This book is a reproduction of a historical work, published by Megali, a company dedicated to making literature accessible for those with impaired vision through large print editions. The focus on accessibility highlights the importance of inclusivity in reading, ensuring that classic texts can be enjoyed by a wider audience.
Thomas Love Peacock Orden de los libros (cronológico)
Este novelista y poeta inglés se caracteriza por diálogos ingeniosos y una aguda sátira que disecciona las corrientes intelectuales de su tiempo. Su verso más celebrado se teje en sus novelas, donde las conversaciones entre personajes ocupan un lugar central. Estas narrativas a menudo critican las tendencias filosóficas y artísticas predominantes. Su novela más famosa satiriza la melancolía romántica, inspirándose en sus personajes de su círculo de influyentes amigos literarios.






The book is a reproduction of a historical work, presented in large print to enhance accessibility for individuals with impaired vision. Published by Megali, a house dedicated to making historical texts more readable, it aims to preserve the original content while ensuring it is accessible to a wider audience.
This book is a reproduction of a historical work, published by Megali, a company dedicated to producing large print editions. The focus on accessibility aims to assist readers with impaired vision, ensuring that important texts remain available to a wider audience.
Headlong Hall; Nightmare Abbey; Maid Marian; Crotchet Castle
- 432 páginas
- 16 horas de lectura
Nightmare Abbey is a novella by Thomas Love Peacock, first published in 1818, widely considered to be Peacock’s most enduringly popular work. The narrative centres on Christopher Glowry, a miserly widower, his son Scythrop and a host of dismal-sounding servants in his family pile, Nightmare Abbey. Recovering from an ill-fated love affair, Scythrop dreams up various schemes to reform and regenerate the human species, but misanthropy lurks around every corner, and everything changes when a mermaid is spotted and a strange woman appears in his chamber. Although fundamentally a Gothic novel, and rich in allusion – from Pope to Dante, Rossini to Mozart – Nightmare Abbey is, at heart, a satire, as Peacock makes clear in the preface to a later edition, in which he describes the characters – allusions to his friends – as ‘status-quo-ites’, ‘morbid visionaries’, ‘romantic enthusiasts’ and ‘lovers of good dinners’. 'Every quarter century, like clockwork, there is a Peacock revival.' — Gore Vidal 'Great mental powers on display in such lightly told tales.' — Christopher Hawtree, The Guardian
Three Novels - Headlong Hall - Nightmare Abbey - Crotchet Castle
- 360 páginas
- 13 horas de lectura
Featuring three notable novels, this collection showcases Thomas Love Peacock's satirical style, characterized by characters engaging in philosophical discussions. The works included are "Headlong Hall," "Nightmare Abbey," and "Crotchet Castle," reflecting Peacock's wit and social commentary. A contemporary of Percy Bysshe Shelley, Peacock's influence on literature is significant. This edition also offers introductory essays by Sir Walter Raleigh and Virginia Woolf, enhancing its value for both enthusiasts and scholars. It's a must-have for those appreciating classic literature.
Headlong Hall & Nightmare Abbey
- 272 páginas
- 10 horas de lectura
These two novels contain characters who are either representative types, or thinly veiled caricatures of Peacock's contemporaries, who gather in country houses to eat, drink and discuss. These tales poke fun at contemporary attitudes and ideas, such as the Romantic literary movement.
Nachtmahr-Abtei
- 283 páginas
- 10 horas de lectura


