British Weird by James Machin Paperback Book

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Rent British Weird

Author: James Machin

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Publisher: Handheld Classics

Published: Dec 1969

Genre: Fiction - Occult

Retail Price: $17.99

Pages: 290

Synopsis

Following the success of Handheld Press’s 2019 best-selling anthology Women’s Weird, British Weird is a new anthology of classic Weird short fiction by British writers, first published between the 1890s and the 1930s. To be published alongside the second Women’s Weird anthology, Melisa Edmundson’sWomen’s Weird 2, this collection – curated by James Machin, author of Palgrave Gothic’s Weird Fiction in Britain, 1880-1939 – assembles stories to thrill, entertain, and chill. The nine stories are:\r\n 1. ‘Man-Size in Marble’ by Edith Nesbit (1893): immense church effigies walk at night\r\n 2. ‘No-Man’s Land’ by John Buchan (1900): man find prehistoric tribe in Scottish Highlands\r\n 3. ‘The Willows’ by Algernon Blackwood (1907): canoeing holiday on a haunted river\r\n 4. ‘Caterpillars’ by E. F. Benson (1912): really bad country house hallucinations\r\n 5. ‘The Bad Lands’ by John Metcalfe (1920): more hallucinations, but outdoors\r\n 6. \'Randalls Round’ by Eleanor Scott (1927): a folk tune with deadly effect\r\n 7. ‘Lost Keep’ by L. A. Lewis (1934): a terrifying experiment with human scale\r\n 8. ‘N’ by Arthur Machen (1934): why looking for a lost London street can be dangerous\r\n 9. ‘Mappa Mundi’ by Mary Butts (1937): 20thC American student gets lost in medieval Paris\r\n British Weird also republishes an important 1933 essay by Mary Butts on the history of and recent work in supernatural writing:\r\n 10. ‘Ghosties and Ghoulies’: Uses of the Supernatural in English Fiction \r\n Machin’s introduction describes the background for these excellent stories in the Weird tradition, and identifies their use of peculiarly British preoccupations in supernatural short fiction.

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