Scholars have long recognized that narrative suspense dominates the formal dynamics of
nineteenth-century British fiction, both high and low. But few have asked why suspense played such a
crucial role in the Victorian noveland in Victorian culture more broadly. The Serious Pleasures
of Suspense argues that a startling array of nineteenth-century thinkersfrom John Ruskin and
Michael
Faraday to Charlotte Brontë and Wilkie Collinssaw suspense as the perfect vehicle for a
radically new approach to knowledge that they called "realism." Although by convention suspense
has belonged to the realm of sensational mysteries and gothic horrors, and realism to the world of sober,
reformist, middle-class domesticity, the two were in fact inextricably intertwined. The real was defined
precisely as that which did not belong to the mind, that which stood separate from patterns of thought and
belief. In order to get at the truth of the real, readers would have to learn to suspend their judgment.
Suspenseful plots were the ideal vehicles for disseminating this experience of doubt, training readers to
pause before leaping to conclusions.
Far from being merely low or sensational, the mysteries of many plotted texts were intended to
introduce readers to a rigorous epistemological training borrowed from science. And far from being
complacently conservative, suspense was deliberately employed to encourage a commitment to skepticism
and uncertainty. In The Serious Pleasures of Suspense, Caroline Levine argues convincingly that the
nineteenth-century critics were not wrong about suspense: the classic readerly text was indeed far more
writerlydynamic, critical, questioning, and indeterminatethan modern critics have been inclined to
imagine.
Offering original readings of canonical texts, including Jane Eyre, Great Expectations, The Moonstone, and The Picture of Dorian Gray, and drawing on a range of historical sources, from popular fiction and art criticism to the philosophy of science and scientific biography, Levine combines narrative theory and the history of ideas to offer a stunning rereading of nineteenth-century realism.
Caroline Levine is Assistant Professor of English at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, and the coeditor, with Mark W. Turner, of From Author to Text: Re-reading George Eliots Romola.