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This was a fun read, particularly close to Halloween. The artwork is very spooky and ethereal with lots of watercolors and lots of blues, blacks, and oranges. Seeing the original sketches at the back was also neat.

The wording is pretty much all taken from the original story, though this is not word-for-word the whole story. The selected parts and accompanying illustrations set up a nice flow and definitely give it the feeling of listening to a ghost story by the fire.
 
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rianainthestacks | 5 reseñas más. | Nov 5, 2023 |
Listened to the free Librivox recording, and the narrator was well suited to the story.

I've always meant to read this and I'm not sure what I was expecting to happen. I thought that perhaps the headless horseman appeared more often, but this was pitched just right. In Sleepy Hollow, not long after the War of Independance, when many lives were lost, ghost stories have been built up around what happened.

Ichibod Crane, the school teacher, has been courting one of the local women, much to the dismay of others who would like to also court her. He has become aware of the local war stories - both the British and the Americans can past nearby - and these stories are repeated at a local party thrown by the father of his beau. Once the party finishes, he stays behind to talk to the girl but gets turfed out with a flea in his ear not long after - Irving not going into detail. He has to ride his horse through the haunted area, only to be chased by the headless horseman.

Crane is never to be seen again, and rumours abound for a while about what happened and whether he is still alive

Good haunting story, and well suited for a reading on a dark and stormy night.....
 
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nordie | 5 reseñas más. | Oct 14, 2023 |
This did absolutely nothing for me. The story was farfetched and nonsensical. The art was, quite frankly, awful. The frequent spelling mistakes were annoying.

Nothing to see here, folks. There's FAR superior horror out there.
 
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TobinElliott | Sep 3, 2021 |
Maybe it's because I love Tim Burton's movie version (with Johnny Depp), but I didn't find this book nearly as scary or frightening as I'd hoped. Not a page-turner at all.
 
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GettinBetter | 5 reseñas más. | Jun 27, 2016 |
Many have seen some tv or movie variation of this story and are familiar with the storyline. I had read it in school and even watched the movie Legend of Sleepy Hollow that came out. I liked the movie, but there is always something about a good story that always beats out the movie especially when it comes to a mystery or scary story.

The story is set in 1790 in a place called Tarry Town that is in a glen called Sleepy Hollow. We meet Ichabod Crane who is a schoolmaster and who wants to marry an 18 yr old wealthy farmers daughter, Katrina Van Tassel. However, he has some competition with Abraham Van Brunt who also wants her hand. One night there is a party where all are in attendence. When Ichabod leaves he finds he is pursued by the Headless Horseman. He is the ghost of a Hessian trooper who had his head shot off by a stray cannonball during a "nameless battle" during the American Revolutionary War. Ichabod mysteriously disappears from town after that fateful night which leaves Katrina to marry Brom Bones. The story leaves in mystery saying only that Brom would look "exceedingly knowing when the story of Ichabod was related".

This is a fun story that is wrapped in love, mystery, and legend. Definitely worth the read and being free what could be better!
 
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jessica_reads | 5 reseñas más. | Mar 24, 2015 |
Many have seen some tv or movie variation of this story and are familiar with the storyline. I had read it in school and even watched the movie Legend of Sleepy Hollow that came out. I liked the movie, but there is always something about a good story that always beats out the movie especially when it comes to a mystery or scary story.

The story is set in 1790 in a place called Tarry Town that is in a glen called Sleepy Hollow. We meet Ichabod Crane who is a schoolmaster and who wants to marry an 18 yr old wealthy farmers daughter, Katrina Van Tassel. However, he has some competition with Abraham Van Brunt who also wants her hand. One night there is a party where all are in attendence. When Ichabod leaves he finds he is pursued by the Headless Horseman. He is the ghost of a Hessian trooper who had his head shot off by a stray cannonball during a "nameless battle" during the American Revolutionary War. Ichabod mysteriously disappears from town after that fateful night which leaves Katrina to marry Brom Bones. The story leaves in mystery saying only that Brom would look "exceedingly knowing when the story of Ichabod was related".

This is a fun story that is wrapped in love, mystery, and legend. Definitely worth the read and being free what could be better!
 
Denunciada
jesssika | 5 reseñas más. | Sep 9, 2014 |
This is such a classic tale...one that I know well even though this is the first time I've actually read it. Growing up on Long Island, NY, I remember visiting Washington Irving's home in Tarry Town as a child and hearing the story of Ichabod Crane at that point. I also vaguely remember watching the 1948 Disney version when I was younger (and I just re-watched on youtube...amazing how much the coquettish Katrina resembles Disney's Cinderella! ;)). However, I am so glad that I finally read Washington Irving's story, effectively set in the framework of early post-Revolution America, with its beautiful descriptions of the Hudson Valley region and eerily suspenseful language which really leaves the reader wondering "What REALLY happened to Ichabod Crane?"
 
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KindleKapers | 5 reseñas más. | Jan 6, 2012 |
This 'Elseworlds' graphic novel takes the character of Bruce Wayne and transplants him to the 1800s where he takes on a Frankenstein-esque role and constructs a monster from the brain of his father that morphs into the Batman. I really, really didn't like this. The Batman-Frankenstein myth-melding did nothing for me. It didn't make me view the Batman in a new light nor did it provide an interesting setting for a familiar character. It was nothing more than a Shelley pastiche with a modern novetly edge. I didn't like the artwork either - traditional simulated brushwork or not, it wasn't stylistically something that gripped my attention. There are better works in the Batman canon and the original Frankenstein is steeped further in gothic horror than this slightly limp-wristed effort.
 
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klarusu | otra reseña | May 20, 2009 |
An "elseworlds" Batman graphic novel, modeled after the "Frankenstein" legend and set in that time and place, in which Bruce Wayne attempts to construct a sort of "Bat-Man" using immensely strong body parts and his dead father's brain. Needless to say, things go awry shortly after. Good painted-style artwork that complements the Gothic tones.½
 
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burnit99 | otra reseña | Jan 29, 2007 |
Mostrando 9 de 9