Posts Tagged ‘Joan Aiken’
Posted by demonik on September 1, 2013
Syd Bentlif (ed.) – Horror Anthology (Mayflower-Dell, 1965)

Elizabeth Howard and Robert Aickman – Left Luggage
Edgar Allan Poe – Silence
Ray Bradbury – The Dwarf
Isabel Colegate – The Nice Boys
Edgar Allan Poe – The Tell-Tale Heart
M. R. James – The Uncommon Prayer Book
Jerome Bixby – It’s a Good Life
Algernon Blackwood – The Terror of the Twins
Joan Aiken – Marmalade Wine
Blurb
Horror Anthology: Ray Bradbury, Edgar Allan Poe, Algernon Blackwood, Jerome Bixby, Joan Aiken, M. R. James
Great tales Of The Macabre By World masters in their field.
Posted in *Mayflower*, Syd Bentlif | Tagged: Algernon Blackwood, edgar allan poe, Elizabeth Howard, Horror Anthology: Ray Bradbury, Isabel Colegate, Jerome Bixby, Joan Aiken, M. R. James, Mayflower-Dell, paperback, Robert Aickman, Syd Bentlif, Vault Of Evil | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on August 25, 2012
Coming soon ….
Stephen Jones (ed.) – Mammoth Book Of Best New Horror 23 (Robinson, Oct. 2012)

Cover Illustration: Vincent Chong
Stephen Jones – Introduction: Horror In 2011
Ramsey Campbell – Holding The Light
Christopher Fowler – Lantern Jack
Paul Kane – Rag And Bone
Gemma Files – Some Kind Of Light Shines From Your Face
Joel Lane – Midnight Flight
Tim Lebbon – Trick Of The Light
Gregory Nicoll – But None Shall Sing For Me
Alison Littlewood – About The Dark
Daniel Mills – The Photographer’s Tale
Mark Samuels – The Tower
Peter Atkins – Dancing Like We’re Dumb
Simon Strantzas – An Indelible Stain Upon The Sky
Joan Aiken – Hair
Steve Rasnic Tem – Miri
Geeta Roopnarine – Corbeaux Bay
Michael Marshall Smith – Sad, Dark Thing
Robert Silverberg – Smithers And The Ghost Of The Thar
Reggie Oliver – Quieta Non Movere
Joe R. Lansdale – The Crawling Sky
Conrad Williams – Wait
Simon Kurt Unsworth – The Ocean Grand, North West Coast
Evangeline Walton – They That Have Wings
Thana Niveau – White Roses, Bloody Silk
John Ajivide Lindqvist – The Music Of Bengt Karlsson, Murderer
Ramsey Campbell – Passing Through Peacehaven
David Buchan – Holiday Home
Stephen Jones & Kim Newman – Necrology: 2011
Blurb
The latest volume of the world’s longest-running annual showcase of Horror and Dark Fantasy fiction.
Presenting a selection of the very best, and most chilling, short stories and novellas of horror and the supernatural by both established masters of horror and exciting newcomers.
See also the Best New Horror 23 thread on the Vault forum
Posted in "Constable-Robinson*, *Constable/Robinson*, Stephen Jones | Tagged: Alison Littlewood, Best New Horror, Christopher Fowler, Conrad Williams, Daniel Mills, David Buchan, Evangeline Walton, fiction, Geeta Roopnarine, Gemma Files, Gregory Nicoll, Joan Aiken, Joe R. Lansdale, Joel Lane, John Ajivide Lindqvist, Kim Newman, Mark Samuels, Michael Marshall Smith, Paul Kane, Peter Atkins, Ramsey Campbell, Reggie Oliver, Robert Silverberg, Robinson, Simon Kurt Unsworth, Simon Strantzas, Stephen Jones, Steve Rasnic Tem, Thana Niveau, Tim Lebbon, Vault Of Evil, Vincent Chong | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on March 20, 2012
Anonymous – Ghost Stories ( Cathay, 1984)

illustrations by Ian McCraig
H. P. Lovecraft – The Music of Erich Zann
Charles Dickens – The Ghost in the Bride’s Chamber
M. R. James – A School Story
Oscar Wilde – The Canterville Ghost
Edgar Allan Poe – The Tell-Tale Heart
R. Chetwynd-Hayes – The Cat Room
Catherine Crowe – The Monk’s Story
Saki – Laura
Fritz Leiber – Smoke Ghost
Frederick Marryat – The Phantom Ship
Leon Garfield – An Adelaide Ghost
E. Nesbit – Man-Size In Marble
Hugh Walpole – A Little Ghost
Rosemary Timperley – The Mistress in Black
Guy de Maupassant – An Apparition
Penelope Lively – The Ghost of Thomas Kempe (extract)
Algernon Blackwood – The Occupant of the Room
Jerome K. Jerome – The Haunted Mill
Elizabeth Le Fanu – The Harpsichord
J. S. Le Fanu – The White Cat of Drumgunniol
W. W. Jacobs – The Three Sisters
Joan Aiken – Sonata For Harp and Bicycle
Posted in *Cathay*, Anonymous | Tagged: Algernon Blackwood, Cathay, Catherine Crowe, Charles Dickens, E. Nesbit, edgar allan poe, Elizabeth Le Fanu, fiction, Frederick Marryat, Fritz Leiber, Ghost Stories, Guy de Maupassant, H. P. Lovecraft, Hugh Walpole, Ian McCraig, J S Le Fanu, Jerome K. Jerome, Joan Aiken, Leon Garfield, M. R. James, Oscar Wilde, Penelope Lively, R. Chetwynd-Hayes, Rosemary Timperley, Saki, Vault Of Evil, W. W. Jacobs | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on October 25, 2010
Anonymous – Tales Of Horror & Mystery (Dean, 1993)

Luis Rey
Horror Stories
Roald Dahl – The Landlady
Walter De La Mare – The Riddle
W. W. Jacobs – The Monkey’s Paw
Ruth Ainsworth – Through The Door
E. Nesbit – Man-Size In Marble
Edgar Allan Poe – The Tell-Tale Heart
Helen Cresswell – A Kind Of Swan Song
Gene Kemp – The Clock Tower Ghost
Robert Arthur – The Haunted Trailer
Ambrose Bierce – The Stranger
Walter De La Mare – Bad Company
Michael Joseph – The Yellow Cat
W. W. Jacobs – The Well
Saki – Laura
Joan Aiken – The Swan Child
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle – The Brown Hand
H. G. Wells – The Red Room
Mystery Stories
Joan Aiken – The Blade
M. R. James – Lost Hearts
Charles Dickens – The Signalman
Oscar Wilde – The Picture Of Dorian Gray (Extract)
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle – The Silver Mirror
Bret Harte – The Stolen Cigar Case
Honore De Balzac – The Mysterious Mansion
Nicholas Fisk – Sweets From A Stranger
Roald Dahl – The Hitch-Hiker
Wilkie Collins – The Dream Woman
Edgar Allan Poe – The Masque Of The Red Death
Karen Blixen – The Sailor Boy’s Tale
Guy de Maupassant – The Horla
Theophile Gautier – The Mummy’s Foot
Blurb:
“It is very seldom that one encounters what would appear to be sheer unadulterated evil in a human face; an evil, I mean, active, deliberate, deadly, dangerous.”
This anthology contains more than thirty spine-chilling stories by contemporary and classic writers, drawing us into a world of ghosts, demons and horrific happenings.
In Walter de la Mare’s Bad Company who is the evil-looking stranger on the Underground who leads us to a frightening discovery? And in Roald Dahl’s The Landlady what sinister secret is the mysterious proprietress of the guesthouse witholding from her unsuspecting guest?
These startling and compelling stories by some of the world’s greatest writers will enthrall readers to the very last page.
Posted in Anonymous | Tagged: Ambrose Bierce, Anonymous, anthology, Books, Bret Harte, Charles Dickens, Dean, E. Nesbit, edgar allan poe, fiction, Gene Kemp, Guy de Maupassant, H G Wells, Helen Cresswell, Honore De Balzac, Horror Stories, Joan Aiken, Karen Blixen, Luis Rey, M. R. James, Michael Joseph, Mystery Stories, Nicholas Fisk, Oscar Wilde, Roald Dahl, Robert Arthur, Ruth Ainsworth, Saki, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Supernatural, Tales Of Horror & Mystery, Théophile Gautier, Vault Of Evil, W. W. Jacobs, Walter De La Mare, Wilkie Collins | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on October 25, 2010
Michael Morpurgo (ed.) – Ghostly Haunts (Collins/ The National Trust, 1994)

Illustrated by Nilesh Mistry
Michael Morpurgo – Introduction
Ted Hughes – The Deadfall
Berlie Doherty – Hurry, Please
Michael Morpurgo – Silver Ghost
John Quinn – The Rising Stones
Dick King-Smith – Godfrey’s Revenge
Anne Merrick – Mirror, Mirror
Joan Aiken – The Thing In Waiting
Alick Rowe – The Dorabella Variation
Terence Blacker – A Lady in Blue, Unidentified
Jamila Gavin – The Demon Drummer
The Authors
The National Trust
National Trust Properties Featured In The Stories
Blurb
Have you ever visited a spooky place and wondered whether the ghosts of the people who lived there still linger around the buildings or the grounds?
This haunting collection of new stories featuring real places eerily captures the atmosphere and history surrounding them, creating a ghostly world that will stay with you long after you’ve read the last word…
“Michael Morpurgo has persuaded ten contemporary children’s authors to produce an attractive variety of ghosts hallmarked by the National Trust.” – The Times
“Ghostly Haunts provides a rich and substantial collection of good, classy, classic ghost tales.” – TES
A commemorative collection specially commissioned to celebrate the National Trust’s centenary, guaranteed to become a classic of its kind.
Posted in *Collins*, Michael Morpurgo | Tagged: Alick Rowe, Anne Merrick, anthology, Berlie Doherty, Books, Collins, Dick King-Smith, fiction, Ghost Stories, Jamila Gavin, Joan Aiken, John Quinn, Michael Morpurgo, Nilesh Mistry, Paul Young, Supernatural, Ted Hughes, Terence Blacker, The National Trust, Vault Of Evil | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on September 25, 2009
Stephen Jones (ed.) – Dancing With The Dark: True Encounters With The Paranormal By Masters Of The Macabre (Vista, 1997)
![[image]](https://i0.wp.com/h1.ripway.com/Spook%20Puke/dancingindark.jpg)
Cover by Splash: Photography by Simon Marsden
Stephen Jones – Introduction: Dancing with the Dark
Joan Aiken – My Feeling about Ghosts
Sarah Ash – Timeswitch
Mike Ashley – The Rustle in the Grass
Peter Atkins – Take Care of Grandma
Clive Barker – Life After Death
Stephen Baxter – The Cartographer
Robert Bloch – Not Quite So Pragmatic .
Ramsey Campbell – The Nearest to a Ghost
Hugh B. Cave – Haitian Mystères
R. Chetwynd-Hayes – One-Way Trip
A. E. Coppard – The Shock of the Macabre
Basil Copper – The Haunted Hotel
Peter Crowther – Safe Arrival
Jack Dann – A Gift of Eagles
Charles de Lint – The House on Spadina
Terry Dowling – Sharing with Strangers
Lionel Fanthorpe – Hands on the Wheel
Esther M. Friesner – That Old School Spirit
Gregory Frost – Twice Encountered
Neil Gaiman – The Flints of Memory Lane
Stephen Gallagher – In There
Ray Garton – Haunted in the Head
John Gordon – The House on the Brink
Ed Gorman – Riding the Nightwinds
Elizabeth Goudge – ESP
Simon R. Green – Death is a Lady
Peter Haining – The Smoke Ghost
Joe Haldeman – Never Say Die
James Herbert – Not Very Psychic
Brian Hodge – Confessions of a Born-Again Heathen
Nancy Holder – To Pine with Fear and Sorrow
M. R. James – A Ghostly Cry
Peter James – One Extra for Dinner
Mike Jefferies – A Face in the Crowd
Nancy Kilpatrick – Raggedy Ann
Stephen King – Uncle Clayton
Hugh Lamb – Go On, Open Your Eyes…
Terry Lamsley – Moving Houses
John Landis – Inspiration
Stephen Laws – Norfolk Nightmare
Samantha Lee – Not Funny
Barry B. Longyear – The Gray Ghost
H. P. Lovecraft – Witch House
Brian Lumley – The Challenge
Arthur Machen – World of the Senses
Graham Masterton – My Grandfather’s House
Richard Matheson – More Than We Appear To Be
Richard Christian Matheson – Visit to a Psychic Surgeon
Paul J. McAuley – The Fall of the Wires
Anne McCaffrey – Unto the Third Generation
Thomas F. Monteleone – Talkin’ Them Marble Orchard Blues
Mark Morris – A Shadow of Tomorrow
Yvonne Navarro – The House on Chadwell Drive
William F. Nolan – The Floating Table and the Jumping Violet
Edgar Allan Poe – Mesmeric Revelation
Vincent Price – In the Clouds
Alan Rodgers – Clinic-Modern
Nicholas Royle – Magical Thinking
Jay Russell – De Cold, Cold Décolletage
Adam Simon – The Darkness Between the Frames
Guy N. Smith – The Mist People
Michael Marshall Smith – Mr Cat
S. P. Somtow – In the Realm of the Spirits
Brian Stableford – Chacun sa Goule
Laurence Staig – The Spirit of M. R. James
Peter Tremayne – The Family Curse
H. R. Wakefield – The Red Lodge
Lawrence Watt-Evans – My Haunted Home
Cherry Wilder – The Ghost Hunters
Chet Williamson – A Place Where a Head Would Rest
Paul F. Wilson – The Glowing Hand
Douglas E. Winter – Finding My Religion
Gene Wolfe – Kid Sister
A Spectral vision …. The sound of phantom footsteps … An experiment in astral projection ….. A childhood premonition of disaster …. Possession by a voodoo god ….
An Ouija board that predicted death … A body kept alive by force of will ….. A cursed family name …
Such tales as these are more usually associated with horror books and movies. However, these anecdotes are absolutely true! They are ,just a sample of the real-life experiences recounted by some of the world’s most famous frighteners, from such bestselling authors as Stephen King and James Herbert, to actor Vincent Price and director John Landis.
Collected together for the very first time, many or the most successful and well-known exponents, along with rising stars of the horror field, relate their fascinating encounters with the supernatural, revealing how such unique experiences have affected their lives and influenced their works.
Even for the experts, when it comes to Unexplained phenomena, fact can be much more frightening than fiction …
See also Dancing With the Dark thread on Vault Of Evil
Thanks to Nightreader!
Posted in *Vista*, Stephen Jones | Tagged: *Vista*, A. E. Coppard, Adam Simon, Alan Rodgers, Anne McCaffrey, Arthur Machen, Barry B. Longyear, Basil Copper, Brian Hodge, Brian Lumley, Brian Stableford, Charles de Lint, Cherry Wilder, Chet Williamson, Clive Barker, Douglas E. Winter, Ed Gorman, edgar allan poe, Elizabeth Goudge, Esther M. Friesner, Gene Wolfe, Ghosts, Graham Masterton, Gregory Frost, Guy N. Smith - The Mist People, H. P. Lovecraft, H. R. Wakefield, Hugh B. Cave, Hugh Lamb, Jack Dann, James Herbert, Jay Russell, Joan Aiken, Joe Haldeman, John Gordon, John Landis, Laurence Staig, Lawrence Watt-Evans, Lionel Fanthorpe, M. R. James, Mark Morris, Michael Marshall Smith, Mike Ashley, Mike Jefferies, Nancy Holder, Nancy Kilpatrick, Neil Gaiman, Nicholas Royle, non-fiction, Paul F. Wilson, Paul J. McAuley, Peter Atkins, Peter Crowther, Peter Haining, Peter James, Peter Tremayne, R. Chetwynd-Hayes, Ramsey Campbell, Ray Garton, Richard Christian Matheson, Richard Matheson, Robert Bloch, S. P. Somtow, Samantha Lee, Sarah Ash, Simon R. Green, Stephen Baxter, Stephen Gallagher, Stephen Jones, Stephen King, Stephen Laws, Terry Dowling, Terry Lamsley, Thomas F. Monteleone, True Ghost Stories, Vault Of Evil, Vincent Price, William F. Nolan, Yvonne Navarro | Leave a Comment »