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Available for the first time in trade paperback, the first of five
volumes collecting the complete fiction of William Hope Hodgson, an
influential early twentieth-century author of science fiction,
horror, and the fantastic. William Hope Hodgson was, like his
contemporaries Algernon Blackwood and Arthur Machen, one of the
most important, prolific, and influential fantasists of the early
twentieth century. His dark and unsettling short stories and novels
were shaped in large part by personal experience (a professional
merchant mariner for much of his life, many of Hodgson's tales are
set at sea), and his work evokes a disturbing sense of the
amorphous and horrific unknown. While his nautical adventure
fiction was very popular during his lifetime, the supernatural and
cosmic horror he is most remembered for only became well known
after his death, mainly due to the efforts of writers like H. P.
Lovecraft and Clark Ashton Smith, who often praised his work and
cited it as an influence on their own. By the later half of the
twentieth century, it was only his weird fiction that remained in
print, and his vast catalog of non-supernatural stories was
extremely hard to find. Night Shade Books's five-volume series
presents all of Hodgson's unique and timeless fiction. Each volume
contains one of Hodgson's novels, along with a selection of
thematically-linked short fiction, including a number of works
reprinted for the first time since their original publication. The
first of the five-volume set, The Boats of the "Glen Carrig" and
Other Nautical Adventures, collects all of Hodgson's series
nautical fiction, including the Sargasso Sea Story cycle. The
Complete Fiction of William Hope Hodgson is published by Night
Shade Books in the following volumes: The Boats of the "Glen
Carrig" and Other Nautical Adventures The House on the Borderland
and Other Mysterious Places The Ghost Pirates and Other Revenants
of the Sea The Night Land and Other Romances The Dream of X and
Other Fantastic Visions
The Valley of Lost Children by William Hope Hodgson This book
contains twelve works of mystery and horror by William Hope
Hodgson, a prolific early 20th century author who produced
mysteries, horror, and science fiction. Hodgson is probably best
known for HOUSE ON THE BORDERLAND. H. P. Lovecraft lists this and
other works by Hodgson among his greatest influences.
This is an account of their adventures in the strange places of the
Earth, after the floundering of the good ship Glen Carrig through
striking upon a hidden rock in the unknown seas to the Southward.
It is as told by John Winterstraw, Gent., to his son James
Winterstraw, in the year 1757, who committed very properly and
legibly to manuscript. This is a Wildside Fantasy Classic
William Hope Hodgson's "cosmic horror" classic continues the
Haunted Library of Horror Classics series. In a ruined house at the
edge of an abyss lies the diary of a madman… Two friends on a
fishing trip make an unsettling discovery when the river they've
been following abruptly ends and reappears some 100 feet below the
edge of an abyss. If that wasn't unnerving enough, the river runs
along the remains of an oddly shaped house, half-swallowed by the
pit. Within the ruins, they discover the moldering journal of an
unidentified man—the Recluse—who had lived in the house years
ago. Its pages reveal the man's apparent descent into madness—why
else would he chronicle haunted visions, trips to other dimensions,
and attacks by swine-like creatures that have followed him home?
After a horrific vision in which he witnesses the end of the earth
and time itself, the Recluse awakens in his study to find nothing
has changed—except that his dog has dissolved into a pile of
dust. And then the "swine things" return... Introduced by modern
horror master Ramsey Campbell as "an enduring classic of cosmic
terror," The House on the Borderland has inspired dozens of other
classic horror novels and indelibly changed the genre. Influencing
writers from H.P. Lovecraft to Terry Pratchett, this 1908
masterpiece shucks the conventions of Gothic horror and presents an
eerie mix of sci-fi, fantasy, and the supernatural.
The House on the Borderland by William Hope Hodgson. "What were
they, those Beast- gods, and the others? At frst, they had appeared
to me, just sculptured Monsters, placed indiscriminately among the
inaccessible peaks and precipices of the surrounding mountains.
Now, as I scrutinised them with greater intentness, my mind began
to reach out to fresh conclusions. There was something about them,
an indescribable sort of silent vitality, that suggested, to my
broadening consciousness, a state of life-in-death--a something
that was by no means life, as we understand it; but rather an
inhuman form of existence, that well might be likened to a
deathless trance--a condition in which it was possible to imagine
their continuing, eternally. 'Immortal!' the word rose in my
thoughts unbidden; and, straightway, I grew to wondering whether
this might be the immortality of the gods."
The House on the Borderland Have you ever wondered what a place
would be like where you were outside of time and space, neither
dead nor alive? Where you could observe the mechanisms of the
universe and see the death of our planet and sun? Where you could
commune with souls of the dead in the black, silent sea of sleep? A
manuscript is found: filled with small, precise writing and
smelling of pit-water, it tells the story of an old recluse and his
strange home - and it's even stranger, jade-green double, seen by
the recluse on an otherworldly plain where gigantic gods and
monsters roam. Soon his more earthly home is no less terrible than
his bizarre vision, as swine-like creatures boil from a cavern
beneath the ground and besiege it. But a still greater horror will
face the recluse - more inexorable, merciless and awful than any
creature that can be fought or killed.
From the Manuscript discovered in 1877 by Messrs. Tonnison and
Berreggnog, in the Ruins that lie to the South of the Village of
Kraighten, in the West of Ireland -- a place known in certain
arcane circles to be the Borderland between Earth and Faerie. A
classic novel of horror by the acclaimed master of the macabre,
William Hope Hodgson. (This jacketless hardcover edition is
intended for the library trade.)
Six tales of Carnacki the Ghost Finder, tales of the outre, the
unexpected, and the unexplained from a reknowned master of the
macabre, William Hope Hodgeson. (This jacketless hardcover edition
is intended for the library trade.)
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The Ghost Pirates
William Hope Hodgson
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R791
Discovery Miles 7 910
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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'A few minutes, it seemed, and I had risen above the great
mountains – floating, alone, afar in the redness. At a tremendous
distance below, the arena showed, dimly; with the mighty House
looking no larger than a tiny spot of green. The Swine-thing was no
longer visible.' In the damp and neglected heart of a ruin in the
wilds of the west of Ireland, a manuscript is discovered entitled
The House on the Borderland. Penned by an enigmatic Recluse, the
contents spin an account of an uncanny and isolated existence,
which unfolds into a hallucinatory and mind-wracking journey into
cosmic revelations and encounters with beasts and beings without
name. For the Recluse seems to have discovered another land and in
it another House; a jade-green double of his own in a realm in
which the bounds of reality are untethered. First published in
1908, this masterpiece of Horror and the uncanny was a direct
influence on the imagination of H P Lovecraft and was described by
Terry Pratchett as ‘the Big Bang in my private universe as a
science fiction and fantasy reader and, later, writer’.
Available for the first time in trade paperback, the fourth of five
volumes collecting the complete fiction of William Hope Hodgson, an
influential early twentieth-century author of science fiction,
horror, and the fantastic. William Hope Hodgson was, like his
contemporaries Algernon Blackwood and Arthur Machen, one of the
most important, prolific, and influential fantasists of the early
twentieth century. His dark and unsettling short stories and novels
were shaped in large part by personal experience (a professional
merchant mariner for much of his life, many of Hodgson's tales are
set at sea), and his work evokes a disturbing sense of the
amorphous and horrific unknown. While his nautical adventure
fiction was very popular during his lifetime, the supernatural and
cosmic horror he is most remembered for only became well known
after his death, mainly due to the efforts of writers like H. P.
Lovecraft and Clark Ashton Smith, who often praised his work and
cited it as an influence on their own. By the latter half of the
twentieth century, it was only his weird fiction that remained in
print, and his vast catalog of non-supernatural stories was
extremely hard to find. Night Shade Books's five-volume series
presents all of Hodgson's unique and timeless fiction. Each volume
contains one of Hodgson's novels, along with a selection of
thematically-linked short fiction, including a number of works
reprinted for the first time since their original publication. The
fourth book of the five-volume set, The Night Land and Other
Romances, collects all of his romances and women's fiction, as well
as the entirety of his classic 1912 dying-earth novel The Night
Land. The Complete Fiction of William Hope Hodgson is published by
Night Shade Books in the following volumes: The Boats of the "Glen
Carrig" and Other Nautical Adventures The House on the Borderland
and Other Mysterious Places The Ghost Pirates and Other Revenants
of the Sea The Night Land and Other Romances The Dream of X and
Other Fantastic Visions
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The Nightland (Hardcover)
William Hope Hodgson; Contributions by Mint Editions
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R503
Discovery Miles 5 030
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The Night Land (1912) is a terrifying tale of romance and fantasy
in which William Hope Hodgson imagines humanity at the end of the
world. Noted for its creative exploration of concepts such as
telepathy, futuristic technologies, and reincarnation, Hodgson's
novel is an indisputable classic of literary science fiction. When
a widower dreams of Earth in a far-off future, what he sees is
nearly unrecognizable. The sun has been extinguished, and all human
life has been forced to gather within the Last Redoubt, a metal
pyramid looming miles above the darkened planet. Outside, monstrous
forces gather, waiting for the mysterious energy source powering
humanity's last refuge to die out. When the narrator unexpectedly
connects with a young woman telepathically, he makes the horrifying
choice to leave the safety of the pyramid in order to search for
her at the rumored Lesser Redoubt, long thought lost to the dark.
The Night Land journeys to the outer reaches of space and time to
see how far humanity will go to keep love, and itself, alive.
Complex and kaleidoscopic, William Hope Hodgson's The Night Land is
a classic story of romance and loss projected into a harsh,
unpredictable future. It is often considered a seminal work in the
Dying Earth or apocalyptic subgenre of science fiction and fantasy.
For its strange blend of futuristic imagery and archaic narration,
the book was initially deemed difficult to read. However, as time
has passed, and with the help of positive reviews by such figures
as H.P. Lovecraft, The Night Land is now appreciated for the depths
of its vision and the experimental nature of its form. For modern
readers, who face the daily reality of a deadly pandemic and a
future threatened by global climate disaster, Hodgson's work can
only prove timely. For fans of classic science fiction, horror, and
fantasy, The Night Land is a guaranteed hit. With a beautifully
designed cover and professionally typeset manuscript, this new
edition of William Hope Hodgson's The Night Land is a classic work
of science fiction reimagined for modern readers.
"The House on the Borderland (1908) -- perhaps the greatest of all
Mr. Hodgson's works -- tells of a lonely and evilly regarded house
in Ireland which forms a focus for hideous otherworld forces and
sustains a siege by blasphemous hybrid anomalies from a hidden
abyss below. The wanderings of the Narrator's spirit through
limitless light-years of cosmic space and Kalpas of eternity, and
its witnessing of the solar system's final destruction, constitute
something almost unique in standard literature. And everywhere
there is manifest the author's power to suggest vague, ambushed
horrors in natural scenery." -- H.P. Lovecraft
"The Ghost Pirates . . . is a powerful account of a doomed and
haunted ship on its last voyage, and of the terrible sea-devils (of
quasi-human aspect, and perhaps the spirits of bygone buccaneers)
that besiege it and finally drag it down to an unknown fate. With
its command of maritime knowledge, and its clever selection of
hints and incidents suggestive of latent horrors in nature, this
book at times reaches enviable peaks of power." -- H.P. Lovecraft
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