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The second of two volumes containing the complete Tales of the
Wonder Club
Tales of the Wonder Club was originally published as three volumes
between 1899-1900 and all three books are present in this special
Leonaur two volume set. These tales are unusual for late 19th
century works; most of the stories are gothic with elements of the
supernatural, weird, bizarre, horror or fantasy and some
commentators have likened them to the work of J. Sheridan Le Fanu.
An acknowledged 'grandfather of the supernatural, ' Le Fanu's work
was typical of the early to mid-nineteenth century and the author
of these volumes has paid homage to the master, in much the same
way as did M. R. James, another fine writer of supernatural
fiction. The potentially uninspiring pseudonym of the author of
these well regarded books, 'Dryasdust, ' is used humorously, and
with a nod to Sir Walter Scott; in fact Dryasdust was not his only
nom-de-plume, he also wrote under the name M. Y. Halidom though he
was in reality Englishman, Alexander Huth. In the period leading to
the outbreak of the Great War, Huth wrote a number of supernatural
novels, one of them, coincidentally, with the same title as that
classic of the modern ghost story, The Woman in Black.
Included in volume 2 are: The Three Pauls, The Waxen Image, The
Chieftain's Destiny, A Tale of the French Revolution and The Gipsy
Queen.
Leonaur editions are newly typeset and are not facsimiles; each
title is available in softcover and hardback with dustjacket; our
hardbacks are cloth bound and feature gold foil lettering on their
spines and fabric head and tail bands.
The first of two volumes containing the complete Tales of the
Wonder Club
Tales of the Wonder Club was originally published as three volumes
between 1899-1900 and all three books are present in this special
Leonaur two volume set. These tales are unusual for late 19th
century works; most of the stories are gothic with elements of the
supernatural, weird, bizarre, horror or fantasy and some
commentators have likened them to the work of J. Sheridan Le Fanu.
An acknowledged 'grandfather of the supernatural, ' Le Fanu's work
was typical of the early to mid-nineteenth century and the author
of these volumes has paid homage to the master, in much the same
way as did M. R. James, another fine writer of supernatural
fiction. The potentially uninspiring pseudonym of the author of
these well regarded books, 'Dryasdust, ' is used humorously, and
with a nod to Sir Walter Scott; in fact Dryasdust was not his only
nom-de-plume, he also wrote under the name M. Y. Halidom though he
was in reality Englishman, Alexander Huth. In the period leading to
the outbreak of the Great War, Huth wrote a number of supernatural
novels, one of them, coincidentally, with the same title as that
classic of the modern ghost story, The Woman in Black.
Included in volume 1 are: The Spirit Lovers, The Headless Lady,
The Haunted Stage Box, The Spirit Leg, Lost in the Catacombs,
Buried Alive and seven more strange tales.
Leonaur editions are newly typeset and are not facsimiles; each
title is available in softcover and hardback with dustjacket; our
hardbacks are cloth bound and feature gold foil lettering on their
spines and fabric head and tail bands.
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