The big book of ghost stories

Book - 2012

A collection of ghost stories by American and English authors. These spectral stories span more than a hundred years, from modern-day creations by Joyce Carol Oates and Chet Williamson, to pulp yarns from August Derleth and M.L. Humphreys, to the atmospheric Victorian tales of Kipling and Lovecraft, not to mention modern works by Donald E. Westlake and Isaac Asimov. Whether you prefer possessive poltergeists, awful apparitions, or friendly phantoms, these stories are guaranteed to thrill you, tingle the spine, or tickle the funny bone, and keep you turning the pages with fearful delight.

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Subjects
Published
New York : Vintage Books 2012.
Language
English
Other Authors
Otto Penzler (-)
Item Description
"A Black Lizard publication"--Cover.
Physical Description
xii, 833 p. : ill. ; 24 cm
ISBN
9780307474490
  • But I'm not dead yet. Mr. Arcularis / Conrad Aiken ; August heat / William Fryer Harvey
  • I'll love you-- forever (or maybe not). The shadowy third / Ellen Glasgow ; The past / Ellen Glasgow ; But at my back I always hear / David Morrell ; The furnished room / O. Henry ; Death's warm fireside / Paul Ernst ; The advent reunion / Andrew Klavan ; The return / R. Murray Gilchrist ; The phantom rickshaw / Rudyard Kipling ; The moonlit road / Ambrose Bierce ; The story of Ming-Y / Lafcadio Hearn ; Yuki-Onna / Lafcadio Hearn
  • This old house. Brickett Bottom / Amyas Northcote ; How fear departed from the long gallery / E.F. Benson ; Thing of darkness / G.G. Pendarves ; The house of the nightmare / Edward Lucas White ; The house in Half Moon Street / Hector Bolitho ; A night of horror / Dick Donovan ; The burned house / Vincent O'Sullivan
  • Kids will be kids. Harry / Rosemary Timperley ; Make-believe / Michael Reaves ; Playmate / A.M. Burrage ; Just behind you / Ramsey Campbell ; Adam and Eve and pinch me / A.E. Coppard ; The lost boy of the Ozarks / Steve Friedman
  • There's something funny around here. A ghost's story / Mark Twain ; In at the death / Donald E. Westlake ; The ghost of Dr. Harris / Nathaniel Hawthorne ; The everlasting club / "Inculphus" ; Legal rites / Isaac Asimov and James MacCreigh ; Death must die / Albert E. Cowdrey ; The transferred ghost / Frank Stockton ; The Canterville ghost / Oscar Wilde
  • A negative train of thought. Pacific 421 / August Derleth ; The midnight el / Robert Weinberg
  • Stop-- you're scaring me. Punch and Judy / Frederick Cowles ; The fireplace / Henry S. Whitehead ; The night wire / H.F. Arnold ; Smoke ghost / Fritz Leiber ; Song of the dead / Wyatt Blassingame
  • I must be dreaming. The dream woman / Wilkie Collins ; The adventure of the German student / Washington Irving
  • A séance, you say? They found my grave / Joseph Shearing ; Mrs. Morrel's last séance / Edgar Jepson ; Night-side / Joyce Carol Oates
  • Classics. "Oh, whistle and I'll come to you my lad" / M.R. James ; The monkey's paw / W.W. Jacobs ; The toll-house / W.W. Jacobs ; Afterward / Edith Wharton ; Consequences / Willa Cather ; The follower / Cynthia Asquith ; The corner shop / Cynthia Asquith ; The terrible old man / H.P. Lovecraft ; The murderer's violin / Erckmann-Chatrian ; The open window / Saki ; Laura / Saki ; What was it? / Fitz-James O'Brien ; Full fathom five / Alexander Woollcott ; He cometh and he passeth by / H.R. Wakefield ; Thurnley Abbey / Perceval Landon
  • The female of the species. The woman's ghost story / Algernon Blackwood ; The angel of the Marne / Victor Rousseau ; The shell of sense / Olivia Howard Dunbar ; The avenging of Ann Leete / Marjorie Bowen
  • Beaten to a pulp. The dead-wagon / Greye LaSpina ; A soul with two bodies / Urann Thayer ; The ghosts of Steamboat Coulee / Arthur J. Burks ; The considerate hosts / Thorp McClusky ; The fifth candle / Cyril Mand ; The return of Andrew Bentley / August Derleth and Mark Schorer ; The floor above / M.L. Humphreys ; School for the unspeakable / Manly Wade Wellman ; Mordecai's pipe / A.V. Milyer ; He walked by day / Julius Long ; Behind the screen / Dale Clark
  • Modern masters. Journey into the kingdom / M. Rickert ; Mr. Saul / H.R.F. Keating ; Coventry carol / Chet Williamson.
Review by Booklist Review

This is not an exhaustive collection, but it is certainly comprehensive. It's broken into 13 thematic sections and covers more than a century of stories. It's got everything from doomed love to seances to a little comic relief (Mark Twain and Oscar Wilde both appear). There are also some canonical classics, for the sake of completeness, including The Monkey's Paw, which remains a masterwork of atmospheric creepiness no matter how many times one reads it, one by Edith Wharton, and a pair by master storyteller Saki. The three contemporary stories presented at the end stand up quite nicely to the weight of the more classic works. Penzler has done an excellent job of collecting interesting, unnerving, and fascinating stories as well as providing nifty tidbits in the introductions. Reading most of these stories just before trying to sleep, though, is not recommended.--Schroeder, Regina Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

The literary ghost comes in all shapes, sizes, and predispositions, and an impressive variety flits through Penzler's latest mountain-sized omnibus (after Zombies! Zombies! Zombies!). There are urban ghosts in Fritz Leiber's "Smoke Ghost" and rural ghosts in Arthur J. Burks's "The Ghosts of Steamboat Coulee"; physical ghosts in Perceval Landon's "Thurnley Abbey" and faux ghosts in Saki's "The Open Window"; funny ghosts in Oscar Wilde's "The Canterville Ghost" and deadly serious ghosts in Ramsey Campbell's "Just Behind You." The most disturbing ghosts-among them the spurned lover in Rudyard Kipling's "The Phantom Rickshaw" and the neglected child in Ellen Glasgow's "The Shadowy Third"-are those whose persisting affections after death have curdled into an unholy hold on the living. The contents emphasize the classic over the contemporary, and though there are a few notable omissions (J. Sheridan Le Fanu, Henry James), there's enough in this volume to please both dilettantes and devotees among ghost story readers. (Sept.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

Introduction By Otto Penzler Tales of the supernatural have been a fixture of the storytelling tradition since preliterate times, and the most popular form they have taken is the ghost story. This should not be at all surprising, as the fear of death and its aftermath has abided in the breasts of humans ever since they became cognizant of what it meant to no longer be alive in the manner in which it is traditionally understood. Animals, down to the most primitive invertebrates, share this fear without precisely being aware of what it means in a conscious sense, but they nonetheless do all they can to stay alive. The question of what follows the extinguishing of life probably does not keep mosquitoes or squirrels awake at night, but more than a few homo sapiens have pondered their uncertain futures with trepidation in the dark of night. All cultures on the planet have superstitions about the dead returning as spirits or -phantoms---belief systems memorialized in drawings and writings from the very beginnings of civilization. In the Egyptian Book of the Dead, departed people are shown to return, not merely looking as they did in life, but dressed in similar garments. Therefore, apparently not only do dead people have the ability to materialize, making themselves visible again after they are gone, but so do textiles, leather, and metal. In the Bible, the story of King Saul calling on the Witch of Endor to summon the spirit of Samuel has been recorded, as have the questions surrounding whether Jesus after his resurrection was a living being or a ghost. From ancient texts in Greek mythology, various types of ghosts are described in Homer's Iliad and Odyssey, and Romans, notably Plutarch and Pliny the Younger, wrote about haunted houses. Literature of all eras abounds in ghosts stories. William Shakespeare often used ghosts in his plays, most famously in Hamlet and Macbeth, and Charles Dickens wrote the greatest pure ghost story of all time in A Christmas Carol. Others among the world's greatest authors who have written in the genre include Ben Jonson, Horace Walpole, Jane Austen, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Guy de Maupassant, Edgar Allan Poe, Wilkie Collins, Edward -Bulwer--Lytton, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Henry James, Edith Wharton, Oscar Wilde, Willa Cather, F. Scott -Fitzgerald---well, -really too many to continue. What is the great attraction of supernatural fiction in general, and the ghost story in particular? From the time of childhood, we have a fear of the dark (and rightly so, as we don't know exactly what is lurking out there, wrapped in the black cloak of invisibility). Although it frightens them, children still love to hear scary stories at bedtime; just consider such fairy tales as Hansel and Gretel, Rapunzel, and Little Red Riding Hood. We never outgrow our love of fairy tales, even if in adulthood they take a more complex form as stories about vampires, serial killers, werewolves, or terrorists. Ghost stories may be told in many different tones and styles, ranging from the excruciatingly horrific to the absurdly humorous. Ghosts, after all, may have widely divergent goals. Some return from the dead to wreak vengeance; others want to help a loved one. Some are the spirits of people who were murdered or committed suicide and so could not rest because their time officially had not yet come and therefore walked the earth instead of stretching out comfortably in their graves. Some were playful, enjoying the tricks and pranks their invisibility allowed them, while others delighted in their own cruelty, committing acts of violence and terror for the sheer inexplicable pleasure of it. All these ghosts, and more, appear in this volume. You will meet ghosts who frighten you, who make you laugh, and for whom you will feel sorry. And they are true ghosts. I have tried to remain true to the notion that ghosts are spirits or specters of the dead. Some stories that frequently have appeared in other ghost story anthologies have nothing at all to do with ghosts. They may be trolls, or evil plants, vile fungi, monsters, or other creatures of that ilk. Rightly or not, I have attempted to be a bit of a -narrow--minded purist about it all, not that it created a problem. There have been an astonishing number of outstanding ghost stories written by some of the finest authors who ever dared allow their dark creations to be set down on paper. It has been a confounding challenge to select the stories for this, the biggest collection of ghost stories ever compiled. It was tempting to include all the great classics but that would have filled to overflowing even this gigantic tome. It was equally tempting to stuff the pages with -little--known stories, often every bit the equal of the cornerstone titles, but it is impossible to attempt to produce the definitive collection of ghost stories and omit M. R. James, Algernon Blackwood, H. P. Lovecraft, or Edith Wharton. Although I admire some of the supernatural tales of Henry James, especially "The Turn of the Screw," he won't be found here because that novella has been anthologized to death, is easy to find elsewhere, and is so long that a -half--dozen other stories would have had to be sacrificed. Putting together an anthology is not a pure science, so there are contradictions galore. I've included "The Monkey's Paw," for example, which has also been anthologized to the point of being a cliché. Still, it's short, -didn't use up too much space, and it is lively (unlike dear old Henry -James---no offense). To make up for the very familiar stories, I've included some that you've never seen before, several of which appear in book form for the very first time. The Golden Age of the ghost story (the late Victorian and Edwardian eras) is fully represented, and so is the Golden Age of the pulp magazines (the 1920s and 1930s), while the contemporary masters have not been ignored. Whether this collection is best enjoyed next to a summer campfire or a winter fireplace is up to you. On the other hand, it is so enormous that it may endure through several seasons. Whenever you read it, I hope you have a shiveringly good time with it. After all, in the dead of night, who would not believe in ghosts? Although I read more than a thousand stories to find and identify those that I hope you will most enjoy, it would not have been possible to compile such a comprehensive and -wide--reaching volume without the invaluable assistance of those who know a great deal more than I do. Sincere, if hopelessly inadequate, thanks are owed to Robert Weinberg, John Pelan, Chris Roden, Gardner Dozois, Joel Frieman, Harlan Ellison, John Knott, and those I'm forgetting who so freely and generously offered their assistance and expertise. Excerpted from The Big Book of Ghost Stories by Otto Penzler All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.