I'm gonna preface this whole review with the total fact that I am not a deep intellectual. I have not gone to college or studied or anything. I am dufus with delusions of grandeur and I'm okay with that.
Most of what I know I've learned myself from reading essays like this book.
And really, I did learn a lot. Granted, I've not yet read Frankenstein (though I've consumed so much media about it, adaptations, spoofs, etc.) or The Picture of Dorian Grey (in the process of correcting that now), which are two of the original basis for Gothic that the author uses to deconstruct the genre (the other two being Dracula and Dr. Jekyll Mr. Hyde.
The essays create multiple ways of seeing the story and what lies beneath. It takes those four stories as the foundation for what we would come to know as Gothic horror, showcase what about them means gothic, as well as giving us the ideas of what the author's intentionally and most times unintentionally put between the lines. The author goes even further at times to display how certain themes can be taken for the world of today, in a world where sexuality and politics are somewhat kinda not really but yes really the same and different. One of the excellent things I found about this was the way the author really went about of connecting these stories into the modern horror of today.
I really want to go a bit more into this, but this is a book I've got to revisit after having read the original Frankenstein and Picture of Dorian Gray (well in my case, listen to.)
Still a valuable read, easy to understand, with ideas galore.