
A Little Magenta Book about a Dollhouse
A Historical, Erotica, Victorian book. Edward Lee channels M.R. James. How could the results not be interesting? This little tome mixes...
The NINTH title in Borderlands' "Little Book" series II is by cult favorite writer Ed Lee, who has created a A Little Magenta Book about a Dollhouse.WELCOME TO THE PATTEN MANOR HOUSE.It’s a horror house, a slaughter house, a devil house. And it’s something else, too:A doll house.Reginald Lympton collects doll houses, and now that he’s acquired the rare Patten Doll House, he can boast the most preeminent collection in the world. But after visions too abominable to reckon, and nightmares blacker than the most bottomless abyss, he discovers in short order that his acquisition is not a prized collector’s item at all but a diabolical thoroughfare designed to serve the darkest indulgences of the King of Terrors. Edward Lee, the master of hardcore horror, has penned this audacious homage to the master of the Victorian ghost story, M.R. James.
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- Filetype: PDF
- Pages: 96 pages
- ISBN: / 0
BJBSQkJ3Uw-.pdf
More About A Little Magenta Book about a Dollhouse
Edward Lee channels M.R. James. How could the results not be interesting? This little tome mixes the outrageous excesses of classic Lee with the wry wit and erudite prose of James. I can definitely understand why this book wouldn't work for everyone, but for me, it did. Swimmingly. Edward Lee is always working on multiple levels. Even... #195/500 S/L copiesA LITTLE MAGENTA BOOK ABOUT A DOLLHOUSE is the ninth book in the Borderlands Press "mini" collection. This one is by horror master Edward Lee, and is his "homage" to the style of M.R. James. Lee takes one of James' famous stories, and--keeping with the language James would use--transforms it into something more--infusing... The attempt by Lee to mimick or pay tribute to his own favorite author is a colossal failure. Instead, the story manages to be a disjointed, uneven mix of graphic (and frankly off-putting, "why?" producing) sexual acts and encounters by the anti-protagonist and self-deprecating, apathetic passages by the narrator. What a disappointment...