The Waxwork

532 Words2 Pages

“Where there is no imagination there is no horror.”~ Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. The waxwork is all about how his imagination faded into reality, how it got the better of him. The waxwork is considered to be a book in the horror genre. All books in the horror genre include things like suspense, setting, and theme. Like any other scary or horror book, this book is all about its suspense. When Hewson explains that he wants to stay in the murderer's den the manager quickly explains on page 467 “...I couldn’t sit alone among them all night, with their seeming to stare at me…” The manager who saw all these figures being made from scratch couldn’t even bare to spend a night with them. It adds the feeling that something could happen in the future. The story quickly escalates when the manager is describing to Hewson the gruesome murders that Dr. Bourdette committed. When Hewson is finally left alone in the chamber he starts describing on page 472 how he believed the figures moved, “... there had been a subtle change in the grouping of the figures in front…” Everything that was being said before this had somehow switched his perspective in his thoughts, made him think that something sinister was going on. It wasn’t only the suspense in the book that contributed to its horror, it …show more content…

The way that the author of The Waxwork explains how everything was malevolently placed in the chamber contributes to this. On page 468 The author describes “... an open barrier and down ill-lit stone stairs which conveyed a sinister impression…” The mood of the place could have added to the eeriness Hewson was feeling. When Hewson is beginning to wonder if the waxworks are actually moving he states “ The dim unwavering light fell on the rows of uncannily like human beings that the silence seemed unnatural and even ghastly.” Hewson was the only one in that room yet it felt as if the waxworks were alive as

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