The Haunting of Hill House by Shirley Jackson — book cover

Book details

The Haunting of Hill House

by Shirley Jackson

1959 · Penguin Books

About the book

Dr. John Montague, a ghost hunter, invites three strangers to stay at Hill House, an 80-year-old mansion with a history of tragedy. Among them is Eleanor Vance, a woman seeking independence after a decade spent caring for her invalid mother. As the group documents banging doors and shifting architecture, the house focuses its attention on Eleanor. The narrative tracks her mental dissolution as the property’s physical layout manipulates her sense of reality, eventually leading the group to question whether the disturbances originate from the walls or from Eleanor’s subconscious.

Readers who enjoy psychological tension and Gothic settings choose this novel to study the relationship between isolation and madness. It appeals to those interested in unreliable narration and the ways childhood trauma shapes adult vulnerability. Instead of jump scares, the reader gains a chilling perspective on how an environment can consume an individual's identity. By the final page, one is left to decide if the house is a sentient monster or merely a mirror reflecting a broken mind.

Details

Published
1959
Publisher
Penguin Books
ISBN
9780143134190
Language
EN