Strange Stories discussion
Other authors and books in this genre?
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The Literary
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Aug 04, 2013 03:46AM

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Short story authors: Joseph Sheridan La Fanu, Arthur Machen, M.R.James, E.F. Benson, Algernon Blackwood, Henry James, Edith Wharton, H.P. Lovecraft, Robert Aikman, Richard Matheson, Charles Beaumont, T.E.D Klein, Clive Barker, Thomas Ligotti, Joe Hill. And many more, I'm sure.
Edgar Allen Poe was said to have preferred the medium of the short story for the tellng of horror, a tale that could be read in one sitting. There is something to be said for that intensity. I found this, by the way, I think they'd be classified more as horror than strange fiction, but some might qualify.
http://www.blastr.com/2011/10/33_cree...
http://www.blastr.com/2011/10/33_cree...

A side note: Poe felt the same way about poetry too. He asserted that every poem produced a single effect in a short amount of time, and that what we call long poems (stuff like "Paradise Lost," "The Dunciad," "The Prelude") are really a bunch of shorter poems on related topics strung together.
You certainly fall deeper into the world of the writing when it can be read in one sitting. Poetry, especially.

http://suptales.blogspot.co.uk/2013/0...
I've been told by P. Curran, author of Stay Out of New Orleans, that to-reads are Elizabeth Jane Howard's short stories, Avram Davidson's strange stories, not his science fiction, and again, Walter de la Mare is great, but you have to make sure you're getting the strange stories rather than his stuff for kids or his comedy. (He was really prolific.) You want a collection with 'Seaton's Aunt," "Out of the Deep," "Crewe," "The Almond Tree," things like that. Some of them seem to be out of print and are fairly pricey, but I am looking around.

Thanks for the other two recommendations. I recently bought a collection of Davidson's stories, because I had heard much the same thing. Now I'll move it up on my list.
Excellent. I just picked up a hard copy of the de la Mare for $12 and a Folio Society edition of Ghost Stories and Other Horrid Tales with shorts by many of the authors mentioned. Now I need either a roaring fire and a glass of sherry, or a windowless room with no means of escape. Actually, I've never tried sherry.

When I was a weird kid--as opposed to the weird old man I am now--I liked to sneak downstairs at one in the morning, light the pair of three-light candelabra in the dining room, and read ghost stories by their light alone.
I remember they added quite a lot to my enjoyment of "The Beckoning Fair One," "Whistle and I'll Come to You my Lad," and "Lunkundoo."
It might work for you too. (Although considering the fire hazard, you might limit your consumption of sherry).

http://www.tartaruspress.com/aickmanw...