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Barry Pain (1864–1928)

Autor(a) de The Eliza Stories

66+ Works 239 Membros 7 Reviews 2 Favorited

About the Author

Obras de Barry Pain

The Eliza Stories (1984) 77 cópias
The Undying Thing and Others (2011) 12 cópias
Eliza (1904) 10 cópias
Stories in the Dark (1901) 7 cópias
An Exchange of Souls (2017) 6 cópias
The One Before 5 cópias
Going home (2018) 4 cópias
The problem club (2009) 3 cópias
The exiles of Faloo (2011) 3 cópias
Stories and interludes (2011) 3 cópias
Here and Hereafter (1911) 3 cópias
In A Canadian Canoe (1891) 3 cópias
Stories In Grey (2012) 2 cópias
Graeme and Cyril 2 cópias
Playthings and parodies (2011) 2 cópias
Roaming the Dark (2012) — Autor — 1 exemplar(es)
The Shadow of the Unseen (1907) 1 exemplar(es)
Stories Without Tears 1 exemplar(es)
Humorous Stories 1 exemplar(es)
Eliza Getting on (1911) 1 exemplar(es)
Lindley Kays 1 exemplar(es)
More Stories 1 exemplar(es)
Eliza's Husband (1917) 1 exemplar(es)
Marge Askinforit (1920) 1 exemplar(es)
Rose Rose [Short story] 1 exemplar(es)
Mrs. Murphy 1 exemplar(es)
The Diary of a Baby 1 exemplar(es)
Little Entertainments 1 exemplar(es)
One Kind and Another 1 exemplar(es)
Says Mrs. Hicks 1 exemplar(es)
Robinson Crusoe's return (1976) 1 exemplar(es)
The later years 1 exemplar(es)
Works of Barry Pain (2013) 1 exemplar(es)
Robinson Crusoe's return 1 exemplar(es)

Associated Works

The Oxford Book of English Ghost Stories (1986) — Contribuinte — 545 cópias
The Oxford Book of Victorian Ghost Stories (1976) — Contribuinte — 520 cópias
100 Hair-Raising Little Horror Stories (1993) — Contribuinte — 443 cópias
100 Ghastly Little Ghost Stories (1993) — Contribuinte — 339 cópias
100 Creepy Little Creature Stories (1994) — Contribuinte — 185 cópias
Victorian Tales of Mystery and Detection: An Oxford Anthology (1991) — Contribuinte — 173 cópias
The Fantastic Imagination II (1978) — Contribuinte — 96 cópias
World's Great Adventure Stories (1929) — Contribuinte — 75 cópias
The Phoenix Tree: An Anthology of Myth Fantasy (1980) — Contribuinte — 72 cópias
The Mammoth Book of Thrillers, Ghosts and Mysteries (1936) — Contribuinte — 67 cópias
100 Twisted Little Tales of Torment (1998) — Contribuinte — 64 cópias
The Fourth Fontana Book of Great Ghost Stories (1967) — Contribuinte — 52 cópias
The Century's Best Horror Fiction Volume 1 (2011) — Contribuinte — 51 cópias
The Mammoth Book of Thrillers, Ghosts and Mysteries (1936) — Contribuinte — 47 cópias
Gaslit Nightmares (1988) — Contribuinte — 44 cópias
The Werewolf Pack (2008) — Contribuinte — 44 cópias
A Century of Humour (1934) — Contribuinte — 42 cópias
Great Tales of Terror (2002) — Contribuinte — 39 cópias
The Best Crime Stories Ever Told (2012) — Contribuinte — 34 cópias
100 Tiny Tales of Terror (1996) — Contribuinte — 33 cópias
Great Short Stories of Detection, Mystery, and Horror (1928) — Contribuinte — 32 cópias
The Horned God: Weird Tales of the Great God Pan (2022) — Contribuinte — 27 cópias
Spectral Sounds: Unquiet Tales of Acoustic Weird (2022) — Contribuinte — 23 cópias
The Great Book of Humour (1935) — Contribuinte — 22 cópias
The Second Omnibus Of Crime: The World's Great Crime Stories (1932) — Contribuinte — 18 cópias
Beware of the Cat (1972) — Contribuinte — 17 cópias
Ghosts and Marvels (1924) — Contribuinte — 17 cópias
Dr. Caligari's Black Book (1968) — Contribuinte — 16 cópias
Stories in the Dark: Tales of Terror (1989) — Contribuinte — 15 cópias
Short Stories of To-Day (1924) — Contribuinte — 11 cópias
The Black Cap: New Stories of Murder and Mystery (1928) — Contribuinte — 11 cópias
Crime and Detection (1926) — Contribuinte — 10 cópias
M Is for Monster: A Modern Bestiary of Classic Monsters (2011) — Contribuinte — 9 cópias
Forgotten Tales of Terror (1978) — Contribuinte — 9 cópias
The Blinded Soldiers and Sailors Gift Book (1915) — Contribuinte — 6 cópias
The Fireside Treasury of Modern Humor (1963) — Contribuinte — 5 cópias
Klassisia kauhukertomuksia (2021) — Contribuinte — 2 cópias
Tchnienie Grozy — Contribuinte — 1 exemplar(es)

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Nome padrão
Pain, Barry
Nome de batismo
Odell, Eric
Data de nascimento
1864-09-28
Data de falecimento
1928-05-05
Sexo
male
Nacionalidade
UK
Local de nascimento
Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, England, UK
Locais de residência
Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, England, UK (born)
Educação
University of Cambridge
Ocupação
Journalist
Organizações
journalist
poet
writer
Pequena biografia
English journalist, poet and writer known known for his parody and lightly humorous stories.

Membros

Resenhas

This is actually five books in one. They were originally published between 1900 and 1913, and are vignettes in the life of a city clerk and his wife, the eponymous Eliza. They are told from the husband's point of view. He is a priggish, pompous, climbing sort of man, who never realizes how his wife gets around him. He's been compared to Basil Fawlty, and there's some validity to that, though I think Fawlty is nastier.
 
Marcado
lilithcat | outras 3 resenhas | Oct 29, 2023 |
Very Edwardian, as a bookseller states on his or her list. Great ads at end, e.g. Bongola tea has no equal and Excelsior sardines double crown salmon & lobster. Inside the book at the back there was a loose sheet of paper upon which had been written the following words in pencil: 'DEAR ANNIE, PLEASE LOOK IN YOUR SNAKE DRAWER'.
 
Marcado
jon1lambert | Jun 11, 2020 |
"I want to know how this research is going on, and how it will end."
"It will go on and end in the service of humanity. If I gave you the details, I think that you would regard me rather as a quack than as a doctor—a quack with the restless ambitions of a mad man."
(101)

The characters speaking in my epigraph above are the two central figures of this novel: Claudius Sandell, a would-be novelist, and Gabriel Lamb, a doctor who's ended his private practice to devote himself purely to research. Claudius's life has reached a low point, and he almost dies on the street, penniless and homeless, but for the ministrations of Lamb. Claudius is initially willing to do anything for Lamb, and ends up promising to serve him the rest of his life in exchange for eight days of freedom: eight days where Lamb will give Claudius £1,000 per day to use as he pleases.

You might guess that Lamb has nefarious motives, otherwise there wouldn't be a plot, and you'd be right. Lamb is clearly intended as a critique of the motivations and practices of vivisectionists, who claimed to be causing pain for the greater good of humanity. Sometimes, anti-vivisection novels criticized this as a self-serving lie; these men are just out to cause pain and/or for their own self-interest, and vivisection furthers those goals (e.g., Heart and Science, The Beth Book). Sometimes, anti-vivisection novels were willing to believe this was true, but explored the harm it causes regardless (e.g., The Professor's Wife).

It's hard to put Lamb in The Octave of Claudius in either category. He definitely sees the world differently than other people; in one scene, he looks out his window at London: "Each man of them is nothing as an individual. Charles Peace and William Shakespeare were both accidents" (101). When he explains why he gave up his practice, he says, "I asked myself if that kind of thing [helping an individual patient] was science as I loved it—if it really assisted the great cause of humanity for which alone I live. I gave up my practice. I study the individual man only when he is likely to throw light on the aggregate. I never work on behalf of the individual" (22-3). If it was just down to his conversations with Claudius, I'd be inclined to believe him. He's going to have to leave the country to do what he wants to Claudius; he'll never get acclaim for what he learns within his lifetime, but he's okay with this if it helps humanity in the long run: "I certainly have my reward. You have noticed, perhaps, that only people with imagination lay down wine. The old man in his cellar, storing the vintage that he knows he cannot live to drink, tastes in that moment all its unborn perfections that one day his grandson overhead will praise" (100).

But one of the other key characters in the novel is Lamb's wife, Hilda. They used to have a good marriage, but it fell apart at some point, apparently after the death of their only child; now Lamb tells her, "My interest in you is largely scientific" (33). But when Hilda gets hysterical at one point, he beats her with a whip, literalizing the metaphorical connection between vivisection and domestic abuse I've noticed in The Beth Book and Lynton Abbott's Children. Lamb claims to take no pleasure in what he does to Claudius, but it's impossible to read what he says and does to Hilda and not believe that he doesn't derive satisfaction from it. So he might genuinely be doing terrible things to further the human race... but he clearly also has failed as a husband, which thus means he's failed in one of his most basic ethical obligations according to the Victorians.

Like a lot of these anti-vivisection books, it's not great-- basically everything Claudius does when Lamb is not present is dead boring, especially his dull romance-- but it contains fascinating nuggets of how science and scientists were seen in the late Victorian period. I'm very glad I took the time to read it, and I feel like it ought to make it into my book.
… (mais)
 
Marcado
Stevil2001 | Jan 4, 2019 |
This collection of Victorian supernatural stories, though pleasant and well-written, doesn't pack enough real chills to be frightening. The atmosphere is nice, however, and perhaps with a glass or two of brandy or a fine cigar (fetched by a servant) I would have enjoyed it more.
½
1 vote
Marcado
datrappert | Jan 25, 2014 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
66
Also by
44
Membros
239
Popularidade
#94,925
Avaliação
½ 3.7
Resenhas
7
ISBNs
65
Idiomas
1
Favorito
2

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