Posts Tagged ‘Daniel Defoe’
Posted by demonik on February 6, 2011
Richard Dalby (ed.) – The Anthology Of Ghost Stories (Tiger, 1994)

Robert Aickman – The Unsettled Dust
Louisa Baldwin – How He Left the Hotel
Nugent Barker – Whessoe
E.F. Benson – The Shuttered Room
Ambrose Bierce – An Inhabitant of Carcosa
Charles Birkin – Is there Anybody there?
Algenon Blackwood – The Whisperers
L.M. Boston – Curfew
A.M. Burrage – I’m Sure it was No. 31
Ramsey Campbell – The Guide
R. Chetwynd-Hayes – The Limping Ghost
Wilkie Collins – Mrs Zant and the Ghost
Basil Copper – The House by the Tarn
Ralph A. Cram – In Kropfsberg Keep
Daniel Defoe – The Ghost in all the Rooms
Charles Dickens – The Bagman’s Uncle
Arthur Conan-Doyle – The Bully of Brocas Court
Amelia B. Edwards – In the Confessional
Shamus Frazer – The Tune in Dan’s Cafe
John S. Glasby – Beyond the Bourne
William Hope Hodgson – The Valley of Lost Children
Fergus Hume – The Sand-Walker
Henry James – The Real Right Thing
M.R. James – The Haunted Dolls’ House
Roger Johnson – The Wall-Painting
Rudyard Kipling – They
D.H. Lawrence – The Last Laugh
Margery Lawrence – Robin’s Rath
J. Sheridan Le Fanu – The Dream
R.H. Malden – The Sundial
Richard Marsh – The Fifteenth Man
John Metcalfe – Brenner’s Boy
Edith Nesbit – Uncle Abraham’s Romance
Fitz-James O’Brien – What was It?
Vincent O’Sullivan – The Next Room
Roger Pater – The Footstep of the Aventine
Edgar Allan Poe – William Wilson
Forrest Reid – Courage
Mrs J.H. Riddell – The Last of Squire Ennismore
L.T.C. Rolt – The Garside Fell Disaster
David G. Rowlands – The Tears of St. Agatha
Saki – The Soul of Laploshka
I’m guessing Tiger were an instant remainder imprint?
If you’re looking for an A-S of great ghost story authors, this is one for you! At first glance a straight reprint of Richard Dalby’s Mammoth Book Of Ghost Stories Vol 1, closer inspection reveals they’d not set aside enough pages so once we’re done with Saki’s story there’s no more room making the reference to Mark Twain on the cover entirely spurious. Worse, the stories gone AWOL include some of the best in the volume:
——————————————–
Sapper – The Old Dining-Room
Montague Summers – The Between-Maid
Mark Twain – A Ghost Story
Mark Valentine – The Folly
H. Russell Wakefield – Out of the Wrack I Rise
Karl Edward Wagner – In the Pines
Manly Wade Wellman – Where Angels Fear
Edward Lucas White – The House of the Nightmare
Oscar Wilde – The Canterville Ghost
William J. Wintle – The Spectre Spiders
Posted in *Tiger*, Richard Dalby | Tagged: A. M. Burrage, Algenon Blackwood, Ambrose Bierce, Amelia B. Edwards, Arthur Conan Doyle, Basil Copper, Charles Birkin, Charles Dickens, D. H. Lawrence, Daniel Defoe, David G. Rowlands, E. F. Benson, edgar allan poe, Edith Nesbit, Fergus Hume, Fitz-James O’Brien, Forrest Reid, Ghost, Ghost Stories, Henry James, J. Sheridan Le fanu, John Metcalfe, John S. Glasby, L T C Rolt, Louisa Baldwin, Lucy M. Boston, M. R. James, Margery Lawrence, Mrs. J. H. Riddell, Nugent Barker, R. Chetwynd-Hayes, R.H. Malden, Ralph A. Cram, Ramsey Campbell, Richard Dalby, Richard Marsh, Robert Aickman, Robinson, Roger Johnson, Roger Pater, Rudyard Kipling, Saki, Shamus Frazer, Tiger, Vault Of Evil, Vincent O’Sullivan, Wilkie Collins, William Hope Hodgson | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on October 20, 2009
Anon – A Century Of Thrillers: Second Series (Daily Express, 1935)

Somerset Maugham – The Taipan
Donn Byrne – Tale Of The Piper
George Eliot – The Lifted Veil
M. R. James – Number 13
M. R. James – Rats
M. R. James – Count Magnus
G. K. Chesterton – The Queer Feet
H. G. Wells – Pollock And The Porrah Man
A. J. Alan – My Adventure In Norfolk
Sax Rohmer – Tcheriapin
J. S. Fletcher – The Ivory God
Daniel Defoe – The Apparition Of Mrs Veal
E. F. Benson – The Thing In The Hall
Guy De Maupassant – Night
Guy De Maupassant – The Drowned Man
Guy De Maupassant – Who Knows?
Nathaniel Hawthorne – Young Goodman Brown
Oscar Wilde – The Ballad Of Reading Gaol
Edgar Allan Poe – The Tell-Tale Heart
Edgar Allan Poe – The Fall Of The House Of Usher
Edgar Allan Poe – The Black Cat
Edgar Allan Poe – Ligeia
Bram Stoker – The Squaw
Sir A. T. Quiller-Couch – A Pair Of Hands
O. Henry – The Last Leaf
W. W. Jacobs – The Well
Charles Dickens – The Haunted Man And The Ghost’s Bargain
Ambrose Bierce – Moxon’s Master
Ambrose Bierce – The Middle Toe Of The Right Foot
Ambrose Bierce – The Damned Thing
W. F. Harvey – The Beast With Five Fingers
F. Marion Crawford – The Upper Berth
F. Marion Crawford – Man Overboard!
N. A. Temple Ellis – Diver’s Drops
Sydney Parkman – The Cards
Ashton Wolfe – The Knights Of The Silver Dagger
Frederick Marryat – The Werewolf
J. S. LeFanu – Shalken The Painter
J. S. LeFanu – Carmilla
J. S. LeFanu – The Familiar
Wilkie Collins – Gabriel’s Marriage
Mrs. Gaskell – The Sexton’s Hero
Posted in *Daily Express*, Anonymous | Tagged: *Daily Express*, A Century Of Thrillers, A. J. Alan, Ambrose Bierce, Anon, Ashton Wolfe, Bram Stoker, Charles Dickens, Daniel Defoe, Donn Byrne, E. F. Benson, edgar allan poe, F. Marion Crawford, fiction, Frederick Marryat, G. K. Chesterton, George Eliot, Ghost Stories, Guy de Maupassant, H G Wells, horror, J. S. Fletcher, J. S. LeFanu, M. R. James, Mrs. Gaskell, N. A. Temple Ellis, Nathaniel Hawthorne, O. Henry, Oscar Wilde, Sax Rohmer, Sir A. T. Quiller-Couch, Somerset Maugham, Supernatural, Sydney Parkman, Vault Of Evil, W. F. Harvey, W. W. Jacobs, Wilkie Collins | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on October 5, 2009
Harrison Dale (ed.) – More Great Ghost Stories (Herbert Jenkins, 1932)

Help! Cover Wanted!
Harrison Dale – Anthologists And Other Ghouls
Daniel Defoe – In Defence Of His Right
William Austin – Peter Rugg, The Missing Man
R. S. Hawker – The Bothanen Ghost
Nathaniel Hawthorn – Young Goodman Brown
Charles Dickens – No. 1 Branch Line: The Signal-Man
J. S. Le Fanu – The Familiar
Perceval Landon – Thurnley Abbey
Margaret Oliphant – The Open Door
W. D. Howells – Though One Rose From The Dead
Edith Wharton – Afterward
Howard Pease – In The Blackfriars Wynd
James Grant – The Phantom Regiment
Posted in *Herbert Jenkins*, Harrison Dale | Tagged: Charles Dickens, Daniel Defoe, Edith Wharton, fiction, Ghost Stories, Harrison Dale, Herbert Jenkins, Howard Pease, J S Le Fanu, James Grant, Margaret Oliphant, Nathaniel Hawthorn, Perceval Landon, R. S. Hawker, Vault Of Evil, W. D. Howells, William Austin | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on October 5, 2009
Adam L. Gowans (ed.) – Famous Ghost Stories by English Authors (Gowans & Grey, 1919)

Help! Cover Wanted!
Charles Dickens – To be Taken with a Grain of Salt
Mrs. Gaskell – The Old Nurse’s Story
Sir Walter Scott – The Tapestried Chamber; or, The Lady in the Sacque
Lord Lytton – The Haunted And The Haunters; Or, The House and the Brain
Allan Cunningham – The Haunted Ships
Charles Dickens – No. 1 Branch Line: The Signal-Man
James Hogg – The Mysterious Bride
Daniel Defoe – A True Relation of the Apparition of Mrs. Veal
Charles Dickens – The Bagman’s Story
James Hogg – Mary Burnet
Charles Dickens – Telling Winter Stories (article)
Posted in *Gowans & Grey*, Adam L. Gowans | Tagged: *Gowans & Grey*, Adam L. Gowans, Allan Cunningham, Charles Dickens, Daniel Defoe, fiction, Ghost Stories, James Hogg, Lord Lytton, Mrs. Gaskell, Sir Walter Scott, Vault Of Evil | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on June 3, 2009
Pamela Search (ed.) – The Supernatural In The English Short Story (Bernard Hanison, 1959)

Daniel Defoe – The Apparition Of Mrs. Veal
Sir Walter Scott – Wandering Willie’s Tale
J. S. Le Fanu – Green Tea
Frederick Marryat – The Werewolf
Wilkie Collins – The Dream Woman
Lord Lytton – The Haunters And The Haunted
Bram Stoker – The Judges House
E. A. Poe – Ligeia
Charles Dickens – The Chimes
R. L. Stevenson – Markheim
Oscar Wilde – The Canterville Ghost
F. Marion Crawford – The Upper Berth
William Fryer Harvey – Sambo
Robert Hichens – How Love Came To Professor Guildea
D. H. Lawrence – The Rocking-Horse Winner
Oliver Onions – The Beckoning Fair One
Saki – The Music On the Hill
Roger Pater – A Porta Inferi
Michael Joseph – The Yellow Cat
M. R. James – The Diary Of Mr. Poynter
Algernon Blackwood – The Wendigo
Another of those samey post-War anthologies of classic ghost stories, this one sharing reprising several of the authors and even stories that John L. Hardie had used in 22 Strange Stories in 1946. You don’t need it, me neither, but i’d love a cover scan just the same.
Posted in *Bernard Hanison*, Pamela Search | Tagged: Algernon Blackwood, Bram Stoker, Charles Dickens, D. H. Lawrence, Daniel Defoe, E. A. Poe, F. Marion Crawford, fiction, Frederick Marryat, Ghost Stories, J S Le Fanu, Lord Lytton, M. R. James, Michael Joseph, Oliver Onions, Oscar Wilde, Pamela Search, R. L. Stevenson, Robert Hichens, Roger Pater, Saki, Sir Walter Scott, Vault Of Evil, Victorian Ghost Stories, Wilkie Collins, William Fryer Harvey | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on April 22, 2009
R. Chetwynd-Hayes and Stephen Jones (eds.) – Great Ghost Stories (Cemetery Dance, Carroll & Graf, 2004)
![[image]](https://i0.wp.com/img.photobucket.com/albums/v683/panspersons/greatghoststories.jpg)
Les Edwards
Foreword – Stephen Jones
Introduction – R. Chetwynd-Hayes
Amelia B. Edwards – The Four-Fifteen Express
Richard Middleton – On the Brighton Road
Ambrose Bierce – The Moonlit Road
G. B. S.- The Whittaker’s Ghost
S. Baring-Gould – The Leaden Ring
Sir Walter Scott – The Tapestried Chamber
Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu – Ghost Stories Of The Tiled House
F. Marion Crawford – The Dead Smile
Daniel Defoe – The Ghost of Dorothy Dingley
Anon – The Dead Man Of Varley Grange
E. Nesbit – John Charrington’s Wedding
Sydney J. Bounds – The Night Walkers
Amyas Northcote – Brickett Bottom
John Kendrick Bangs – The Water Ghost of Harrowby Hall
Stephen King – The Reaper’s Image
Jerome K. Jerome – Christmas Eve in the Blue Chamber
Steve Rasnic Tem – Housewarming
Ramsey Campbell – The Ferries
Tina Rath – The Fetch
Washington Irving – Guests From Gibbet Island
Garry Kilworth – The Tryst
Guy de Maupassant – An Apparition
Brian Lumley – Aunt Hester
Tony Richards – Our Lady Of The Shadows
R. Chetwynd-Hayes – She Walks on Dry Land
Can anyone see the sense in this? Take a series of everyman pocket paperbacks like The Fontana Book Of Great Ghost Stories, which, in their day were available in just about every newsagent and supermarket up and down the country, and like as not got several people on here reading the stuff. Make a random selection from volumes 17-20. Get Les Edwards to design you a terrific cover, fully in sympathy with the original series. Now, have the thing printed, making sure it’s as unnecessarily bulky as possible, and run off just enough copies so that it sells out prior to publication. Appealing to the “I’ve still got my factory sealed, never been opened, worth a bomb!” non-reading market is all very well, but it’s also driving another stake into the heart of what’s supposed to be ‘popular fiction’. Hope they won an award for it.
Anyway, here’s the Blurb:
Eerie atmospherics, a sense of foreboding, then the unease, a chill, a shudder, ghosts, terror — again and again, in the twenty-five superbly scary tales of this standout anthology, they’re conjured artfully, both by modern masters of the macabre, among them Stephen King, Garry Kilworth, Brian Lumley, Ramsey Campbell, and Tony Richards, and by literary greats like Ambrose Bierce, Washington Irving, Sir Water Scott, and J Sheridan Le Fanu. Culled from the renowned Fontana Book of Great Ghost Stories series, which was edited from 1972 to 1984 by horror fiction writer and erudite anthologist R Chetwynd-Hayes, these highly original, and often long-obscure tales reflect the enduring fascination in our literary tradition with phantoms, specters, ghouls, and wraiths. There’s a fetch (i.e., doppelganger) too — in Tina Rath’s nasty take on a violent husband, his shrinking wife, and a scheming woman. And behind Guy de Maupassant’s simply titled “An Apparition” lurks a tale that Chetwynd-Hayes places among the top ten most terrifying ghost stories ever written. From Daniel Defoe’s engaging period piece, “The Ghost of Dorothy Dingley,” set in 1665, to the subtle slice of contemporary ghostly life in Stephen King’s “The Reaper’s Image,” dread takes many fearsome guises in the three centuries of chilling fiction collected here, and solace lies only at the feet of a very dark angel.
Posted in R. Chetwynd-Hayes, Stephen Jones | Tagged: Ambrose Bierce, Amelia B. Edwards, Amyas Northcote, Anon, Brian Lumley, Daniel Defoe, E. Nesbit, F. Marion Crawford, fiction, G. B. S., Garry Kilworth, Ghost Stories, Guy de Maupassant, Jerome K. Jerome, John Kendrick Bangs, Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu, Les Edwards, R. Chetwynd-Hayes, Ramsey Campbell, Richard Middleton, S. Baring-Gould, Sir Walter Scott, Stephen Jones, Stephen King, Steve Rasnic Tem, Sydney J. Bounds, Tina Rath, Tony Richards, Vault Of Evil, Washington Irving | 3 Comments »
Posted by demonik on April 11, 2009
Vere H. Collins – Ghosts and Marvels: A Selection Of Uncanny Tales from Daniel Defoe to Algernon Blackwood (H. Milford, Oxford University Press, 1924)
![[image]](https://i0.wp.com/h1.ripway.com/Spook%20Puke/filmtv/helpcoverwanted.jpg)
M. R. James – Introduction
Daniel Defoe – The Apparition Of Mrs. Veal
Walter Scott – Wandering Willie’s Tale
F. Marryat – The Werewolf
Lord Lytton – The Haunted And The Haunters; or, The House and the Brain
Nathaniel Hawthorne – Young Goodman Brown
Edgar A. Poe – Ligeia
J. S. Le Fanu – A Strange Event In The Life of Schalken the Painter George Eliot – The Lifted Veil
Mrs. Oliphant – The Open Door
R. L. Stevenson – The Body-snatcher
W. W. Jacobs – The Monkey’s Paw
H. G. Wells – The Crystal Egg
Algernon Blackwood – Ancient Sorceries
Barry Pain – The Moon-slave
M. R. James – Casting the Runes
Posted in *Oxford*, Vere H. Collins | Tagged: Algernon Blackwood, Barry Pain, Daniel Defoe, Edgar A. Poe, F. Marryat, George Eliot, H G Wells, Lord Lytton, Montague Summers, Mrs. Oliphant, Nathaniel Hawthorne, R. L. Stevenson, Vault Of Evil, Vere H. Collins, W. W. Jacobs, Walter Scott | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on September 2, 2007
Richard Dalby (ed.) – The Mammoth Book of Ghost Stories: Volume 1 (Robinson 1990)

Preface
Robert Aickman – The Unsettled Dust
Louisa Baldwin – How He Left the Hotel
Nugent Barker – Whessoe
E.F. Benson – The Shuttered Room
Ambrose Bierce – An Inhabitant of Carcosa
Charles Birkin – Is there Anybody there?
Algenon Blackwood – The Whisperers
L.M. Boston – Curfew
A.M. Burrage – I’m Sure it was No. 31
Ramsay Campbell – The Guide
R. Chetwynd-Hayes – The Limping Ghost
Wilkie Collins – Mrs Zant and the Ghost
Basil Copper – The House by the Tarn
Ralph A. Cram – In Kropfsberg Keep
Daniel Defoe – The Ghost in all the Rooms
Charles Dickens – The Bagman’s Uncle
Arthur Conan-Doyle – The Bully of Brocas Court
Amelia B. Edwards – In the Confessional
Shamus Frazer – The Tune in Dan’s Cafe
John S. Glasby – Beyond the Bourne
William Hope Hodgson – The Valley of Lost Children
Fergus Hume – The Sand-Walker
Henry James – The Real Right Thing
M.R. James – The Haunted Dolls’ House
Roger Johnson – The Wall-Painting
Rudyard Kipling – They
D.H. Lawrence – The Last Laugh
Margery Lawrence – Robin’s Rath
J. Sheridan Le Fanu – The Dream
R.H. Malden – The Sundial
Richard Marsh – The Fifteenth Man
John Metcalfe – Brenner’s Boy
Edith Nesbit – Uncle Abraham’s Romance
Fitz-James O’Brien – What was It?
Vincent O’Sullivan – The Next Room
Roger Pater – The Footstep of the Aventine
Edgar Allan Poe – William Wilson
Forrest Reid – Courage
Mrs J.H. Riddell – The Last of Squire Ennismore
L.T.C. Rolte – The Garside Fell Disaster
David G. Rowlands – The Tears of St. Agatha
Saki – The Soul of Laploshka
Sapper – The Old Dining-Room
Montague Summers – The Between-Maid
Mark Twain – A Ghost Story
Mark Valentine – The Folly
H. Russell Wakefield – Out of the Wrack I Rise
Karl Edward Wagner – In the Pines
Manly Wade Wellman – Where Angels Fear
Edward Lucas White – The House of the Nightmare
Oscar Wilde – The Canterville Ghost
William J. Wintle – The Spectre Spiders

Posted in "Constable-Robinson*, *Constable/Robinson*, Richard Dalby | Tagged: A. M. Burrage, Algenon Blackwood, Ambrose Bierce, Amelia B. Edwards, Arthur Conan Doyle, Basil Copper, Charles Birkin, Charles Dickens, D. H. Lawrence, Daniel Defoe, David G. Rowlands, E. F. Benson, edgar allan poe, Edith Nesbit, Edward Lucas White, Fergus Hume, Fitz-James O'Brien, Forrest Reid, Ghost, Ghost Stories, H. Russell Wakefield, Henry James, J. Sheridan Le fanu, John Metcalfe, John S. Glasby, Karl Edward Wagner, L T C Rolt, Louisa Baldwin, Lucy M. Boston, M. R. James, Manly Wade Wellman, Margery Lawrence, Mark Twain, Mark Valentine, Montague Summers, Mrs. J. H. Riddell, Nugent Barker, Oscar Wilde, R. Chetwynd-Hayes, R.H. Malden, Ralph A. Cram, Ramsey Campbell, Richard Dalby, Richard Marsh, Robert Aickman, Robinson, Roger Johnson, Roger Pater, Rudyard Kipling, Saki, Sapper, Shamus Frazer, Tiger, Vault Of Evil, Vincent O'Sullivan, Wilkie Collins, William Hope Hodgson, William J. Wintle | Leave a Comment »