'Last night I dreamt I went to Manderley again.'
It’s time to begin our journey into the heart of Daphne du Maurier's dark gothic bestseller: Rebecca.
Our reading will teach us about possessive jealousy, hauntings of the past, the evolution of gothic literature, the rise of the bestseller, the interwar years, identity, memory, class, marriage, women in the modern world, the human condition, and much more.
Today we’re meeting Daphne du Maurier together, contextualising her life, the modern era, and the history of the gothic genre, with a spoiler-free discussion, in order to elevate our appreciation of one of the most iconic works of 20th century British Gothic Literature.
Video Timestamps:
0:00 ‘last night I dreamt I went to Manderley again’
1:30 Daphne du Maurier’s Rebecca spoiler-free talk
2:30 book club autumn lecture series for Rebecca
3:00 meeting the author Daphne du Maurier
5:00 when writers fall in love with a locale
6:00 growing up in the du Maurier family
7:00 Daphne’s trauma and identity crisis
8:00 portrait of the artist as a young woman
9:00 writing in the 1920s Paris cafe culture
10:00 leaving the Victorian era behind
11:00 landmark era for women’s rights
12:00 Victorian to Edwardian to Modern
14:00 birth of Modernism out of WWI
16:00 channeling trauma into great art
18:00 Daphne du Maurier’s Cornwall
20:00 Cornish myths, legends, folklore
21:00 a shipwreck inspires her first story
22:00 Daphne du Maurier’s Jamaica Inn
23:00 Menabilly, the real life Manderley
24:00 how Daphne met husband Tommy
25:00 real life romantic jealousy of the past
26:00 letters from her husband’s ex-fiancée
27:00 haunted by the ghost of her father
28:00 the marriage of Daphne du Maurier
29:00 trauma from the First World War
30:00 Daphne’s struggles with motherhood
31:00 the challenge of being the breadwinner
32:00 Daphne du Maurier in Alexandria
33:00 what inspired the novel Rebecca?
34:00 feeling of homesickness in Rebecca
35:00 the destruction of the first draft
36:00 Alfred Hitchcock’s film adaptations
37:00 Daphne du Maurier on writing
38:00 the double life of Daphne du Maurier
40:00 Rebecca during the Interwar Years
41:00 looming threat of Second World War
42:00 Britain enters World War Two
43:00 carrying the scars of two world wars
44:00 Daphne du Maurier during WWII
45:00 crisis of faith in the 20th century
46:00 Daphne du Maurier’s The Birds
47:00 Rebecca and the Gothic tradition
48:00 was Daphne du Maurier a Modernist?
49:00 what does gothic literature mean?
50:00 formulation for unlocking the gothic
52:00 French Revolution and gothic evolution
54:00 Gothic as corrupted quest romance
55:00 structural definition of romance
57:00 rebirth, renewal and reunion
58:00 heroines at the centre of the gothic
1:00:00 gothic as male or female fantasy?
1:02:00 the byronic anti-hero archetype
1:04:00 brooding Maxim de Winter
1:05:00 on the rise of women writers
1:06:00 gothic and the rise of the novel
1:08:00 sublime terror in the gothic
1:09:00 difference in terror vs horror
1:10:00 why do we love the sublime?
1:11:00 the war of realism vs romance
1:13:00 gothic literature as political force
1:14:00 proto-feminist critique in the gothic
1:15:00 historical skewed marital rights
1:17:00 woman defined in relation to man
1:18:00 Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre
1:20:00 Sally Beauman on Rebecca
1:22:00 gothic as eternally popular literature
1:23:00 the threat feared becomes internal
1:25:00 identity crisis at the heart of Rebecca
1:26:00 the story of du Maurier’s Rebecca
1:28:00 the narrator’s possessive jealousy
1:29:00 marriage in modern gothic novels
1:30:00 Manderley as masculine metaphor
1:31:00 the two Mrs de Winter characters
1:32:00 the dominating presence of the book
1:33:00 reading as dreaming whilst awake
1:34:00 complex persona put into both women
1:35:00 what does being possessed mean?
1:36:00 haunting means returning home
1:37:00 how Rebecca became a bestseller
1:39:00 is du Maurier really a romance writer?
1:40:00 Daphne du Maurier vs the critics
1:41:00 why I reread Rebecca every few years
1:42:00 Rebecca book club lecture series
Recommended Resources:
Editions: I am working from the Virago Modern Classics paperback for our read-through, which is also available in hardback, and has a thought-provoking afterword by Sally Beauman. There is also a beautiful edition from Everyman's Library. One of my favourite copies of the book is an old battered and well-loved Penguin paperback with a wonderful cover. There are plenty of editions to choose from, so grab whatever comes most easily to hand for you. And, for fellow audiobook lovers, Anna Massey and Harriet Walter have wonderful narrations on Audible. I'm also a huge fan of the abridged Talking Classics version, read by Jenny Agutter and Simon Williams.
Film & TV Adaptations: There are two major film adaptations that you will want to note. You've got the classic black-and-white 1940 Alfred Hitchcock masterpiece, starring Joan Fontaine and Laurence Olivier, which helped further propel Daphne du Maurier to superstardom. Then there's the more recent stunning 2020 film on Netflix, which has a very glossy production value. There are adaptation for television too, like the excellent BBC miniseries from 1979 and the 1997 series. All of these adaptations take different approaches into Dame du Maurier's great novel. My recommendation is to hold off on watching an adaptation until you've finished the book. Whilst reading, think about how you would adapt Rebecca to the screen. What directorial decisions would you make? We'll talk about the film adaptations together when we reach the climax of the story. Instead of watching an adaptation of Rebecca from the outset, you might enjoy watching another of her stories brought to life on screen instead. Hitchcock also adapted The Birds and Jamaica Inn. Nicholas Roeg directed a great adaptation of one of du Maurier's short stories with the 1979 film Don't Look Now.
Biography: There is an excellent biography of Daphne du Maurier by Margaret Forster, which is well worth dipping into. Forster has done a tremendous job researching the writer's private letters and papers to explore the secret drama of her personal life. If you're interested in knowing about du Maurier's life and craft in her own words, Virago has put together a work based on her personal diaries kept from 1920-1931, called Myself When Young: The Shaping of a Writer, and also The Rebecca Notebook.
Short Stories: Daphne du Maurier is a superb short story writer. Her stories offer us some of her darkest stories and make for perfect reading during the autumnal season. The Birds, and Other Stories and Don't Look Now are excellent volumes to have with a wonderful selection of some of her finest works in the mode.
Spoilers: This introductory talk is a spoiler-free discussion, designed for first-time readers and rereaders of Rebecca alike, mentioning only the plot details that one finds on the back cover of the book and things we learn early on. I will be refraining from spoilers for later in the story as we move through each lecture, focusing only on the events of the chapters up for discussion. If you're a rereader of this phenomenal novel, I ask that we make efforts to protect the secrets of the story for first-time readers. Unlike with Homer's Odyssey, the air of mystery shrouding Rebecca is a profound part of one's first engagement with the work.
Reading Assignment:
Our next discussion will cover events from chapter one up to and including chapter ten of the story, which will take us from Monte Carlo to the famed Manderley.
So start making your way into the work, enter the world of Daphne du Maurier, meet her complex characters, and note down any themes, ideas, or passages that personally resonate with you.
Questions for You:
1) What is your current relationship with Daphne du Maurier? Is this your first reading or a rereading of this great story?
2) What are you hoping to get out of your deep reading of Rebecca?
3) What themes from your wider reading would you like to pull into this journey?
4) Are you a fan of dark gothic narratives? And why do you think gothic stories are so popular with readers?
Happy reading, everybody!
Josie Swallow
2026-02-05 11:12:33 +0000 UTCElizabeth Kamras
2026-02-01 02:21:41 +0000 UTCShelley
2026-01-12 13:11:14 +0000 UTCLeigh Coop
2025-10-27 17:43:16 +0000 UTCDr Jenny
2025-10-15 10:53:57 +0000 UTCLisa Vehe
2025-10-12 17:49:40 +0000 UTCMaryan Dawson
2025-10-11 22:45:33 +0000 UTCYoknapatawpha
2025-10-10 04:39:59 +0000 UTCYoknapatawpha
2025-10-09 20:15:15 +0000 UTCClement Lee
2025-10-09 18:07:28 +0000 UTCAshley August
2025-10-09 15:48:55 +0000 UTCJonathon Glover
2025-10-09 10:18:01 +0000 UTC