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33 of 35 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
The power of suggestion....,
By claus_byrial@hotmail.com (Denmark) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Great God Pan (Creation Classics) (Paperback)
The REAL grandeur of this little gothic gem lies in the power of suggestion. Machen, much like a Nicholas Roeg film or the Lovecraft mythology, only hints at the unspeakable horrors in "Great God Pan" and therein lies the novel's strength, short and negligable as it may seem. It's up to the reader to "fill in the blanks", and make the right connections as to which abominations lurks beneath the sinister series of seemingly unconnected events, that are displayed in "Great God Pan." Scattered around in the book are twisted images of the many abominable faces that the Great God Pan may take, drawn by the esoteric occultist Austin Osman Spare.
37 of 40 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Dark Pagan Horror,
By
This review is from: The Great God Pan (Creation Classics) (Paperback)
I came to know about Arthur Machen and his work through the brilliant mastermind of H.P.Lovecraft; his references, both in fiction ("The Dunwich Horror" makes a very clear statement about Machen's influence in his body of work) and non-fiction ("Supernatural Horror in Literature"), ultimately inspired me to go search something about this author. Needless to say, I found virtually nothing in any bookstore. It was during a trip to Madrid, Spain, where I finally found a book by Machen containing "The Great God Pan" and many others. I was shocked."The Great God Pan" was the first story I read by Arthur Machen, and I only had to read the first few pages to know I was going to like it. Indeed, I did, although it was a little short for my taste. The ideas Machen makes you travel through are some of the finest in horror literature, and the Cosmic view of Pan, is very near the likes of Lovecraft. One can easily see where the influence Machen exerted over Lovecraft is. The only difference is that Machen did believe in some supernatural force existing within the Universe, whereas Lovecraft was the complete opposite. Dark Pagan Horror is what Machen delivers, and he does so with such a style, elegance (at least the Castilian translation, I still have to read the originals in English, but I am assuming the originals are much better) and wit, you just can't help but to stay with it until you are done.
24 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A terrifying and unique Supernatural story,
By av (USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Great God Pan (Creation Classics) (Paperback)
This novel has a wonderfully unique premise. The themes of the darker aspects of Greek Myth, sinister woods and what lurks within them, unreality right beneath our world, make for a delightfull story. While the plot is a bit mundane towards the center of the book, overall this is compensated for. If you've ever let your mind wander into the origins of ancient myths, and have been a bit shocked by what you imagine this is the book for you. The sexual aspect of the supernatural events is key, and overall adds to the one's attraction and repulsion to the concepts beneath the surface of this book. Machen was akcknowledged by HP Lovecraft as a major influence, and one sees this here. Also, Spare's illustrations, while not done for the book, are quite appropriate to convey its themes. Highly reccomended.
17 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Great God Pan,
By
This review is from: The Great God Pan (Paperback)
Arthur Machen's "The Great God Pan" (1894) delves into Machen's favorite subject: the supposed existence of a spiritual realm that is imperceptible to the human eye. A realm -- in the mind of Machen -- populated by golden-haired fairies haunting Welsh meadows, sex-crazed demons of ancient mysticism, furry red-eyed changelings that drag children underground with ropes, and phantom Roman legions glimpsed on foggy British moors. Clearly, Machen was a dreamer-sentimentalist, but with a very, very creepy sexual side. His Orthodox Anglo-Catholic upbringing imbued his mind with a love/hate fascination of aberrant sexuality; in particular, its spiritual ramifications. It was this fascination that lead to his writing "The Great God Pan."Machen's "The Great God Pan" is based upon the concept of spiritual demons that seduce their victims. This age-old story shares some of its esoteric origins in the Old Testament. Prior to textual expurgations by Christian Councils, the Old Testament once referenced the existence of incubi (male) or succubi (female) which preyed on sexual debutantes. Their queen was Lilith -- the Night Hag -- the first wife of Adam in Hebrew and Akkadian folklore. Lilith was a nymphomaniac whom Yahweh made from dung, prior to the creation of Eve. Lilith's inability to obey Adam led to her banishment and replacement by Eve. Later, Lilith mated with beasts and had offspring. Although in Hellenistic myth Pan was the foster brother of Zeus, some of Joseph Campbell's monomyth theorists claim that Pan was one of Lilith's children. The Pan deity present in Machen's horror story borrows from the aforementioned lore and also from the contemporary exorcism of his day. In the 19th century, exorcists believed that a demon could invade a weak soul and, if a child was conceived in lust by that soul, be born into the resulting child. Another variant was that a person in a hypnotic or drowsy state of mind could glimpse the spirit realm and have unwanted "encounters" there. Machen expounded upon this latter variant of exorcism in "The Great God Pan" by having Dr. Raymond create an experiment that allows others to glimpse that spirit world and creates tragic, yet kinky results. In "The Great God Pan," the experiment performed upon a seventeen-year old female, Mary, results in her seeing the "real world [...] beyond the veil" and, in doing so, she is raped by Pan. Mary goes insane, but bears a child nine months later from that unholy union. Years later, Helen Vaughan, the offspring of Pan and Mary, shocks London society by engaging in bizarre sexuality and destroying lives as the result of her taint by Pan. Machen foreshadows these events with the Latin adage: "Et diabolus incarnatus est. Et homo factus est." The English translation is: "And a devil was made incarnate. And a human being was produced." Overall, I enjoyed Machen's "The Great God Pan." To me, Machen's tale is similar to Bram Stoker's Dracula (1897) minus the clear-cut, black-and-white demarcation between good and evil. I also think "The Great God Pan" would be an excellent story to have your girlfriend read if the topic of marriage and children has just come up...
22 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
One of the most unsual and effective horror tales,
By Claude Avary "West Coast Reader" (Los Angeles, CA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Great God Pan (Creation Classics) (Paperback)
While the Victorian literary horror world revolved around vampires, Frankenstein monsters, and creaky ghosts in old castles, Machen wrote this terrifying story of the insatiable and malign spirit of nature invading our world through sexual means. Machen tells his story through an intriguing structure that slowly reveals the true horror behind a string of socialite murders. For anyone interested in novels of terror that go beyond the mundane and into the realm of spiritual nightmare.
15 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Great God Pan.,
By New Age of Barbarism "zosimos" (EVROPA.) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Great God Pan (Creation Classics) (Paperback)
"An incoherent nightmare of sex . . . " - The Westminster Gazette._The Great God Pan_ is the first book of the Welsh writer of weird tales and mystic Arthur Machen, published first in 1894. This book was regarded as a form of decadent literature and was panned by critics of the Victorian era. Arthur Machen was a fascinating character and antiquarian whose weird writings reveal his learning in the occult and his mystical inclinations. Machen was an Anglo-Catholic opposed to modernism in all its forms who was to join the secret society of the Golden Dawn, though he would reject the nefarious doings of such individuals as Aleister Crowley. Machen had an enormous influence on later writers of weird tales including especially H. P. Lovecraft who mentions him in his essay "Supernatural Horror in Literature" as an important influence. This book, republished by Creation Classics, is complimented by automatic drawings of Austin Osman Spare, a friend of Machen and a fellow occultist and mystic. In addition, this book contains Machen's introduction to the story proper. _The Great God Pan_ begins with a scientist/doctor and his friend attempting to perform a surgical operation on the brain of a seventeen year old girl, Mary, so that she may "see the Great God Pan". The doctor discusses his theories of "transcendental medicine", in which he believes he can control her through this operation. The operation fails and Mary is rendered an "idiot". The story then skips to the memoirs of Mr. Clarke, the friend of Dr. Raymond from the experiment on Mary. Mr. Clarke recounts a tale involving a young girl named Helen Vaughan, who encounters a pagan idol from Roman times in a field. The story involves murder and intrigue as well as a demonic sex change, which occur later in the tale. Machen's mystical inclinations can be seen as he presents the reader with an alchemical transformation. Though this book was initially criticized harshly by the establishment in Victorian times, it has endured and set the place of Arthur Machen as an important writer of weird tales. Machen's stories are quite unique and his influence on subsequent writers of supernatural fiction continues to endure.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Poor Quality Kindle Edition,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Great God Pan (Kindle Edition)
This review is specifically for the Kindle edition by the publisher "Public Domain Books". There are several typographical errors in this edition that are not present in other versions; the formatting is poor, with no block-quoting for long quoted passages; and most glaringly, a whole paragraph is left out near the beginning of the book (early in chapter 2).Skip this version, and get the higher-quality version from Project Gutenberg.
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A horror classic,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Great God Pan (Paperback)
Written in 1894, Arthur Machen's The Great God Pan is a short novel which was highly influential to H.P. Lovecraft and Stephen King. King, in fact, said The Great God Pan is "...one of the best horror stories ever written. Maybe the best in the English language. Mine isn't anywhere near that good..." The Great God Pan used to be hard to find, but is now available free on the Kindle (and at other public domain e-book outlets) and is easily read in one dark and rainy evening.The first few pages of The Great God Pan describe Mr. Clarke's visit to his friend Dr. Raymond. After many years of study, Dr. Raymond has theorized that the spirit world is all around us, but that humans are unable to perceive it because of the particular set-up of our sensory systems. Thus, he hypothesizes that a small lesion in the cortex of the brain -- a slight adjustment of our normal functioning -- will "lift the veil" so that we can perceive the supernatural. The Greeks called this "seeing the Great God Pan." Dr. Raymond invites Mr. Clarke into his laboratory where he is ready to perform this operation on Mary, a beautiful teenage girl who he saved from the streets years before and who, in his thinking, owes him her life. The operation appears to be unsuccessful... or at least Mary turns out to be incapable of describing her perceptions, because she has become "an idiot." The rest of the story is Mr. Clarke's collection of accounts of unexplained suicides and strange deaths (apparently from shock and terror) in London society and his gradual suspicion that there is some connection between these deaths and Dr. Raymond's failed experiment. The horrible things he hears about happen in private (many appear to be sexual in nature), so he can't report the specifics for any of them. Eerie tension and a creeping horror arise as the reader fills in the unknown with fears from his or her own imagination. It's disappointing that the writing style of The Great God Pan isn't as exquisite as the terror is, but it's pleasant enough and completely readable over 100 years later. The Great God Pan is a must-read for any fan of horror fiction -- not the bloody gruesome type of horror, but the brain-bending, soul-scaring type.
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Gothic Horror,
By Joseph Adams "brother" (Superior, WI USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Great God Pan (Paperback)
I got this because the author was at one time affiliated with the Golden Dawn. It is horror that was an influence of H.P. Lovecraft. I liked it because the author maintains an aura of darkness that could be disturbing. This is neo pagan horror that you usually don't see any more. Stephen King commercialized horror but this is more obscure. A few pages in I already thought highly of it. I thought it was cool that he was such an icon back at the turn of the last century.
4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Great story in a bad package,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Great God Pan (Paperback)
As mentioned in most of the other reviews, this is a terrific story, easily digested in one sitting. Unfortunately, the publishing house for this version failed to really proof their work. I found at least 3 errors. No really big deal, but the story is only 94 pages long. Take some time and give Machen's work the respect it deserves.
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The Great God Pan by Arthur Machen (Paperback - October 21, 2008)
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