Customer Reviews
Haunting gothic and chilling fable - By: Roman Clodia, 23 Jun 2008 
This is a spine-tingling (not necessarilyin a good way!) long short story with hauntingly gothic imagery that shifts & stirs beneath a prosaic surface.
The female protagonist is confined to her room as a 'rest cure' which might be associated with what we now recognise as post-natal depression, but the enforced 'rest' that is more akin to imprisonment releases somethingin her psyche that might be madness...
The yellow wallpaper of the title is both a kind of fairy-tale mirror & a window to another world that allows the narrator to see the female figures caught beneath it & living out their lives beneath its shadows, an incredibly haunting & indicting imagery for Victorian England.
This is only short (more a long short story than a novella) but it will stay with you for all that.
Haunting tale - By: kehs, 01 Nov 2007 
This is a disturbing tale about a young woman's treatment by her husband. What we now know as post-natal depression wasin those days treated as madness. Her husband has had her confined to a room with yellow patterned wallpaper after she has her first baby. Her only way of expressing her feelings is to write them down, but she has to do soin secret as her husband has forbidden it. She thinks there is a person underneath the wallpaper trying to get out & we can feel the desperationin her writing as she struggles to understand what is happening to her. This has a bone chilling ending which will haunt my mind forever.
Tales of a Lunatic - By: , 25 Jan 2002 
Focusing on The Yellow Wallpaper alone, this novel is wonderful. Our protagonist is a woman stifled by her husband, also a doctor, who doesnt allow her to write & believes her passion for writing has made her mad. He locks herin the highest roomin the house with the famous Yellow Wallpaper where most of the story takes place. It is a tale of an incarcerated woman who stays awake by night to see the caged figurein the wallpaper that 'shakes the bars' by moonlight, hence her lunacy.
The book is a large component fir Gilbert & Gubar's 'The Madwoman In The Attic' & frankly, i love it!!