
Follow this link to a Paris Review article from 2014 entitled “Ghosts on the Nog” relating five forgotten Christmas horror stories. Authors include E.F. Benson, Algernon Blackwood, J.H. Riddell, Sir Andrew Caldecott, and A.M. Burrage.
Follow this link to a Paris Review article from 2014 entitled “Ghosts on the Nog” relating five forgotten Christmas horror stories. Authors include E.F. Benson, Algernon Blackwood, J.H. Riddell, Sir Andrew Caldecott, and A.M. Burrage.
I watched this on YouTube some time back, but rediscovered it today. It’s quite interesting. I post it her for your edification.
Hasta luego. Wear your mask.
Follow this link to a Paris Review article from 2014 entitled “Ghosts on the Nog” relating five forgotten Christmas horror stories. Authors include E.F. Benson, Algernon Blackwood, J.H. Riddell, Sir Andrew Caldecott, and A.M. Burrage.
If you have followed my website, you know that I usually post a short horror story from the nineteenth or early twentieth century on Saturday nights. I call it “The Saturday Night Special”. I have accumulated somewhere around 36+ stories, all of which are in the public domain. I have decided to collect these into a volume and publish them on Kindle. I have not decided what the title will be. It’s probably going to be Slattery’s Classic Tales of Horror or something similar. Until last night, I had only two stories and no front or back matter or even a basic framework. Last night, while watching Netflix with the family, I started going back into my posts and putting them in the new collection, arranging them in chronological order. I wrote a draft title in Algerian font and a preface (Times New Roman like the rest of the text). I picked a quotation from Shakespeare for the quotation page :”What’s past is prologue.” I now have fourteen stories and poems from the likes of Edgar Allan Poe (naturally), Algernon Blackwood, Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu, Louisa May Alcott (yes, the author of Little Women did write at least one ghost story), M.R. James, Wilkie Collins, and several others. If a story has some notes that I published with the story originally, I am including them. I will probably include a photo or drawing of the author with each story, as I did originally.
Having the stories arranged chronologically will be good so that the reader can see the progression of horror over the decades. You will be able to see how writing styles developed on a nationwide level as well as the development of the English language and the American dialect.
I have no completion date set, but if I can continue as I did last night (and taking into the account that I have to work a day job), I may be finished in a month or two.
The Dead Smile by Francis Marion Crawford (1899) Tuesday’s Tale of Terror March 15, 2015 Let’s go to Ireland for the month of March as we near St. Patrick’s Day. Come to this Irish cas…
Source: Hauntings at Ockram Hall
The Glamour of Snow by Algernon Blackwood Tuesday’s Tale of Terror March 1, 2016 Is it still winter? Are glittery snowflakes falling outside your window? Softy passing, softly gathering. L…
Source: Snow Beings and Witchery