Assembled by an authority on vintage thrillers, these 17 Victorian-era stories of the macabre include works from around the world by both popular and lesser-known authors. Ambrose Bierce, Robert Barr,... This description may be from another edition of this product.
Interesting Collection of Old-Fashioned, Victorian Ghost Stories
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 19 years ago
This Dover edition is an unabridged reprint of the edition published in 1979 by W. H. Allen, London, and contains the following short stories. The Haunted Station by Hume Nesbit The Hour and the Man by Robert Barr Nut Bush Farm by Mrs. J. H. Riddell The Man Who Coined His Blood in Gold by J. H. Pearce The Shrine of Death by Lady Dilke The Black Veil by Lady Dilke The Ways of Ghost by Ambrose Bierce The Fever Queen by K & H Prichard The Permanent Stiletto by W. C. Morrow The Houseboat by Richard Marsh Dame Inowslad by R. Murray Gilchrist The Mountain of Spirits by Anonymous The Golden Bracelet by Anonymous The Tyburn Ghost by The Countess of Munster Remorseless Vengeance by Guy Boothby The Green Bottle by Bernard Capes An Eddy on the Floor by Bernard Capes The collection, largely based on conventional Victorian ghost story formula, comes from the contemporary magazines or books of collected short stories, and many of them were originally published around the late 19th century in England or America. The collection starts with `The Haunted Station' in which an escaped convict in Australia experiences a weird thing or two in a deserted house in the middle of nowhere in Down Under, and ends with a tale about a mysterious cell in prison. None of them might not be as scary as, say, W. W. Jacobs' anthology favorite `The Monkey's Paw', and Barr's story belongs to another genre such as `cruel tales' by some French writers, but the distinct taste of Victorian ghost stories is always there in this selection. The writers are not all second-rate, as you might think. Look carefully, and you will find some familiar names like Ambrose Bierce (his four `stories' here are actually urban legend like reports on the strange episodes that really happened. At least, so they claim). Richard Marsh is, and will be, known as the writer of `The Beetle' while Guy Boothby is famous for his unique creation for the arch-villain Dr. Nichola. These biographical things are provided by the editor Hugh Lamb for those who are interested in the historical background. Not all are bone-chilling stories, I must say, and some of them are rather impossible by today's standard (of medicine, read the story of stiletto for instance); some are awfully predictable, and some, though given good ideas, miss the chance to develop them. But for those who like reading old-fashioned macabre tales, and who can ignore the obvious flaws, the collection would be a nice choice to read at night.
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