"All this he saw, for one moment breathless and intense, vivid on the morning sky; and still, as he looked, he lived; and still, as he lived, he wondered."

George MacDonald’s Lilith

“too long for traditional publishing”, and on Saint Valentine’s day nonetheless! Yeah, this rubbed me the wrong way a little, since I’m perfectly within the boundaries of the word count recommended for my genre and hey, if you like the project we can trim it, right? Wrong. Apparently.

Anyway, this means you get a romantic tale: Lilith by George MacDonald.

George Macdonald is a capital author, especially for a Tolkien fan such as myself, as his novels shaped the taste for fantasy we find in books such as The Hobbit.

His enigmatic novel Lilith is a much different story, considered appalling by some and a masterpiece by others.

Young Mr. Vane inherits a vast, old house filled with secrets. By interacting with objects in the house, such as a mirror, he finds himself transported to another world, an alternate reality known as “the region of the seven dimensions.”

Haunting and steeped in symbolism, the region hosts creatures such as Mr. Raven, the alluring yet dangerous Lilith (reimagined as a powerful princess, not the demon of folklore), and Adam, the first man. Vane embarks on five journeys through the mirror, and grapples with questions about good and evil, life and death, rebellion against God, the search for true understanding, the transformative power of love and the true nature of reality.

Enjoy!

 

Pride Month

Pride Month 2025 – Words of the Day

Not by Nature, but by Habit: Christine de Pizan and the Complexity of Gender Roles “If it were customary to send little girls to school and teach them the same subjects as boys are taught, they would learn just as well… Not because they are

Read More »
Pride Month

Pride Month 2025 – Story of the Day

The Sword and the Stage: La Maupin, the Scandalous Virtuosa of Baroque France Julie d’Aubigny, better known as La Maupin, was a French opera singer, expert swordswoman, and outlaw who lived as boldly as the heroines she portrayed. Born into a noble family and trained

Read More »
art and fashion

Anatomy of a Space: Maria Helena Vieira da Silva in Venice

From April 12 to September 15, 2025, Venice’s Peggy Guggenheim Collection hosts the richly evocative solo exhibition Maria Helena Vieira da Silva: Anatomy of Space (Anatomia di uno spazio in Italian), curated by Flavia Frigeri, an art historian from London’s National Portrait Gallery. Featuring around

Read More »
Share on LinkedIn
Throw on Reddit
Roll on Tumblr
Mail it
No Comments

Post A Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

RELATED POSTS

Pride Month 2025 – Words of the Day

Not by Nature, but by Habit: Christine de Pizan and the Complexity of Gender Roles “If it were customary to send little girls to school and teach them the same subjects as boys are taught, they would learn just as well… Not because they are

Read More

Pride Month 2025 – Story of the Day

The Sword and the Stage: La Maupin, the Scandalous Virtuosa of Baroque France Julie d’Aubigny, better known as La Maupin, was a French opera singer, expert swordswoman, and outlaw who lived as boldly as the heroines she portrayed. Born into a noble family and trained

Read More

Anatomy of a Space: Maria Helena Vieira da Silva in Venice

From April 12 to September 15, 2025, Venice’s Peggy Guggenheim Collection hosts the richly evocative solo exhibition Maria Helena Vieira da Silva: Anatomy of Space (Anatomia di uno spazio in Italian), curated by Flavia Frigeri, an art historian from London’s National Portrait Gallery. Featuring around

Read More