Witchcraft Classics: Best Witch Short Stories 1800-1849 (Best Short Stories) by Nathaniel Hawthorne Paperback Book

Details

Rent Witchcraft Classics: Best Witch Short Stories 1800-1849 (Best Short Stories)

Author: Nathaniel Hawthorne

Format:

Publisher: Bottletree Books

Published: Dec 1969

Pages: 150

Synopsis

"Then with the agility of a cat she sprang on his shoulders, struck him in the side with a broom, and he began to run like a race-horse, carrying her on his shoulders." Nikolai Gogol, Viy The cradle of modern witch short stories began in the first half of the 19th century. This anthology unearths the very best of these stories. Andrew Barger, a leading voice in the Gothic literature space, searched forgotten magazines, newspapers, journals and scholarly articles, to uncover the best witch stories written in the English language over one hundred years after the horrific events of the Salem Witch Trials. They had a lasting effect in both the U.S. and Europe, as these publications reflect from the many authors who penned witch stories in this genre. Andrew's introduction to the collection includes actual text from the Salem Witch Trials. The classic witch stories he has uncovered are unmatched. One is a humorous tale that stands, in the grand Irish tradition of great storytelling, shoulder to shoulder with Washington Irving's "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow" (1819) and Charles Dickens's "The Goblins Who Stole a Sexton" (1836), as that rare combination of humor and horror that is so difficult to find. It is published for the first time in over a century and a half. What Andrew calls America's "first great witch short story" is also published for the first time in nearly two hundred years. As readers have come to expect from Andrew, he includes his scholarly touch to the anthology by providing introductions to each story and a foreword titled "Hags! Hags! Hags!" There are also illustrations for each story. Last, a list of stories considered are at the end of the anthology. Read these witchcraft classics tonight! Hags! Hags! Hags! by Andrew BargerThe Hollow of the Three Hills (1830) by Nathaniel HawthorneThe Marvelous Legend of Tom Connor's Cat (1847) by Samuel LoverThe Witch Caprusche (1845) by Elizabeth ElletThe Brownie of the Black Haggs (1827) by James HoggLydia Ashbaugh, the Witch (1836) by William DarbyYoung Goodman Brown (1835) by Nathaniel HawthorneViy (1835) by Nikolai GogolWitch Short Stories Considered

View descriptions at Amazon.com

Reviews