Hugh Lamb & Richard Lamb [eds.] – And Midnight Never Come
Posted by demonik on October 21, 2021
Richard Lamb
Richard Lamb – Introduction
Hume Nisbet – Marie St. Pierre
E. R. Suffling – Eccles Old Tower
Amyas Northcote – Mr. Mortimer’s Diary
Mrs. G. Linnaeus Banks – Judgement Deferred
Andre De Lorde – Waxworks
F. Startin Pilleau – The Vision of Inverstrathy Castle
F. Startin Pilleau – The Vision of Inverstrathy Castle
Frederick Carruthers – The Follower
Anonymous – In the Interests of Science
Guy Thomas – The Painted Coin
Bernard Capes – The Corner House
Frederick Cowles – The Headless Leper
Grant Allen – Our Scientific Observations of a Ghost
Thomas Burke – Miracle in Suburbia
J. H. Pearce – Ego Speaks
William Hope Hodgson – The Phantom Ship
G. M. Robins – A Twilight Experience
R. H. Benson – Father Martin’s Tale
Alice Perrin – The Bead Necklace
Violet Jacob – Behind the Wall
Johnny Mains – Afterword
Richard Lamb – Acknowledgements
Blurb:
The diary with a nasty tale to tell
A burglary gone horribly wrong
The sinister woman at the window
A night alone in the waxworks
And Midnight Never Come brings you 20 haunting tales from the Victorian and Edwardian heyday of supernatural fiction.
Hugh Lamb was one of the world’s leading anthologists of vintage macabre. During his long career he unearthed a host of little-known authors and also brought to light lost works from the more well-known. When he passed away in 2019, Hugh left behind a collection of unused stories and unpublished anthology ideas. Using this material as a starting point, Hugh’s son Richard has compiled And Midnight Never Come , the first brand new Hugh Lamb anthology for 30 years.
Delve, if you dare, into this unique age of ghosts, monsters, killers and fog-enshrouded chills.
This entry was posted on October 21, 2021 at 9:23 am and is filed under Hugh Lamb, Richard Lamb, Uncategorized. Tagged: Alice Perrin, Amyas Northcote, Andre De Lorde, Anon, Bernard Capes, E. R. Suffling, Edwardian, F. Startin Pilleau, Frederick Carruthers, Frederick Cowles, G. M. Robins, Ghost Stories, Grant Allen, Guy Thomas, Hugh Lamb, Hume Nisbet, J. H. Pearce, Kingsbrook, Mrs. G. Linnaeus Banks, R. H. Benson, Richard Lamb, Vault Of Evil, Victorian, Violet Jacob, William Hope Hodgson. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.
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