Dr. Simon Cooke is an authority on Victorian illustration and has published widely in the field. His books include Illustrated Periodicals of the 1860s and The Moxon Tennyson: A Landmark in Victorian Illustration. He is a senior editor on the Victorian Web and the editor of Illustration magazine.
Description
This meticulously researched, generously illustrated study of a genre not systematically explored until now illuminates how Victorian illustration of the supernatural reflects, enhances, and at times counters topics including skepticism of the paranormal, the psychological dimensions of ghostliness, and the political ghoul as an incarnation of empire's repugnant past. Through Cooke's superb reading of supernatural illustrations by well-known and lesser-known artists for texts including those not typically considered ghost stories, this book will linger in our minds and imaginations long after we close its pages. - Catherine J. Golden, author of Serials to Graphic Novels: The Evolution of the Victorian Illustrated Book This book takes the reader on a ghost tour of Victorian illustrations of the supernatural. Cooke is an engaging guide who breathes a new (after)life into these images and carefully considers their cultural and political significance. Under Cooke's watch, specters and phantoms-both humorous and horrifying-emerge from the shadows. - Julia Thomas, author of The Victorian Mind's Eye: Reading Literature in an Age of Illustration