Posts Tagged ‘Peter Tremayne’
Posted by demonik on January 9, 2012
Otto Penzler (ed) – Zombies: A Compendium of the Living Dead (Corvus, 2011: originally US, Zombies! Zombies! Zombies!, Vintage Crime/Black Lizard, Sept. 2011)

Otto Penzler – INTRODUCTION
W. B. Seabrook – Dead Men Working In The Cane Fields
David A. Riley – After Nightfall
Hugh B. Cave – Mission To Margal
Chet Williamson – The Cairnwell Horror
Arthur Leo Zagat – Crawling Madness
Lisa Tuttle – Treading The Maze
Karen Haber – Red Angels
Michael Marshall Smith – Later
Vivian Meik – White Zombie
Guy de Maupassant – Was It A Dream?
Steve Rasnic Tem – Bodies And Heads
Dale Bailey – Death And Sufferage
Henry Kuttner – The Graveyard Rats
Edgar Allan Poe – The Facts In The Case of M. Valdemar
Yvonne Navarro – Feeding The Dead Inside
Charles Birkin – Ballet Negre
Geoffrey A Landis – Dead Right
Graham Masterton – The Taking of Mr. Bill
Jack D‘Arcy – The Grave Gives Up
H. P. Lovecraft – Herbert West: Reanimator
H. P. Lovecraft – Pickman’s Model
Robert Bloch – Maternal Instinct
Kevin J. Anderson – Bringing The Family
Richard Laymon – Mess Hall
J. Sheridan Le Fanu – Schalken The Painter
Thorpe McClusky – While Zombies Walked
Mary A. Turzillo – April Flowers, November Harvest
Mort Castle – The Old Man And The Dead
Henry S. Whitehead – Jumbee
Peter Tremayne – Marbh Bheo
Thomas Burke – The Hollow Man
Anthony Boucher – They Bite
Gahan Wilson – Come One, Come All
Ramsey Campbell – It Helps If You Sing
R. Chetwynd-Hayes – The Ghouls
Seabury Quinn – The Corpse-Master
F. Marion Crawford – The Upper Berth
Ralston Shields – Vengeance Of The Living Dead
Harlan Ellison & Robert Silverberg – The Song The Zombie Sang
John H. Knox – Men Without Blood
Uel Key – The Broken Fang
Theodore Sturgeon – It
Day Keene – League Of The Grateful Dead
Garry Kilworth – Love Child
Edith & Ejler Jacobson – Corpses On Parade
Richard Christian Matheson – Where There’s A Will
Michael Swanwick – The Dead
Manly Wade Wellman – The Song of The Slaves
H. P. Lovecraft – The Outsider
Robert R. McCammon – Eat Me
Joe R. Lansdale – Deadman’s Road
Robert E. Howard – Pigeons From Hell
Scott Edelman – Live People Don’t Understand
August Derleth & Mark Schorer – The House In The Magnolias
Stephen King – Home Delivery
Arthur J. Burks – Dance Of The Damned
Theodore Roscoe – Z Is For Zombie
Posted in Corvus, Otto Penzler | Tagged: Anthony Boucher, Arthur J. Burks, Arthur Leo Zagat, August Derleth, Charles Birkin, Chet Williamson, Dale Bailey, David A. Riley, Day Keene, edgar allan poe, Edith & Ejler Jacobson, F. Marion Crawford, fiction, Gahan Wilson, Garry Kilworth, Geoffrey A. Landis, Graham Masterton, Guy de Maupassant, H. P. Lovecraft, Harlan Ellison, Henry Kuttner, Henry S Whitehead, Hugh B. Cave, J. Sheridan Le fanu, Jack D‘Arcy, Joe R. Lansdale, John H. Knox, Karen Haber, Kevin J. Anderson, Lisa Tuttle, Manly Wade Wellman, Mark Schorer, Mary A. Turzillo, Michael Marshall Smith, Michael Swanwick, Mort Castle, Otto Penzler, Peter Tremayne, R. Chetwynd-Hayes, Ralston Shields, Ramsey Campbell, Richard Christian Matheson, Richard Laymon, Robert Bloch, Robert E. Howard, Robert R. McCammon, Robert Silverberg, Scott Edelman, Seabury Quinn, Stephen King, Steve Rasnic Tem, Theodore Roscoe, Theodore Sturgeon, Thomas Burke, Thorpe McClusky, Uel Key, Vault Of Evil, Vivian Meik, W. B. Seabrook, Yvonne Navarro, Zombies | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on October 5, 2009
Stephen Jones (ed.) – Dark Detectives: Adventures of the Supernatural Sleuths (Fedogan & Bremer, 1999)

Les Edwards
Stephen Jones – Introduction: The Serial Sleuths
Kim Newman – Seven Stars Prologue: In Egypt’s Land
Peter Tremayne – Our Lady of Death
Kim Newman – Seven Stars Episode One: The Mummy’s Heart
William Hope Hodgson – The Horse Of The Invisible
Kim Newman – Seven Stars Episode Two: The Magician and the Matinee Idol
Basil Copper – The Adventure of the Crawling Horror
Kim Newman – Seven Stars Episode Three: The Trouble with Barrymore
Manly Wade Wellman – Rouse Him Not
Brian Lumley – De Marigny’s Clock
Kim Newman – Seven Stars Episode Four: The Biafran Bank Manager
R. Chetwynd-Hayes – Someone Is Dead
Brian Mooney – Vultures Gather
Clive Barker – Lost Souls
Kim Newman – Seven Stars Episode Five: Mimsy
Jay Russell – The Man Who Shot the Man Who Shot The Man Who Shot Liberty Valence
Kim Newman – Seven Stars Episode Six: The Dog Story
Neil Gaiman – Bay Wolf
Kim Newman – Seven Stars Episode Seven: The Duel of Seven Stars
Posted in Stephen Jones | Tagged: Basil Copper, Brian Lumley, Brian Mooney, Clive Barker, Fedogan & Bremer, fiction, horror, Jay Russell, Kim Newman, Les Edwards, Manly Wade Wellman, Neil Gaiman, Peter Tremayne, R. Chetwynd-Hayes, Stephen Jones, Supernatural Sleuths, Vault Of Evil, William Hope Hodgson | 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 »
Posted by demonik on September 4, 2009
Stephen Jones (ed.) – The Mammoth Book Of Wolf Men (Robinson/ Running Press, 2009: Originally published as The Mammoth Book Of Werewolves, 1994)
![[image]](https://i0.wp.com/i6.photobucket.com/albums/y218/haloofflies/mammothwolfmen.jpg)
Cover: Joe Roberts
Introduction: Even a Man Who is Pure in Heart – Stephen Jones
Clive Barker – Twilight at the Towers
Scott Bradfield – The Dream of the Wolf
Ramsey Campbell – Night Beat
Angus Campbell (R. Chetwynd-Hayes) -The Werewolf
Michael Marshall-Smith – Rain Falls
Stephen Laws – Guilty Party
Roberta Lannes – Essence of the Beast
Mark Morris – Immortal
Basil Copper – Cry Wolf
Graham Masterton – Rug
Justin Case (Hugh B. Cave) – The Whisperers
David Sutton – And I Shall Go in the Devil’s Name
Peter Tremayne – The Foxes of Fascoum
Karl Edward Wagner – One Paris Night
Brian Mooney – Soul of the Wolf
Gans T. Field (Manly Wade Wellman) – The Hairy Ones Shall Dance
Adrian Cole – Heart of the Beast
Les Daniels – Wereman (aka ‘By the Light of the Silvery Moon’)
Nicholas Royle – Anything But Your Kind
Dennis Etchison – The Nighthawk
David Case – The Cell
Suzy McKee Charnas – Boobs
Neil Gaiman – Only The End Of The World Again
Kim Newman – Out of the Night, When the Full Moon is Bright…
Jo Fletcher – Bright of Moon (verse)
See also Vault’s Mammoth Book Of The Werewolf/ Wolf Men combo thread.
Posted in *Constable/Robinson*, Stephen Jones | Tagged: Adrian Cole, Angus Campbell, Basil Copper, Brian Mooney, Clive Barker, Constable, David Case, David Sutton, Dennis Etchison, fiction, Gans T. Field, Graham Masterton, horror, Hugh B. Cave, Jo Fletcher, Justin Case, Karl Edward Wagner, Kim Newman, Les Daniels, Manly Wade Wellman, Mark Morris, Michael Marshall Smith, Neil Gaiman, Nicholas Royle, paperback, Peter Tremayne, R. Chetwynd-Hayes, Ramsey Campbell, Roberta Lannes, Robinson, Running Press, Scott Bradfield, Stephen Jones, Stephen Laws, Suzy McKee Charnas, The Werewolf, Vault Of Evil, werewolves, Wolf Men | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on June 21, 2009
Stephen Jones (ed.) – The Mammoth Book of Vampires: New Edition (Robinson, 2004)

Introduction: The Children of the Night – Stephen Jones
Clive Barker – Human Remains –
Brian Lumley – Necros
Brian M. Stableford – The Man Who Loved the Vampire Lady
Michael Marshall Smith – A Place To Stay
Ramsey Campbell – The Brood
Nancy Kilpatrick – Root Cause
Robert Bloch – Hungarian Rhapsody
Christopher Fowler – The Legend Of Dracula Reconsidered As A Prime-Time TV Special
Richard Christian Matheson – Vampire
Hugh B. Cave – Stragella
David J. Schow – A Week in the Unlife
Frances Garfield – The House at Evening
Simon Clark – Vampyrrhic Outcast
R. Chetwynd-Hayes – The Labyrinth
Karl Edward Wagner – Beyond Any Measure
Basil Copper – Doctor Porthos
Paul McAuley – Straight To Hell
Dennis Etchison – It Only Comes Out at Night
Chelsea Quinn Yarbro – Investigating Jericho
Peter Tremayne – Dracula’s Chair
Sydney J. Bounds – A Taste For Blood
Melanie Tem – The Better Half
John Burke – The Devil’s Tritone
Manly Wade Wellman – Chastel
Howard Waldrop – Der Untergang des Abendlandesmenschen
Tanith Lee – Red As Blood
Tina Rath – A Trick Of The Dark
Graham Masterton – Laird of Dunain
F. Paul Wilson – Midnight Mass
Nancy Holder – Blood Gothic
Les Daniels – Yellow Fog
Steve Rasnic Tem – Vintage Domestic
Neil Gaiman – Fifteen Cards From A Vampire Tarot
Harlan Ellison – Try A Dull Knife
Kim Newman – Andy Warhol’s Dracula
The replaced stories are:
F. Marion Crawford – For the Blood Is the Life
Edgar Allan Poe – Ligeia
Bram Stoker – Dracula’s Guest
M. R. James – An Episode of Cathedral History
E. F. Benson – The Room in the Tower
Kim Newman – Red Reign
Neil Gaiman – Vampire Sestina [Verse]
See also: Mammoth Book Of Vampires (original edition)
Posted in *Constable/Robinson*, Stephen Jones | Tagged: Basil Copper, Brian Lumley, Brian M. Stableford, Chelsea Quinn Yarbro, Christopher Fowler, Clive Barker, David J. Schow, Dennis Etchison, F. Paul Wilson, Frances Garfield, Graham Masterton, Harlan Ellison, horror, Howard Waldrop, Hugh B. Cave, John Burke, Karl Edward Wagner, Kim Newman, Les Daniels, Les Edwards, Mammoth, Manly Wade Wellman, Melanie Tem, Michael Marshall Smith, Nancy Holder, Nancy Kilpatrick, Neil Gaiman, paperback, Paul McAuley, Peter Tremayne, R. Chetwynd-Hayes, Ramsey Campbell, Richard Christian Matheson, Robert Bloch, Robinson, Simon Clark, Stephen Jones, Steve Rasnic Tem, Sydney J. Bounds, Tanith Lee, Tina Rath, Vampires, Vault Of Evil | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on June 3, 2009
Justin Marriott (ed.) – Paperback Fanatic #10 (June, 2009)

Cover: John Holmes
Just crawled through the letterbox so without preamble, here’s what you get in #10
Stephen Sennitt on serious occultist turned top pulp author Gerald Suster.
Andreas Decker on the German editions of Donald Glut‘s ace New Adventures Of Frankenstein.
Justin Marriott on New English Library’s “Sex Manuals” of the ‘sixties & seventies.
John Mains interviews cover artist John “The Fontana Horror ‘Melting Heads’ man” Holmes.
Justin Marriott again on Barry Sadler, the man responsible for not only the Casca the Mercenary pulps but also the rabid pro-‘Nam US smash hit single The Ballad Of The Green Beret (!!!)
Roy Bayfield on Ballantine’s Adult Fantasy books’.
Justin (“I’m leaving to everyone else this issue”) Marriott on versatile and ludicrously prolific pulpster John Harvey whose credits include the Herne The Hunter series and a collaboration with Laurence James on the elusive snuff exploitation job Cut.
Four pages of Fanatical Thoughts
A tribute to Richard Gordon
Order your copy via the Paperback Fanatic site!
Posted in Paperback Fanatic, small press | Tagged: Andreas Decker, Black Magic, Casca, David Robert Wooten, Donald Glut, fiction, Gerald Suster, John Harvey, John Holmes, John Mains, Justin Marriott, Lawrence James, magazine, Mark Rodman, new english library, Occult, Paperback Fanatic, paperbacks, Paul Tabori, Peter Tremayne, Phil Harbottle, pulp, Richard Gordon, Roy Bayfield, Simon R. Green, Stephen Sennitt, Steve Holland, Steve Lines, Vault Of Evil | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on February 22, 2009
Man, this is so hot through the letterbox, I haven’t even managed to extract it from the envelope!
Justin Marriott (ed.) – Paperback Fanatic #9 (February 2009)

A quick flick through before i settle down to actually read the thing, and what immediately catches the eye? Plenty! There’s a lengthy feature on The Man From O.R.G.Y. and his fellow international men of mystery as “The Fanatic dives into the world of sexy spies and double-d double agents.’ Curt Purcell of the incomparable Beyond The Groovy Age Of Horror investigates The Twilight World Of Eli Podgram, star of Nel’s six-part ‘Specialist’ series from the early ‘seventies. There’s an interview with and overview of Peter Tremayne’s career as a horror, fantasy and Crime author and John Mains’ interrogates Chris Lowder about his Mills & Boon Blood Of Dracula outing as Jack Hamilton Teed. Bootboys and Bovver girls are as well catered for as man or woman can ever be with Skinhead Revival: Richard Allen and his delinquent spawn unleashed across seven pages, one of which is commandeered by a certain Franklin ‘Suedehead’ Marsh! As you maybe guessed from the cover, the featured classic artist of the issue is Nel/ Mayflower serial offender Richard Clifton-Day and, of course, there is Fanatical Thoughts, the unmissable letters department, and a right old fiends reunited affair it is with loads of names familiar from this board offering their support and encouragement. Fanatical Thoughts is my absolute favourite department of any publication you care to mention.
As you’re no doubt aware, Justin is currently being kept very occupied by baby Sophie (wish you well, little one) so “No chance to update the PF site, but maybe you could mention £5.25 inc postage by paypal to my e-mail address and to pm me if they don’t know it.”
The email address is justinATjustincultprint.free-online.co.uk (replace the AT with @, obviously. Anti-spam precaution)
Thank you Justin!
Posted in Magazines, Paperback Fanatic, small press | Tagged: Boot Boys, Chris Lowder, Curt Purcell, Dennis Wheatley, Eli Podgram, Errol LeCale, Franklin Marsh, Groovy Age Of Horror, Jack Hamilton Teed, Justin Marriott, Paperback Fanatic, Peter Tremayne, Pulp fiction, Richard Allen, Richard Clifton-Day, Skinhead, Suedehead, The Man From O.R.G.Y., The Specialist, Vault Of Evil | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on June 29, 2008
Stephen Jones (ed.) – The Mammoth Book of Zombies (Robinson, Oct 1993)

Luis Rey
Introduction: The Dead That Walk – Stephen Jones
Clive Barker – Sex, Death and Starshine
Ramsey Campbell – Rising Generation
Manly Wade Wellman -The Song of the Slaves
R. Chetwynd-Hayes -The Ghouls
Edgar Allan Poe – The Facts in the Case of M. Valdemar
Karl Edward Wagner – Sticks
Charles L. Grant – Quietly Now
Basil Copper – The Grey House
M. R. James – A Warning to the Curious
Nicholas Royle -The Crucian Pit
Brian Lumley -The Disapproval of Jeremy Cleave
H. P. Lovecraft – Herbert West: Reanimator
Lisa Tuttle – Treading the Maze
David Riley – Out of Corruption
Graham Masterton – The Taking of Mr. Bill
J. Sheridan Le Fanu – Schalken the Painter
David Sutton – Clinically Dead
Les Daniels – They’re Coming for You
Hugh B. Cave – Mission to Margal
Michael Marshall Smith – Later
Peter Tremayne – Marbh Bheo
Dennis Etchison – The Blood Kiss
Christopher Fowler – Night After Night of the Living Dead
Robert Bloch – The Dead Don’t Die!
Kim Newman – Patricia’s Profession
Joe R. Lansdale – On the Far Side of the Cadillac Desert with Dead Folks
thanks to H. P. Saucecraft & Allthingshorror for providing cover scans.
see also Vault’s Mammoth Book Of Zombies thread.
Posted in *Constable/Robinson*, Stephen Jones | Tagged: "Constable-Robinson*, Basil Copper, Books, Brian Lumley, Charles L. Grant, Christopher Fowler, Clive Barker, David Riley, David Sutton, Dennis Etchison, edgar allan poe, fiction, Graham Masterton, H. P. Lovecraft, horror, Hugh B. Cave, J. Sheridan Le fanu, Joe R. Lansdale, Karl E. Wagner, Kim Newman, Les Daniels, Lisa Tuttle, Luis Rey, M. R. James, Mammoth, Manly Wade Wellman, Michael Marshall Smith, Nicholas Royle, Peter Tremayne, R. Chetwynd-Hayes, Ramsey Campbell, Robert Bloch, Robinson, Stephen Jones, Vault Of Evil, Zombies | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on September 18, 2007
Stephen Jones (ed) – The Mammoth Book of Werewolves (Robinson, 1994)

Introduction: Even a Man Who is Pure in Heart – Stephen Jones
Clive Barker – Twilight at the Towers
Scott Bradfield – The Dream of the Wolf
Ramsey Campbell – Night Beat
Angus Campbell (R. Chetwynd-Hayes) -The Werewolf
Michael Marshall-Smith – Rain Falls
Stephen Laws – Guilty Party
Roberta Lannes – Essence of the Beast
Mark Morris – Immortal
Basil Copper – Cry Wolf
Graham Masterton – Rug
Justin Case (Hugh B. Cave) – The Whisperers
David Sutton – And I Shall Go in the Devil’s Name
Peter Tremayne – The Foxes of Fascoum
Karl Edward Wagner – One Paris Night
Brian Mooney – Soul of the Wolf
Gans T. Field (Manly Wade Wellman) – The Hairy Ones Shall Dance
Adrian Cole – Heart of the Beast
Les Daniels – Wereman (aka ‘By the Light of the Silvery Moon’)
Nicholas Royle – Anything But Your Kind
Dennis Etchison – The Nighthawk
David Case – The Cell
Suzy McKee Charnas – Boobs
Kim Newman – Out of the Night, When the Full Moon is Bright…
Jo Fletcher – Bright of Moon (verse)
Not got this one, but it looks fairly lively and I can certainly vouch for the excellence of “The Cell” and “Boobs”. The Wellman is an enjoyable pulp romp, almost as entertaining as it’s title, and “The Whisperers” is a good example of Hugh B. Cave’s work for “Spicy Mystery Stories.” Basil Copper’s story began life as a chapter in his “The Werewolf: In Legend, Fact And Art” and would’ve been ideal as a story in an Amicus anthology.
Thanks to Steve For the cover scan.
Posted in *Constable/Robinson*, Stephen Jones | Tagged: Adrian Cole, Angus Campbell, Basil Copper, Brian Mooney, Clive Barker, David Case, David Sutton, Dennis Etchison, fiction, Gans T. Field, Graham Masterton, horror, Hugh B. Cave, Jo Fletcher, Justin Case, Karl Edward Wagner, Kim Newman, Les Daniels, Manly Wade Wellman, Mark Morris, Michael Marshall Smith, Nicholas Royle, Peter Tremayne, R. Chetwynd-Hayes, Ramsey Campbell, Roberta Lannes, Robinson, Scott Bradfield, Stephen Jones, Stephen Laws, Suzy McKee Charnas, The Hairy Ones Shall Dance, Vault Of Evil, Werewolf | 1 Comment »
Posted by demonik on September 9, 2007
Peter Haining (ed.) – The Vampire Hunters’ Casebook (Warners, 1996)

Introduction-Peter Haining
Preface: Bram Stoker (extract from “Dracula”)
Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu – Carmilla [extract]
Arabella Kennealy – The Beautiful Vampire
Alice and Claude Askew – Aylmer Vance and the Vampire
Uel Key -The Broken Fang
Seabury Quinn -The Man Who Cast No Shadow
Sydney Horler – The Vampire [extract]
Manly Wade Wellman – The Last Grave of Lili Warren
Peter Haining – The Beefsteak Room
Jeff Rice – The Night Stalker [extract]
Karl Edward Wagner – Beyond Any Measure
Robert Bloch – The Undead
Anne Rice – The Master of Rampling Gate
David J. Schow – A Week in the Unlife
Peter Tremayne – My Name Upon the Wind
Blurb
The Vampire Hunter is one of the most most courageous figures to stalk horror fiction’s bloody pages. Venturing into the world of the Undead armed only with a crucifix, wooden stake, garlic and a bottle of holy water, he dares the impossible – to end the existence of those already dead. And while Count Dracula is assured his place as the father of all vampires, so his nemesis in Bram Stoker’s seminal creation, Professor Abraham Van Helsing has his own immortality guaranteed within the pantheon of honor.
From its first incarnation in nineteenth-century melodrama to the works of more recent masters of the supernatural, such as Anne Rice and Robert Bloch, Peter Haining’s new anthology of short stories traces the fictional history of the Vampire’s greatest foe. Including the vampire hunter’s earliest appearance in Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu’s ‘Carmilla’ – with one of the most gruesome scenes in all of vampire literature – Van Helsing’s shadow casts an unmistakable presence over a diverse range of authors.
Prefaced by an extract from Dracula guiding the uninitiated into the vampire hunter’s arts, the good doctor from Amsterdam is resurrected in three stories: Robert Bloch’s ‘The Undead’, Peter Haining’s own ‘The Beefsteak Room’ and Peter Tremayne’s finale, ‘My Name Upon The Wind’ (written especially for the anthology), a truly chilling tale in which Van Helsing is transplanted to present-day Ireland.
Staking a persuasive claim for these unsung heroes of the night, THE VAMPIRE HUNTERS’ CASEBOOK is a collection to fire the imagination and curdle the blood; but one word of warning – only in daylight should it be opened
Posted in *Warners*, Peter Haining, Uncategorized | Tagged: Alice & Claude Askew, Anne Rice, Arabella Kennealy, Bram Stoker, Carmilla, David J. Schow, Dracula, Jeff Rice, Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu, Karl Edward Wagner, Manly Wade Wellman, paperback, Peter Haining, Peter Tremayne, Robert Bloch, Seabury Quinn, Sydney Horler, Uel Key, vampire fiction, Vampire Hunters, Vault, Vault Of Evil, Warners | Leave a Comment »