ChatterBank1 min ago
The Haunting Of Hill House
5 Answers
The original film version of this famous novel is one of my favourites, and I am re-reading it now and very much enjoying it.
It;s not a long novel - less than 250 pages, but I am sure I have read a 'shorter' version years ago which I found disappointing - have i dreamed this, or are there two different versions of this book?
I do recomend you read it if you like your horror subtle and suspenseful, likewise the original black and white film version. Ignore the re-make - dreadful.
It;s not a long novel - less than 250 pages, but I am sure I have read a 'shorter' version years ago which I found disappointing - have i dreamed this, or are there two different versions of this book?
I do recomend you read it if you like your horror subtle and suspenseful, likewise the original black and white film version. Ignore the re-make - dreadful.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Thanks andy-hughes and jno, I'm adding this to my bookmarks, sounds very interesting indeed:)
I didn't have you down as a Reader's Digest junkie andy-hughes, but there it is, volume 41 spring of 1960... http://en.wikipedia.o...igest_Condensed_Books ;-)
I didn't have you down as a Reader's Digest junkie andy-hughes, but there it is, volume 41 spring of 1960... http://en.wikipedia.o...igest_Condensed_Books ;-)
Thanks jno - it's not a novelisation, because that occurs when a screenplay is turned into a novel, rather than the other way around.
Thanks swedeheart - I wasn't aware it was an abirdged version - certainly no RD connection I was aware of - but that could explain why I found the first time i read the novel so unsatisfying. The full verion is far better, and the screenplay is largely lifted from it - an excellent film as i have mentioned.
Thanks swedeheart - I wasn't aware it was an abirdged version - certainly no RD connection I was aware of - but that could explain why I found the first time i read the novel so unsatisfying. The full verion is far better, and the screenplay is largely lifted from it - an excellent film as i have mentioned.
I know, andy, but sometimes a film that's been adapted from a book gets turned back into a book again, only shorter (I'm struggling to think of examples but I recall that sort of thing happening back in the 60s) - as it's done to cash in on the success of the film it counts as a novelisation, rather than a simple abridgement as the Reader's Digest version might have been. Either could have happened in this case.