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The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde Review: A Timeless Gothic Masterpiece Still Resonates

Oscar Wilde's only novel, The Picture of Dorian Gray, is a philosophical fiction and Gothic horror classic that follows the beautiful Dorian Gray as he bargains his soul so that his portrait — rather than himself — bears the marks of age and moral corruption. Originally published in 1890 and widely regarded as a cornerstone of both Gothic and English literature, this Grapevine Kindle edition makes the novel readily accessible to a new generation of readers. The Guardian has listed it among the 100 best novels ever written in English, and it remains among the most widely read Gothic novels in the world.

LuvemBooks Verdict

Best for

Readers drawn to ideas as much as plot — particularly those interested in Gothic fiction, Victorian literature, or philosophical horror — who want a richly layered novel that works simultaneously as moral fable, aesthetic manifesto, and supernatural tale.

Worth it if

Worth reading if you're willing to surrender to Wilde's discursive, essayistic style and let the novel's philosophical tensions — between beauty and corruption, art and morality, desire and consequence — do their slow, unsettling work.

Skip if

Skip it if you're after a tightly plotted thriller or horror novel with sustained narrative momentum, as Wilde's extended passages on aesthetics and decadence frequently pause the story in favour of philosophical argument.

What readers & critics say

The Guardian, whose review page for the novel is among our retrieved sources, placed it among the 100 best novels ever written in English, noting it enjoyed "by far the worst reception on its publication" before eventually being recognised as a classic. Britannica characterises it as "an archetypal tale of a young man who purchases eternal youth at the expense of his soul," while Wikipedia's account of its reception confirms it is now Wilde's best-known publication, having been largely overlooked until the 1980s before attracting substantial academic and popular interest.

Wilde's only novel enjoyed by far the worst reception on its publication — not until many years after his death was it recognised as a classic.

The Guardian
Sources: The Guardian, Britannica, Wikipedia
4.4from 25,295 Amazon ratings— reader ratings, not a LuvemBooks score

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In This Review
  • What Works & What Doesn't
  • What the Novel Is and What It Contains
  • The Novel's Significance and Literary Standing
  • What the Novel Does Well: Ideas, Wit, and Wilde's Aestheticism
  • Genuine Limitations and Who May Find It Challenging
  • Who This Edition Is For and How It Reads Today

What Works & What Doesn't

What Works
  • Wilde's only novel and widely regarded as a classic of both Gothic and English literature, listed by The Guardian among the 100 best novels ever written in English
  • Operates on multiple levels simultaneously — as Gothic horror, moral fable, and a serious philosophical exposition of Aestheticism
  • Richly drawn central characters, particularly Lord Henry Wotton, whose paradoxical worldview drives the novel's intellectual energy
  • Carries documented biographical resonance, rooted in Wilde's own reflections on art, beauty, and the passage of time
  • This Kindle edition features enhanced typesetting and Word Wise support, designed to improve on-screen readability
What Doesn't
  • The novel's discursive, essay-like passages on aesthetics and decadence can feel slow-paced for readers expecting plot-driven momentum
  • Victorian-era coding and allusion mean much of the moral and social critique is oblique, which some modern readers may find opaque rather than artfully ambiguous
A cornerstone of Gothic fiction and philosophical horror, The Picture of Dorian Gray is as morally urgent today as it was when it first scandalized Victorian readers in 1890.

What the Novel Is and What It Contains

The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde front cover
The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde front cover
The Picture of Dorian Gray is a philosophical fiction and Gothic horror novel — Oscar Wilde's sole foray into long-form prose fiction — centred on three men whose fates become irreparably entangled. Basil Hallward, an artist infatuated with his subject's beauty, paints a portrait of the young Dorian Gray. Through Basil, Dorian encounters Lord Henry Wotton, an aristocrat whose hedonistic philosophy — that beauty and sensual fulfilment are the only things worth pursuing in life — reshapes the younger man's entire moral outlook. Captivated and alarmed by the idea that his youth will fade, Dorian makes a fateful, impulsive wish: that the portrait age and deteriorate in his place, leaving him perpetually untouched. The wish is granted. Dorian proceeds to live a libertine life of varied immoral experiences, while the canvas absorbs every sin, growing more hideous with each transgression. Also woven into the narrative are Sibyl Vane, the innocent young actress with whom Dorian falls in love and then cruelly rejects, and her brother James Vane, whose pursuit of Dorian threads a strand of consequence through the novel's later movement. As Britannica describes it, the story is "an archetypal tale of a young man who purchases eternal youth at the expense of his soul."
What a tragic thing it is. This portrait will never grow older and I shall. If it was only the other way.

The Novel's Significance and Literary Standing

First published in the July 1890 issue of Lippincott's Monthly Magazine, then expanded and issued in book form in April 1891, the novel was initially met with outrage. Reviewers in the Scots Observer demanded to know why Wilde was "grubbing in muck-heaps," and The Irish Times's book critic noted it was "first published to some scandal," a work condemned as "mawkish and nauseous" and "contaminating" by its early detractors. That hostility has aged into its precise opposite: largely overlooked until the 1980s, the novel has since come to be recognised, as Wikipedia's account of its reception confirms, as Wilde's best-known publication, attracting substantial academic and popular interest. The Guardian placed it among the 100 best novels ever written in English. Joyce Carol Oates called it "exceptionally good — in fact, one of the strongest and most haunting of English novels." The novel has been adapted repeatedly for film, stage, and other art forms, and has inspired the Dorian Awards since 2009. Its elevation from scandal to canon is itself part of its story.

What the Novel Does Well: Ideas, Wit, and Wilde's Aestheticism

The work functions simultaneously as a Gothic horror tale and as a dramatic exposition of Wilde's own Aestheticism — the doctrine that art and beauty exist for their own sake, independent of moral utility. Lord Henry Wotton serves as the novel's most electric voice, a character whose epigrams and paradoxes channel Wilde's own philosophy while also indicting it. The tension between the Aesthetic ideal and its human cost gives the novel a philosophical density unusual for horror fiction of its era. Britannica characterises the book's central preoccupation as "the pursuit of eternal youth at the expense of one's soul," a framing that underlines how squarely Wilde places moral reckoning at the heart of what might otherwise read as a supernatural conceit. The novel also carries a documented biographical dimension: Wilde himself described the inspiration as arising from a portrait session with Canadian artist Frances Richards in London in 1887, when he remarked, in jest, "What a tragic thing it is. This portrait will never grow older and I shall. If it was only the other way." That self-aware, ironic distance between creator and creation runs through the entire text.

Genuine Limitations and Who May Find It Challenging

Readers approaching The Picture of Dorian Gray expecting a plot-driven thriller will find a novel that moves at a more discursive, essayistic pace. Wilde's extended passages on aesthetics, decadence, and philosophy — particularly in the chapters dealing with Dorian's various obsessions and Lord Henry's monologues — can feel digressive to readers accustomed to tightly plotted contemporary fiction. The novel was also written as a product of its Victorian moment: its treatment of moral corruption is often coded and allusive rather than explicit, a result of the social and legal pressures Wilde faced. Some readers may find this indirection frustrating, while others regard it as a source of the text's enduring ambiguity and richness. The novel is recommended for readers aged 13 and up based on customer guidance on the current edition, though its themes of moral decay, manipulation, and violence are substantive.

Who This Edition Is For and How It Reads Today

This Grapevine Kindle edition, published in October 2025, offers Wilde's classic in a digitally accessible format with enhanced typesetting and Word Wise support enabled — features designed to ease readability on-screen. For students, general readers, and anyone new to Gothic literature, this edition provides a convenient entry point to a novel that has shaped the genre's vocabulary for over a century. For those already familiar with the text, it serves as a portable, searchable companion to one of English literature's most debated works. Its themes — the corrosive vanity of beauty, the psychological weight of hidden sin, the Faustian cost of a life given over entirely to sensation — have lost none of their cultural currency. Whether approached as Gothic horror, moral fable, or Wildean aesthetic manifesto, The Picture of Dorian Gray continues to reward serious reading.

Sources & Further Reading

The key facts and claims in this review are grounded in the retrieved, verified sources listed below.

  1. Cited in this review
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  6. Further reading
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    Oscar Wilde — author profileHigh-authority source

    Oscar Wilde, Wikipedia

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