the portrait, placing it within a story that celebrates depth, enigma, and a lasting appreciation for the intricate beauty of existence.

    #symbolism #MementoMori #SkullandRoses #GothicRomance #RomanticGoth #ArtisticPortrait

  23. 102nd read of 2025:

    Vampires of El Norte by Isabel Cañas

    Cañas sets up a classic star-crossed lovers Romance structure, with a luscious Gothic tone in 1840s Mexico. Northern Mexico is under siege, and vampires and Yankee colonists function as horror.

    4/5 stars

    #Bookstodon #Horror #GothicRomance #RomanceBooks

    https://ack.nerdfight.online/notice/AxbqEzsOYdMSMlnqAS
  24. CW: Non-sexual nudity

    a bundle of tender passion, soft unraveling, and sweet madness; clad in lace♡ྀི #gothicromance #softnsfw #lace #lustwitch #nsfw

  25. CW: Non-sexual nudity

    a bundle of tender passion, soft unraveling, and sweet madness; clad in lace♡ྀི #gothicromance #softnsfw #lace #lustwitch #nsfw

  26. CW: Non-sexual nudity

    a soft sort of romance; a sweeter kind of sin ─── ⋆⋅ 𖥸 ⋅⋆ ─── #lustwitch #lace #gothicromance

  27. Suffering like a heroine

    "She was all but forgotten. Now the 18th-century author's republished novels reveal why she made such an extraordinary contribution to literature." Kliuless posted about author Anne Radcliffe, credited with inventing the psychological novel of suspense (plus two more women in publishing who have virtually been written out of the popular genres they helped create).

    metafilter.com/205845/Galaxy-G

    #AnneRadcliffe #authors #feminism #gothic #GothicRomance #history #literature #novels #psychology #suspense #writing

  28. Lady Morgan’s Vengeance is a 1965 Italian gothic horror movie. In a spooky castle a woman is going slowly mad. It doesn't slot neatly into any one genre, there are some interesting narrative techniques. While it's no masterpiece it's enjoyable.

    My review: princeplanetmovies.blogspot.co

    #eurocult #eurocultmovie #eurocultmovies #60smovie #60smovies #1960smovie #1960smovies #gothic #gothichorror #cultmovie #cultmovies #gothicromance

  29. Scream of the Demon Lover (1970) is a well executed Spanish-Italian gothic horror/gothic romance movie. It has the right gothic look, it has energy and flair, some nudity and plenty of hints of strange sexual kinks. Plus a mad scientist. Bliss!

    My review: princeplanetmovies.blogspot.co

    #eurocult #eurocultmovie #eurocultmovies #70smovie #70smovies #1970smovie #1970smovies #gothichorror #madscientist #madscientists #gothicromance

  30. Mistress of Dark Fantasy is a collection of Dorothy Quick's 1930s-50s stories from Weird Tales. Horror tales combined with gothic romance and a definite fairy tale vibe, with more emphasis on the romance than on the horror. Odd but interesting.

    My review: vintagepopfictions.blogspot.co

    #DorothyQuick #WeirdTales #fairytales #gothicromance #weirdfiction #pulpfiction

  31. @NeanderthalPride

    "...gothic romance. Who do you recommend?"

    Don't know any modern gothic romance authors, but you can't go wrong with Phyllis A. Whitney. Her's is the type of stories I'd write. When I started writing, I wanted to be like her. It seemed like she visited and then wrote about all these exotic locations (my presumption, dunno). As a writer, I speculated, I could live in different places for 1/2 a year, write a book about that, then move on again. A writer could live anywhere, get paid by a publisher anywhere, right? Remote work before there was such a thing. Her novel, /Feather on the Moon,/ started a love affair with Victoria, and my later being able to visit Buchard Gardens and have high tea at the Empress Hotel was a culmination of that.

    I ended up writing SF for reasons stated previously.

    #BoostingIsSharing and #CommentingIsCool

    #fiction #fantasy #sf #sff #sciencefiction #gothicromance #romance #PhyllisAWhitney #writing #writer #writers #author #writingcommunity #writersOfMastodon
    #RSdiscussion