Sunday, January 5, 2025
Beware Us Flowers of the Annihilator, by Alexander Zelenyj
Saturday, December 21, 2024
The Ghosthunter, by D.F. Lewis
"These stories, it increasingly becomes clear, are separate floors in the mansion of life, till you reach the topmost attic of all, from which vantage point of near roofless exposure, you can gather, simply by looking down, that the whole crumbling exterior of the mansion badly needs repair."
While reading this book, I often had the feeling that I was trespassing into the ghost hunter's metaphysical space, which, I suppose I was meant to, but it felt so personal that I often felt like an intruder. On the only negative I can think of, it does take a lot of time and patience to get through and even then, I'm not absolutely positive that I've truly understood all that Lewis has to say here. If you’re looking for a fast-paced thriller or a typical ghost story, this one won't work for you. However, The Ghosthunter is something that runs much deeper, it is highly introspective, and it is a book that resonates emotionally. It is dark and can range into somber, yet in its own way it is a most beautiful collection that will stay with me for a long time.
Monday, December 9, 2024
The Universe as Performance Art, by Colby Smith
Tuesday, September 24, 2024
Malpertuis, by Jean Ray
"to the role of those Scribes who, without their knowledge (or almost without it), have given Malpertuis a place in the history of human terror."
"Malpertuis! For the first time the name has flowed in a turbid ink from my terrified pen! That house, placed by the most terrible of wills like a full stop at the end of so many human destinies -- I still thrust aside its image! I recoil, I procrastinate rather than bring it to the forefront of my memory!"
"What is more, pressed no doubt by the brevity of their earthly term, human beings are less patient than the house; things remain after them, things -- like the stones of which accursed dwellings are made. Human beings are animated by the feverish haste of sleep tumbling through abbatoir gates -- they will not rest until they have taken their place under the great candlesnuffer that is Malpertuis."
Saturday, August 31, 2024
Lost Estates, by Mark Valentine
"came upon in contemporary 1923 reviews of Uncanny Stories by May Sinclair and Visible and Invisible by E.F. Benson,"
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from Meandering Through Time |
"three travellers headed by their different ways to a causeway leading them to the house called Driftwood End, which stood on a spur of land above a vast canvas of sand."
The first is a guide through the hazardous sands of the estuary, the latest "holder of an ancient office" known as "Bishop's Sandman." The next is a "seer" who employs sand along with the patterns in the sand in her profession, and the third a woman who creates "hour-glasses" and "egg-timers" from "sea-wood and blown glass." She has also discovered a somewhat strange ability she has which she keeps to herself, one which she will have opportunity to use at a particularly critical moment during the gathering. Their host is a certain Phillip Crabbe (and I have to wonder if this is the same Crabbe who vanished in "Fortunes Told: Fresh Samphire") who lives at Driftwood End, and he has brought them all there for a particular purpose. The remaining stories, "The House of Flame," "The Seventh Card," "Laughter Ever After," "The Understanding of the Signs," the titular "Lost Estates" and "The End of Alpha Street," are all excellent as well but I'm running long here.
Sunday, June 23, 2024
Ringstones and Other Curious Tales, by Sarban
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First edition, 1951. From ABAA |
"have a curiously-imparted quality of strangeness; the feeling of having strayed over the border of experience into a world where other dimensions operate."
Like the very best examples of the weird tale, Sarban's work tends to begin in normal circumstances while slowly but surely taking the reader across that border into unexpected and disturbing territory.
Sunday, June 9, 2024
The Haunting of Low Fennel/Tales of Secret Egypt, by Sax Rohmer
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first edition, from Abebooks |
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from Abebooks |
Tuesday, June 4, 2024
Through the Night Like a Snake: Latin American Horror Stories
"dedicated to capturing vanguard works of translated literature -- curated around a particular theme, region, language, historical moment or style ..."
Wednesday, March 13, 2024
Robert Hichens -- three of three -- The Folly of Eustace and Other Satires and Stories
"Some men deliberately don a character in early youth as others don a mask before going to an opera ball. They select it not without some care, being guided in their choice by the opinion they have formed of the world's mind and manner of proceeding."
Saturday, February 3, 2024
Robert Hichens -- two of three -- How Love Came to Professor Guildea and Other Uncanny Tales
"I believe that I can cure you, and you must believe it too. Then we shall work together, and all must go well,"
implying a sort of "reciprocal faith" between the two parties. She moved into the big time with her cure of a young man by the name of Fernol West, "the only child of one of the greatest financiers in America," whose horse had bolted, leaving him with a head wound. His physical injuries had healed, but he was left with no "zest for life," living in utter misery. As this story opens, Olivia has come to England, followed by West, her greatest supporter. She faces her truest test, however, after healing a certain Miss Burnington, who is plagued by horrific headaches, when Miss Burnington's brother, Sir Hector, is stricken with a mysterious illness. Faith vs. science is one aspect of this tale, but suffice it to say there is a very real psychic disturbance at play here.
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The young Laird of Carlounie from Internet Archive |
Tuesday, January 23, 2024
Robert Hichens -- one of three -- The Black Spaniel and Other Strange Stories
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from Internet Archive |