Posted by demonik on October 19, 2009
Dorothy L Sayers (ed.) – Great Short Stories of Detection, Mystery and Horror: 2nd Series (Gollancz, July, 1931)

Help! Cover Wanted!
Dorothy L. Sayers – Introduction
1. Detection & Mystery (25 stories by Sayers, M. P. Shiel, H. C. Bailey, Robert Barr, Mrs. Belloc Lowdnes & Co.)
2. Mystery and Horror:
A.J. Alan – My Adventure in Norfolk
Stacy Aumonier – Miss Bracegirdle Does Her Duty
R. H. Barham – The Leech of Folkestone
Max Beerbohm – A.V. Laider
E.F. Benson – The Room in the Tower
J.D. Beresford – Cut-Throat Farm
Ambrose Bierce – The Damned Thing
Algernon Blackwood – Secret Worship
Mrs. E. Bland (Edith Nesbit) – No. 17
Douglas G. Browne – The Queer Door
A.M. Burrage – The Waxwork
Wilkie Collins – Mad Monkton
Alan Cunningham – The Haunted Ships
Clemence Dane – The King Waits
Walter de la Mare – The Tree
S.L. Dennis – The Second Awakening of a Magician
Charles Dickens – No.1 Branch Line: The Signalman
Ford Madox Ford – Reisenberg
Violet Hunt – The Prayer
W.F. Harvey – The Beast With Five Fingers
Holloway Horn – The Old Man
W.W. Jacobs – The Well
Edgar Jepson – The Resurgent Mysteries
J.S. Le Fanu – Mr. Justice Harbottle
E. Bulwer-Lytton – The Haunted and the Haunters
Arthur Machen – The Great Return
Frederick Marryat – The Story of the Greek Slave
John Masefield – Anty Blight
John Metcalfe – The Double Admiral
Mrs. Oliphant – The Library Window
Barry Pain – Rose, Rose
Eden Phillpotts – The Iron Pineapple
Edgar Allan Poe – Berenice
Sir A. Quiller-Couch – The Roll-Call of the Reef
Naomi Royde-Smith – Mangaroo
Saki – Sredni Vashtar
Mary Shelley – The Mortal Immortal
M. P. Shiel – The Primate of the Rose
Henry Spicer – Called to the Rescue
Hugh Walpole – The Enemy
H. G. Wells – The Inexperienced Ghost
Edward Lucas White – Lukundoo
Posted in *Gollancz*, Dorothy L. Sayers | Tagged: *Gollancz*, A. J. Alan, A. M. Burrage, Alan Cunningham, Algernon Blackwood, Ambrose Bierce, Arthur Machen, Barry Pain, Charles Dickens, Clemence Dane, Dorothy L. Sayers, Douglas G. Browne, E L. White, E. Bulwer-Lytton, E. F. Benson, E. Nesbit, Eden Phillpotts, edgar allan poe, Edgar Jepson, fiction, Ford Madox Ford, Frederick Marryat, H G Wells, H. C. Bailey, Henry Spicer, Holloway Horn, horror, Hugh Walpole, J S Le Fanu, J. D. Beresford, John Masefield, John Metcalfe, M. P. Shiel, Mary Shelley, Max Beerbohm, Mrs. Belloc Lowdnes, Mrs. E. Bland, Mrs. Oliphant, Naomi Royde-Smith, R. H. Barham, Robert Barr, S L Dennis, Saki, Sir A. Quiller-Couch, Stacy Aumonier, Supernatural, Vault Of Evil, Violet Hunt, W. F. Harvey, W. W. Jacobs, Walter De La Mare, Wilkie Collins | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on October 5, 2009
C. A. Dawson Scott & Ernest Rhys (eds.) – Twenty And Three Stories: By Twenty And Three Authors (Thornton Butterworth, 1924)

Introduction: Ernest Rhys & C. A. Dawson Scott
Edith Wharton – Kerfol
L. de Bra – A Life – A Bowl Of Rice
W. B. Yeats – The Crucifixion Of The Outcast
The Marquess Curzon Of Kedleston – The Drums Of Kairwan
T. F. Powys – Alleluia
A. E. W. Mason – Hatteras
Elinor Mordaunt – Hodge
Thomas Burke – The Chink And The Child
Robert Hichens – The Nomad
Cutcliffe Hyne – The Ransom
Edwin Pugh – The Other Twin
Morley Roberts – Grear’s Dam
Ward Muir – The Reward Of Enterprise
H. de Vere Stackpoole -The King Of Maleka
Algernon Blackwood – Violence
A. Conan-Doyle – Captain Sharkey
Arthur Lynch – The Sentimental Mortgage
Ellis Roberts – The Narrow Way
Louis Golding – The Call Of The Hand
Walter De La Mare – The Creatures
W. Somerset Maugham – The Taipan
John Masefield – Davy Jones’ Gift
W. W. Jacobs – The Monkey’s Paw
“The New Terror is apt to be more psychical, more psychological perhaps, than the old. The method of the latter is based on EDGAR POE and the writers for Blackwoods Magazine, while the former is akin to the Russians, to SOLOGUB and TCHEKKOV.”
Strong mixed bag of Ghost stories, mysteries and thrillers – “stories of sensation” as the authors put it – with enough of a horror bent to be included here. A companion piece to their Thirty And One Stories of the previous year which is more diverse in its approach but still finds time to include genre contributions from Percival Gibbon, Violet Hunt, May Sinclair and H. G. Wells of those I recognise.
Posted in *Thornton Butterworth*, C. A. Dawson Scott & Ernest Rhys | Tagged: *Thornton Butterworth*, A. Conan-Doyle, A. E. W. Mason, Algernon Blackwood, Arthur Lynch, C. A. Dawson Scott, Cutcliffe Hyne, Edith Wharton, Edwin Pugh, Elinor Mordaunt, Ellis Roberts, Ernest Rhys, fiction, H. de Vere Stackpoole, horror, John Masefield, L. de Bra, Louis Golding, Morley Roberts, Robert Hichens, T. F. Powys, Terror, The Marquess Curzon Of Kedleston, Thomas Burke, Vault Of Evil, W. B. Yeats, W. W. Jacobs, W.Somerset Maugham, Walter De La Mare, Ward Muir | Leave a Comment »