How did HG Wells and Susan Hill create a tense feeling red room and house in a ghost story? The two stories I want to compare are "The Red Room" by H. G Wells and "Farthing House" by Susan Hill. "The Red Room" and "Farthing House" are typical horror stories with no blood, internal organs or hemostasis. These stories have been written for almost 100 years. Despite having a gap of 100 years, there are still many similarities. "The Red Room" was written in 1896, "Farthing House" was written in 1992/93.
The difference between these two stories is that they all produce tension in different ways. The emotions used are also different. The red room is faster than the fursing house, the tension is high and it is terrible. In the red room, we found a very few, and the end was left to imagination. It is very suitable for Gothic horror type. It is written because it is written on time, but the reader feels it difficult to contact the narrator. Clear In short, I think Red Hall is about fear of terror and fear of unknown, I think the emotions of narrator are left to the reader. Farthing House thinks the connection with the reader is easier - it is approaching our time, and the talker will explain her feelings in a smart way and make her more reliable when asking herself I will. My mother is the common foundation for all of us.
I think that fursing house is more satisfying because we know what happens and who is ghost. I think the red room is more terrible, and the fursing house is deeper, more emotional, more mysterious, and I feel more reliable. But I do not like the end of Farthing House. Because it is a bit confusing and less reliable. I like the way tension is formed in the red room, and the language used for shadows and lights is very effective. I think the Red Room is simpler as it has the concept of dark and light, good and evil, and because it is very effective. However, the fursing house is also very effective, the author explains emotions and settings, using a short, one-segment paragraph