The Hill of Dreams: A Decadent Weird Tale of Welsh Ruins, Pagan Mystery, and Artistic Obsession
Synopsis
The Hill of Dreams is Arthur Machen's haunting Künstlerroman of Lucian Taylor, a hypersensitive young writer whose imagination is awakened amid the Roman remnants and wooded hills of rural Wales, then tested in the sordid literary marketplace of London. Written in a lush, incantatory prose, the novel fuses fin-de-siècle decadence, Symbolist inwardness, and Gothic supernatural suggestion. Its true drama is less external plot than the perilous transformation of memory, landscape, erotic longing, and artistic ambition into visionary obsession. Machen, born in Caerleon, Monmouthshire, drew deeply on the Welsh border country, its antiquarian residues, and its atmosphere of half-buried pagan mystery. His own precarious years as a struggling man of letters in London inform the novel's portrait of artistic isolation and material failure. Best known for works such as The Great God Pan, Machen brought to this book his lifelong concern with ecstasy, terror, and the unseen world pressing through ordinary experience. This novel is recommended to readers interested in psychological Gothic fiction, decadent literature, and the spiritual costs of artistic vocation. It rewards patient attention with one of the most unsettling portraits of imagination in modern supernatural literature.
Publisher information
- Publisher: Sharp Ink
- ISBN: 9788028339227
- Dimensions: 229 x 152 x 5 mm
- Weight: 148g
- Languages: English
