95 pages 3 hours read

Jonathan Stroud

The Screaming Staircase

Fiction | Novel | Middle Grade | Published in 2013

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Background

Literary Context: Traditional English Ghost Stories

Lockwood & Co.: The Screaming Staircase is a novel that deliberately breaks many traditions of classic British ghost stories while simultaneously upholding others. For example, the story includes overt allusions to Shakespeare’s Hamlet, which features a prince who is haunted by his father’s ghost. The novel also forges connections to a variety of ghost stories from the Victorian era, which often featured images of spirits wearing iron chains. (A classic example of this trope is the character of Marley’s Ghost in Charles Dickens’s A Christmas Carol.) In a creative twist, the protagonists of Stroud’s novel use iron chains as a form of protection.

Furthermore, the novel references “ghost-lamps,” which are large oil lamps designed to keep ghosts away; ironically, in Victorian England, these lamps often emitted an odor strong enough to cause hallucinations, which may explain some of the ghost sightings that were so commonly reported at the time. Finally, Stroud’s decision to utilize a photograph of Annabel and her killer as the key to unlocking her murder is likely an homage to Victorian-era spirit photography. Stroud also adds his own unique twists to further embellish the trappings of the classic ghost story, and he refers to this tendency in the foreword of the novel when he describes his decision to feature child heroes who are actually successful in defeating their adversaries.