The Works of Arthur Machen: The Great God Pan, The Inmost Light, The Hill of Dreams, The Secret Glory and More (12 Books With Active Table of Contents) Buy on Amazon
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The Works of Arthur Machen: The Great God Pan, The Inmost Light, The Hill of Dreams, The Secret Glory and More (12 Books With Active Table of Contents)

Author Arthur Machen
Book Details
Author(s) Arthur Machen
ISBN / ASIN B007EYJFTC
ISBN-13 978B007EYJFT5
Sales Rank #932,824
Marketplace United States 🇺🇸
Description
This collection gathers together the works by Arthur Machen in a single, convenient, high quality, and extremely low priced Kindle volume!

Fiction:

The Great God Pan, The Inmost Light, The Three Impostors; or, The Transmutations, The Red Hand, A Fragment of Life, The Hill of Dreams, The White People, The Secret Glory, The Great Return, The Terror : a mystery

Autobiography:

Far Off Things: The Autobiography of Arthur Machen

Non-fiction:

The Angels of Mons: The Bowmen and Other legends of the War

Arthur Machen was a Welsh author and mystic of the 1890s and early 20th century. He is best known for his influential supernatural, fantasy, and horror fiction. His novella The Great God Pan (1890; 1894) has garnered a reputation as a classic of horror. (Stephen King called it "Maybe the best [horror story] in the English language".) He is also well known for his leading role in creating the legend of the Angels of Mons.
From the beginning of his literary career, Machen espoused a mystical belief that the humdrum ordinary world hid a more mysterious and strange world beyond. His gothic and decadent works of the 1890s concluded that the lifting of this veil could lead to madness, sex, or death, and usually a combination of all three. Machen's later works became somewhat less obviously full of gothic trappings, but for him investigations into mysteries invariably resulted in life-changing transformation and sacrifice. Machen loved the medieval world view because he felt it combined deep spirituality alongside a rambunctious earthiness.
Machen was a great enthusiast for literature that expressed the "rapture, beauty, adoration, wonder, awe, mystery, sense of the unknown, desire for the unknown" that he summed up in the word ecstasy.[4] His main passions were for writers and writing he felt achieved this, an idiosyncratic list which included the Mabinogion and other medieval romances, François Rabelais, Miguel de Cervantes, William Shakespeare, Samuel Johnson, Thomas de Quincey, Charles Dickens, Arthur Conan Doyle, Edgar Allan Poe, and Robert Louis Stevenson. Those writers who failed to achieve this, or far worse did not even attempt it, received short shrift from Machen.
Machen's strong opposition to a materialistic viewpoint is obvious in many of his works, marking him as part of neo-romanticism. He was deeply suspicious of science, materialism, commerce, and Puritanism, all of which were anathema to Machen's conservative, bohemian, mystical, and ritualistic temperament. Machen's virulent satirical streak against things he disliked has been regarded as a weakness in his work, and rather dating, especially when it comes to the fore in works such as Dr Stiggins. Similarly, some of his propagandistic First World War stories also have little appeal to a modern audience.
Machen, brought up as the son of a Church of England clergyman, always held Christian beliefs, though accompanied by a fascination with sensual mysticism; his interests in paganism and the occult were especially prominent in his earliest works. Machen was well read on such matters as alchemy, the kabbalah, and Hermeticism, and these occult interests formed part of his close friendship with A. E. Waite. Machen, however, was always very down to earth, requiring substantial proof that a supernatural event had occurred, and was thus highly sceptical of Spiritualism. Unlike many of his contemporaries, such as Oscar Wilde and Alfred Douglas, his disapproval of the Reformation and his admiration for the medieval world and its Roman Catholic ritualism did not fully tempt him away from Anglicanism—though he never fitted comfortably into the Victorian Anglo-Catholic world.
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