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Paperback The Mammoth Book of Short Horror Novels Book

ISBN: 0881844292

ISBN13: 9780881844290

The Mammoth Book of Short Horror Novels

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Good

$27.89
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Book Overview

In this exciting anthology spanning more than a century, Stephen King leads a roster of ten great novelists of horror, including Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Algernon Blackwood, Lucius Shepard, Russell Kirk, A.C. Benson, T.E.D. Klein, John Metcalf, Oliver Onions, and David Case.

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

Another BIG book of horror novels

The Mammoth series of books tend to be very large (hence the "mammoth), and they are never disappointing. But, obviously, if they are going to include actual NOVELS, something has to be lost in order for them to fit. I have never been sorry I ordered a Mammoth book of anything, but there are not the absolute best. But they are, by and large, very good reading, esp. of you are the type to read a chunk at a time.

An essential anthology of supernatural fiction

This is one of the finest anthologies of supernatural fiction I have ever read. The short novel (novella) is, in the opinion of many, the perfect form for a work of supernatural terror, and the ten stories in this collection illustrate the point very well. They are a mixture of classic and more modern horror tales, covering a 100-year range (from the 1880s to the 1980s), and quite a few of them are very hard or impossible to find anywhere else: "The Monkey", by Stephen King - A man's terrifying childhood toy has somehow returned to haunt him. "The Parasite", by Arthur Conan Doyle - A sceptical professor subjects himself to hypnotic experiments with disastrous results. "There's a Long, Long Trail A-Winding", by Russell Kirk - A lonesome petty criminal with a good heart holes up in an abandoned house that seems to be haunted. "The Damned", by Algernon Blackwood - One of the most unusual haunted house stories ever written, in which the whole point is that nothing much happens. "Fengriffen", by David Case - A young bride at an old English manor comes under a horrifying family curse - or is it all in her mind? Although written by an American in the 1970s, this story masterfully creates a classic 19th-century Gothic atmosphere. "The Uttermost Farthing", by A. C. Benson - It's a race to uncover the secrets hidden by a wicked dead man. Another unusual haunted house story, by E. F. Benson's big brother. "The Rope in the Rafters", by Oliver Onions - A horribly disfigured WW-I veteran takes a room in an ancient French chateau, but he seems to have an unexpected roommate. "Nadelman's God", by T. E. D. Klein - A pseudo-Satanic poem he wrote as a teenager (and which was later set to music by a heavy metal band) has come back to haunt the narrator in a very real way. "The Feasting Dead", by John Metcalfe - Many think that this powerfully creepy story is the gem of the collection, and I won't disagree. A man's son, staying with friends in France, returns with a very strange and unwelcome companion. The ending may be puzzling - indeed, the narrator never quite figures it out - but Metcalfe drops enough clues for an attentive reader to get at least a fairly good idea of what has happened. "How the Wind Spoke at Madaket", by Lucius Shepard - A wind monster from the sea wreaks bloody havoc on Nantucket. My least favorite story of the bunch, although even it has some very strong points. Get this book!!!

Redemption And Meaning In Lonely Drifter's Life

This book is a collection of 10 short Horror stories and my favourite would have to be Russell Kirk's "There's A Long, Long Trail A-Winding" for which the author won the World Fantasy Award in 1976.In this book the reader is introduced to ex prisoner and drifter, Frank Sarsfield. One lonely night Frank finds himself walking in the midst of a snowstorm and seeks shelter in an old, empty Victorian Mansion. Things are not what they appear to be and Frank is caught up in the strange hapenings that occur once he is safely inside the house. This book is beautifully written and captures the lonely atmosphere of Life On The Road and explores the Themes of Meaning and Redemption. This would have to be my favourite short Horror story.The author weaves his tale with a deft hand and the reader is left with a sense of visiting another time and place long after he has finished this book.
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