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Horror

The Great God Pan

3.9(10)
Language
English
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About the book

Arthur Machen's "The Great God Pan" is a seminal fin-de-siècle horror novella in which a reckless neurological experiment opens the human mind to a forbidden spiritual reality. Through fractured testimonies, urban rumors, and retrospective investigation, the narrative traces the uncanny career of Helen Vaughan, whose presence corrupts Victorian respectability. Its style is allusive, elliptical, and decadent, replacing explicit spectacle with implication, dread, and metaphysical contamination. Positioned between Gothic romance, scientific fantasy, and occult fiction, it helped define modern cosmic horror. Machen, born in Wales in 1863 and later immersed in London's literary and theatrical circles, brought to the novella a distinctive fusion of Celtic antiquarianism, mystical speculation, and suspicion of reductive materialism. His fascination with hidden worlds beneath ordinary perception, with pagan survivals, and with the sacramental possibilities of landscape and ritual deeply informs the book. The result reflects both Victorian anxieties about science and Machen's lifelong belief that reality is stranger, older, and more perilous than rational culture admits. Readers drawn to atmospheric horror, decadent literature, or the genealogy of writers such as Lovecraft and Blackwood will find "The Great God Pan" indispensable. It is brief, unsettling, and intellectually resonant: a work whose terrors linger because they remain half-seen.

Editions (37)

ISBN9788028337612
PublisherSharp Ink
Publication Date11/25/23
Pages44

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