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37 matches in All Departments
" P]robably the most distinguished writer of English prose in the
novel form at present living. He cannot do other than write
beautifully." - Humbert Wolfe
"The book abounds in glowing experiences of a world of colour and
sensation, minutely imagined. . . . The description of dawn at Kew
Gardens is so lovely that the reader will be tempted to endanger
his respectability by emulating Judy and climbing the wall." -
"Times Literary Supplement"
"Among the few highly important and significant novelists of the
day." - "The Observer"
"There is poetry beneath Mr. Fraser's fantastic humour as there is
a cunning grace in his prose." - "The Times"
"The erotic awakening of a young woman . . . Judy, a student at
Kew Gardens . . . is engaged to a personable young man who does not
have the ability to arouse her, though she likes him, and she is
disturbed by the utilitarian, materialistic life-philosophy of her
businessman brother. She becomes more and more sensitive to the
hidden life of the plants at Kew, and comes to see them as
personalities, with the giant orchid in the role of passionate
lover. . . . Told with delicate imagery and fine perceptions, a
minor rococoism of art deco literature." - E.F. Bleiler, "The Guide
to Supernatural Fiction" (1983)
This first-ever reprinting of "Flower Phantoms" (1926), the
best-known novel by Ronald Fraser (1888-1974), features a new
introduction by Mark Valentine.
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Neighbours (Paperback)
Claude Houghton; Introduction by Mark Valentine
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R573
Discovery Miles 5 730
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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" G]rew upon me with every page, until I came to the dramatic
climax . . . often brilliant . . . with] the brilliance of fever,
almost of delirium." - "Punch"
"It is very shocking . . . Houghton] has proved himself to possess
considerable talent." - "Spectator"
""Neighbours" is a novel about ideas concerning life. It is full
of dialogue, and good dialogue. It has beautiful moments. It is
original." - Arnold Bennett, "Evening Standard"
"His novels bring us the finest and most firmly thought-out
exposition of the spiritual problem of modern times." - "New York
Times"
"In Claude Houghton's work you have come to expect not only an
unusual and fast-moving story, but one with its hidden excitements
or seeming touch of fantasy, the significance of which may not be
apparent until you have reached the last page." - "Sunday Times"
The narrator of "Neighbours" is a young writer who has taken a
room in the attic of a lodging house, where he hopes to find a
quiet atmosphere in which to work. One night, the sound of a man's
laughter outside his door alerts him to the existence of Victor, a
fellow lodger in an adjoining room. The narrator feels an immediate
and inexplicable hatred for his unwanted neighbour, which develops
into an obsession as he listens to Victor's fervent conversations
and amorous adventures through the thin wall and records it all in
minute detail on endless sheets of paper. His morbid fascination
with Victor gradually begins to dominate his existence, leading to
a shocking climax when he finally resolves to destroy his
neighbour, the man he blames for ruining his life . . .
Claude Houghton (1889-1961) won a devoted cult following in the
1930s with novels like "I Am Jonathan Scrivener" (1930) and "This
Was Ivor Trent" (1935), psychological thrillers with brilliantly
sharp dialogue and unusual metaphysical themes. This edition of his
astonishing first novel, "Neighbours" (1926), is the first in over
75 years and features a new introduction by Mark Valentine.
"A striking contribution to the literature of darkness." - Humbert
Wolfe
"A disturbing study of spiritual domination . . . subtle and
terrifying." - Daily Telegraph
"Mr. Onions is an inspired writer . . . A poet of prose." - John
Betjeman
When Peter Byles's father dies shortly before the boy's thirteenth
birthday, the young orphan is sent to live at the Victorian Gothic
mansion of his father's friend, Dr. Kornelius Voyt. Peter arrives
at the dreary house, surprised to find that he sees nothing of the
enigmatic Voyt, instead passing his time in lessons with a young
German tutor. But it soon becomes clear to Peter that these lessons
are only preparations for something much more sinister that Voyt
intends to teach him. Voyt, unable either to hear or speak, has
learned to compensate for his disability by developing
extraordinary powers of the mind, powers which allow him to
communicate telepathically, control the wills of others, and even
inflict pain on those who anger him. Voyt has a terrifying vision
of the world's future, and he is determined to use Peter as a pawn
in his inscrutable plans. . . .
Best known today for his ghost stories, Oliver Onions (1873-1961)
was also a masterful novelist, and all his talents are on display
in "The Hand of Kornelius Voyt" (1939), which, as Mark Valentine
writes in the new introduction to this edition, "is a formidable
achievement in sustaining an atmosphere of uncanny dread." This
edition, the first in nearly fifty years, reprints the unabridged
text of the rare first edition and features a reproduction of the
original dust jacket illustration.
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Ghosts (Paperback)
R.B. Russell; Introduction by Mark Valentine
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R500
Discovery Miles 5 000
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Ferelith (Paperback)
Mark Valentine; Lord Kilmarnock
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R393
Discovery Miles 3 930
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
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R383
R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
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