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A mysterious news signal reports cosmic doom from an otherworldly
location. X-ray evidence suggests the impossible truth that a
sculptor is becoming one with his creation. A gramophone channels
the venomous words of a churlish spirit and its cruel vengeance.
The ground-breaking new technologies of the nineteenth and
twentieth centuries delivered their users into a world of
unfathomable miracles and fresh nightmares - a world in which
pioneers of weird fiction gave expression to the anxieties at the
heart of seemingly limitless communication and the capturing of
images beyond the human eye. Tracing this fiction of speculation
and fear from the motion photography of the 1890s to 1950s
television, this new collection presents seventeen tales of haunted
and uncanny media from a range of writers inspired by its ghastly
potential, including Marjorie Bowen, H. Russell Wakefield, Mary
Treadgold and J. B. Priestley.
'These stories have all had their origins in dreams... Terrifying
enough to the dreamer... I hope that some readers will experience
an agreeable shudder or two in the reading of them.' A malignant
entity answers the call of an ancient curse on the coast of
Brittany; a traveller's curiosity delivers him to an abominable
Hallowe'en ritual; the curious new owner of a haunted mansion
discovers something far worse than ghosts in the night. Randalls
Round has long been revered by devotees of the weird tale. First
published in 1929, its stories of ritualistic folk horror and M. R.
James-inspired accounts of ancient forces terrorising humanity are
thoroughly deserving of wider recognition. This collection includes
a new introduction exploring Eleanor Scott's impact on weird and
folk horror fiction, and two chilling stories by N. Dennett -
speculated to be another of the author's pseudonyms
I entered the church...It struck me suddenly that all this crowd of
men and women standing all round, these priests chanting and moving
about the altar, were dead... Vernon Lee was a polymath whose
copious writings include deeply learned studies of art, music,
literature, and history, but also a small but exquisitely crafted
group of Gothic tales, most of which first appeared in fin de
siecle periodicals including the iconic Yellow Book. In these
stories of obsession and possession, transgressive desire reaches
out from the past - through a haunting portrait, a murdered poet's
lock of hair, the uncanny voice of a diabolical castrato - dragging
Lee's protagonists to their doom. Among those haunted by Lee's
'spurious ghosts' was Henry James, who praised her 'gruesome,
graceful...ingenious tales, full of imagination'. This new edition
includes Lee's landmark 1890 collection Hauntings complete, along
with six additional tales and the 1880 essay 'Faustus and Helena',
in which Lee probes the elusive nature of the supernatural as a
'vital...fluctuating...potent' force that resists definite
representation. Aaron Worth's contextual introduction, drawing upon
Lee's newly published letters, reassesses her place in the pantheon
of the fantastic. ABOUT THE SERIES: For over 100 years Oxford
World's Classics has made available the widest range of literature
from around the globe. Each affordable volume reflects Oxford's
commitment to scholarship, providing the most accurate text plus a
wealth of other valuable features, including expert introductions
by leading authorities, helpful notes to clarify the text,
up-to-date bibliographies for further study, and much more.
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The Wendigo and Other Stories
Algernon Blackwood; Edited by Aaron Worth
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R249
R210
Discovery Miles 2 100
Save R39 (16%)
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'See!...The woods are alive! Already the Great Ones are there, and
the dance will soon begin! The salve is here! Anoint yourself and
come!' One of the greatest writers of the strange and weird,
Algernon Blackwood evolved from a teller of ghost stories to a
pioneering master of such emergent fictional modes as cosmic horror
and nature Gothic. In tales whose settings range from the eerie
North Woods of Canada to the mysterious sands of the Egyptian
desert, Blackwood blurs the boundaries between human and nonhuman,
living and dead, beckoning the reader into strange borderlands
where alien forces lurk, waiting for the chance to break through
into our world. This new selection of Blackwood's shorter fiction
constitutes the most comprehensive critical edition of his work to
date. Included here are such undisputed classics as 'The Wendigo',
'The Willows', and 'Ancient Sorceries', as well as two superbly
unsettling novellas, 'The Man Whom the Trees Loved' and 'A Descent
into Egypt', and ten other stories short and long, drawn from
collections spanning Blackwood's long writing career. Aaron Worth's
introduction and notes situate these tales in the context of
Blackwood's own upbringing in an evangelical Victorian household,
as well as in relation to such topics as late-imperial British
history and the emergence of modern ecological thought. ABOUT THE
SERIES: For over 100 years Oxford World's Classics has made
available the widest range of literature from around the globe.
Each affordable volume reflects Oxford's commitment to scholarship,
providing the most accurate text plus a wealth of other valuable
features, including expert introductions by leading authorities,
helpful notes to clarify the text, up-to-date bibliographies for
further study, and much more.
Something pushed out from the body there on the floor, and
stretched forth a slimy, wavering tentacle... Perhaps no figure
better embodies the transition from the Gothic tradition to modern
horror than Arthur Machen. In the final decade of the nineteenth
century, the Welsh writer produced a seminal body of tales of
occult horror, spiritual and physical corruption, and malignant
survivals from the primeval past which horrified and
scandalised-late-Victorian readers. Machen's 'weird fiction' has
influenced generations of storytellers, from H. P. Lovecraft to
Guillermo Del Toro-and it remains no less unsettling today. This
new collection, which includes the complete novel The Three
Impostors as well as such celebrated tales as The Great God Pan and
The White People, constitutes the most comprehensive critical
edition of Machen yet to appear. In addition to the core
late-Victorian horror classics, a selection of lesser-known prose
poems and later tales helps to present a fuller picture of the
development of Machen's weird vision. The edition's introduction
and notes contextualise the life and work of this foundational
figure in the history of horror.
'Well, a corpse is a natural thing; but this was the dreadfullest
sight I ever sid...' Sheridan Le Fanu is one of the indispensable
figures in the history of Gothic and horror fiction-the most
important such writer in English, certainly, between Poe and M. R.
James. While a number of his sensation and mystery novels were
popular with mid-Victorian readers, it was in shorter forms that he
truly excelled, and most showed himself an innovator in the field
of uncanny fiction. Tales such as 'Carmilla' and 'Green Tea'
prompted M. R. James to remark, 'he succeeds in inspiring a
mysterious terror better than any other writer'. This landmark
critical edition includes the original versions of all five stories
later collected in the superb In a Glass Darkly, along with seven
equally chilling tales spanning the length of Le Fanu's career,
from 'Schalken the Painter', a pioneering story of the walking
dead, to 'Laura Silver Bell', a haunting exploration of the dark
side of fairy lore. Aaron Worth's introduction discusses the
paranoid, claustrophobic world of Le Fanu's fiction as a
counterpoint-one in its own way equally modern-to the cosmic horror
tale as practiced by such writers as H. P. Lovecraft.
Something pushed out from the body there on the floor, and
stretched forth a slimy, wavering tentacle... Perhaps no figure
better embodies the transition from the Gothic tradition to modern
horror than Arthur Machen. In the final decade of the nineteenth
century, the Welsh writer produced a seminal body of tales of
occult horror, spiritual and physical corruption, and malignant
survivals from the primeval past which horrified and
scandalised-late-Victorian readers. Machen's 'weird fiction' has
influenced generations of storytellers, from H. P. Lovecraft to
Guillermo Del Toro-and it remains no less unsettling today. This
new collection, which includes the complete novel The Three
Impostors as well as such celebrated tales as The Great God Pan and
The White People, constitutes the most comprehensive critical
edition of Machen yet to appear. In addition to the core
late-Victorian horror classics, a selection of lesser-known prose
poems and later tales helps to present a fuller picture of the
development of Machen's weird vision. The edition's introduction
and notes contextualise the life and work of this foundational
figure in the history of horror.
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