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Rebecca Johns

Auteur de The Countess

3 oeuvres 303 utilisateurs 21 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Crédit image: Photo by Catherine Adams

Œuvres de Rebecca Johns

The Countess (2010) 240 exemplaires
Icebergs: A Novel (2006) 59 exemplaires
A Condessa 4 exemplaires

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Sexe
female

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Critiques

Esta es la escalofriante historia de Erszebet Nadasdy, conocida como la Condesa Sangrienta, y acusada de ser la más sanguinaria asesina en serie de la historia. Mató, junto a varios colaboradores, a decenas de chicas jóvenes, infligiéndoles las más terribles torturas. En 1610, fue condenada a cadena perpetua por sus terribles crímenes.
 
Signalé
Natt90 | 17 autres critiques | Dec 20, 2022 |

This book is mostly a 2.5 star yawner. I was prepared a slow descent to madness for Elizabeth Bathory. It felt more like a meander that hit, no slumped to, a dead end. At the end, I neither felt sympathy nor disgust about the Countess.

The book buried me in a litany of names. The names of the royalty were burdensome. The servant girls could have been given more reason to care for them. I understand the Countess was telling the story but there could have been another character who vouched for the innocence or goodness of the servant girls.









… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
wellington299 | 17 autres critiques | Feb 19, 2022 |
Interesting book about a disturbed/disturbing woman. As a child she saw horrific punishments being meted out to servants. However, as an adult she took punishment too far. But there also seems to be a mental illness; a lack of empathy. Are we born lacking empathy or can we be trained along those lines? I don't know.
 
Signalé
scot2 | 17 autres critiques | Apr 29, 2019 |
Some of you may know of the Blood Countess or the Countess Dracula, the most prolific female serial killer of all time. Born in the Kingdom of Hungary in 1560, she was accused of killing hundreds of young women and some accounts say she murdered up to 650 victims.

When she was eventually caught and faced trial in 1609, she was walled up in a tower in solitary confinement until her death five years later in 1614. It was said Bathory bathed in the blood of her victims to preserve her beauty, but where does fact end and folklore begin?

Author Rebecca Johns attempts to address this in her fictionalised account of Elizabeth Bathory's life in her historical novel The Countess.

Johns takes us through Bathory's childhood growing up in a noble family in 16th Century Hungary, and walks us through her life in a first person narrative. We see her mature from a young girl and face fear, self-doubt, loneliness, love, heartbreak, loss, grief, anger and frustration.

Johns paints a clear picture of the responsibilities of a Countess to run several households and the disappointment and betrayal Bathory feels when her maidservants steal from her or sleep with her husband. Bathory beats them and many of them die, and we get a unique insight during all of this with privileged access to her - albeit fictionalised - thoughts.

What The Countess doesn't do (and cannot do) is respond to, answer or address the accusations Bathory ever bathed in blood. Many of these myths and accounts of Bathory occurred long after her death and it's difficult to address in a fictionalised account of an historical figure, but perhaps this could have been accomplished by a Author's Note at the end.

Countess Elizabeth Bathory's life and crimes have inspired countless artists to reference her in novels, comics, stage plays, operas, songs, TV shows, movies, and even video games. (Don't believe me? Check it out on Wikipedia).

I enjoyed this account of Bathory's life in The Countess, but I finished reading it with a feeling her crimes had been blown out of all proportion, and she wasn't the devil incarnate. Perhaps that was the point all along.
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Signalé
Carpe_Librum | 17 autres critiques | Jan 11, 2017 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
3
Membres
303
Popularité
#77,624
Évaluation
½ 3.6
Critiques
21
ISBN
13
Langues
3

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