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About This Book

The narrator, raised in a remote family residence, recounts how a beguiling young woman becomes an intimate guest and slowly saps the narrator's strength through mysterious nocturnal visits. Strange illnesses and deaths among nearby residents lead to mounting fear and investigation; a learned physician frames the occurrences as the work of a predatory supernatural being linked to an ancestral wound. The story traces the gathering of evidence, a search into local legend, and a final ordeal that confronts and destroys the menace. Told as a framed personal narrative with medico-legal commentary, the account emphasizes Gothic atmosphere, ambiguous desire, and the porous boundary between rational inquiry and uncanny terror.

About the Author

Le Fanu, Joseph Sheridan portrait

Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu

Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu was an Irish author known for his contributions to the genre of Gothic fiction and supernatural literature. Born in 1814, he is best remembered for his novella "Carmilla," which is one of the earliest works of vampire fiction and has influenced countless adaptations and interpretations. Le Fanu's writing often explores themes of mystery and the uncanny, as seen in his collections such as "In a Glass Darkly" and "A Stable for Nightmares; or, Weird Tales." His ability to weave psychological depth with eerie atmospheres has secured his place in the literary heritage of the 19th century, making him a significant figure in the development of horror literature.

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