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Great Tales of Terror and the Supernatural (1944)

by Herbert Alvin Wise (Editor), Phyllis Fraser (Editor)

Other authors: Conrad Aiken (Contributor), Michael Arlen (Contributor), HonorΓ© de Balzac (Contributor), E.F. Benson (Contributor), Ambrose Bierce (Contributor)38 more, Algernon Blackwood (Contributor), Edward Bulwer-Lytton (Contributor), John Collier (Contributor), Charles Collins (Contributor), Wilkie Collins (Contributor), Richard Connell (Contributor), A.E. Coppard (Contributor), F. Marion Crawford (Contributor), Charles Dickens (Contributor), Isak Dinesen (Contributor), William Faulkner (Contributor), E.M. Forster (Contributor), Thomas Hardy (Contributor), Nathaniel Hawthorne (Contributor), Ernest Hemingway (Contributor), O. Henry (Contributor), Robert Hichens (Contributor), Geoffrey Household (Contributor), W.W. Jacobs (Contributor), Henry James (Contributor), M.R. James (Contributor), Rudyard Kipling (Contributor), Joseph Sheridan LeFanu (Contributor), H.P. Lovecraft (Contributor), Arthur Machen (Contributor), Walter de la Mare (Contributor), Guy de Maupassant (Contributor), Richard Middleton (Contributor), Fitz-James O'Brien (Contributor), Oliver Onions (Contributor), Edgar Allan Poe (Contributor), Saki (Contributor), Dorothy L. Sayers (Contributor), Carl Stephenson (Contributor), H.G. Wells (Contributor), Edith Wharton (Contributor), Edward Lucas White (Contributor), Alexander Woollcott (Contributor)

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingMentions
6811236,233 (4.29)41
Showing 12 of 12
Tales of Terror by Conrad Aiken, Michael Arlen, Honore de Balzac, Ambrose Bierce, John Collier, Wilkie Collins, Richard Connell, William Faulkner, Thomas Hardy, Ernest Hemingway, Geoffrey Household, W.W. Jacobs, Edgar Allan Poe, Saki, Dorothy L. Sayers, Carl Stephenson, H.G. Wells, Alexander Woolcott.
Tales of the Supernatural by E.F. Benson, Algernon Blackwood, Karen Blixen, Edward Bulwer-Lytton, A.E. Coppard, Charles Collins and Charles Dickens, F. Marion Crawford, Walter de la Mare, E.M. Forster, Nathaniel Hawthorne, O. Henry, Robert Hichens, W.W. Jacobs, Henry James, M.R. James, Rudyard Kipling, Joseph Sheridan LeFanu, H.P. Lovesraft, Arthur Machen, Guy de Maupassant, Richard Middleton, Fitz-James O'Brien, Oliver Onions, Saki, Edith Wharton, Edward Lucas White
  cappybear | Jan 22, 2024 |
Great Tales of Terror and the Supernatural: This book had many, many weak stories in it that I'd just as soon not have to Wade through. There were a few goodies, though, and I note them here.

La Grande Breteche, Honore de Balzac
4 🌟
Shades of "The Cask of Amontillado" EAP

The Black Cat, EAP
4 🌟
An alcoholic takes out the black mood of his debauchery on his pets and his sweet-tempered wife. But there's always the KARMIC court, where the court of humans would fail.

The Facts in the Case of M.Valdemar, EAP
4 🌟
A hypnotist tries the experiment of putting a man who is dying into a trance, minutes before his death. Truly gross.

A Terribly Strange Bed, Wilkie Collins
3 🌟
I have never been into gambling; I'm too poor to give my money away. This story is about an Englishman who goes to a mero-mero french gambling house and wins big. To celebrate, he gets drunk. We all know that nothing good can happen next.

The Three Strangers, Thomas Hardy
3 🌟
A case of mistaken identity. When you throw a party, you can often expect to have gate-crashers, and these are usually the most thirsty and hungry of the guests.

Pollock and the Porroh Man, H.G.Wells
4 🌟
A racist in Sierra Leone has an argument with a Porroh Man, with a deadly conclusion. Hallucinations take over the racist's world.

Sredni Vashtar, Saki
4 🌟
A boy orphan has a wicked cousin for a guardian. His only friends in the world are a ferret and a hen, in a toolshed in the garden. Wicked cousin takes away his hen. When wicked cousin would take away the ferret, too, Sredni Vashtar grants the victim his wish.

Back for Christmas, John Collier
4 🌟
How appropriate that the author is named Collier. An English doctor with an over-managing wife, is to lecture for three months in the U.S. Before they left, the doctor had been excavating a hole for a wine cellar, but his wife promised all their friends"We'll be back by Christmas." The hole wasn't for wine.

Taboo, Geoffrey Household
3 🌟
I like this story for the subject matter. It's about a werewolf, in a small village in Eastern Europe. But I don't care for stories about werewolves.

Was it a Dream?, Guy de Maupassant
3 🌟
Someone You knew died. You know that person was a total asshole, but the obituary tells another story. Did you ever wonder if the dead feel like correcting those epitaphs?

Afterward, Edith Wharton
4 🌟
People who are wealthy often get that way by stepping on someone else, or many other people. They don't like to be reminded of who they hurt in order to Live their lavish "I'm important" lifestyle. But there're forces keeping track of such hurts, that our limited senses can't sense, until"afterward."

The Monkey's Paw, W.W.Jacobs
4 🌟
Somebody in India cut off a Monkey's hand. A spell was put on it to grant 3 humans 3 wishes. The first man to utilize the wishes, used the 3rd one to wish for death. An old English couple are the 3rd, and last, humans to benefit from the Monkey's dismemberment.

How Love Came to Professor Guildea, Robert Hichens
4 🌟
A scientist and a priest strike up an unlikely friendship. The priest is all about love of mankind, while the professor feels loathe at the thought of someone or something loving him. Something comes to love the professor as if in answer to his profress.

Lukundoo, Edward Lucas White
5 🌟
White explorers are traveling through parts of Africa, searching out pygmies (!?) when they are visited by a member of another white explorers group whose leader is sick. He asks them to return with him to help his chief. His chief is sick with something like carbuncles. Lukundoo means witchcraft. A truly creepy story.

Caterpillars, E.F.Benson
5 🌟
When I was a kid, I thought cancer was contagious. In this story, it is.

The Beckoning Fair One, Oliver Onions
3 🌟
An author is working on a second book, due in October, when he feels the urge to move residence to a flat in a house. There is a mesmerizing effect in the house that causes him to cease working on his novel, and become a recluse. Moreover, his woman friend, trying to look after him, is mysteriously attacked if she tries to enter the house.

The Celestial Omnibus, E.M.Forster
5 🌟
In a suburb of London, there lived a little, neglected boy. Though he was surrounded with luxury, he was starved. One day, he discovered an Omnibus route that travelled to Heaven.

This story is a lesson to the people who will take themselves so seriously, caring only for how they can impress their fellow human beings, who look down on those who appear simple and uneducated to their"venerable" selves. This story's lesson is that a simple life, but one that finds heaven in every leaf, every flower, is the true, and blessed life.

The writing in this story is lovely, and conveys a magical feeling.

The Ghost Ship, Richard Middleton
4 🌟
A village in England is full of ghosts, and the villagers and the ghosts exist together peacefully. But in 1897, a huge storm blows up, and a Ghost Ship, by its strength, is blown 50 miles from Sea, into the landlord's of the Inn turnip field. The captain is most amiable, when the landlord and the narrator go to complain about ruining the turnips, and gives the landlord's wife a gold brooch, by way of paying for her crushed turnips. The captain, though, for all his amiability, has a bad influence on the young ghosts of the town.

A light-hearted, amusing story from an author who suffered so badly from depression that he chloroformed himself to death at the age of 29. :-(

The Sailor-boy's Tale, Isak Dineson
4 🌟
This story has a moral to it: Be kind to animals and insects; not just humans. With our limited senses, we don't have the knowledge to know that they are so much more important than humans.

The Rats in the Walls, The Dunwich Horror, H.P.Lovecraft
3 🌟
I can't really explain HPL's appeal to me. You read his stories, and sometimes they seem so hokey. But I remember our limited human senses, and I think about Lovecraft, writing in his study, or wherever, and of his striving to explain and explore a world of beings beyond our senses. My favorite is"The Mountains of Madness." ( )
  burritapal | Oct 23, 2022 |
If you never read another horror anthology, if you even hate horror, you should read this one anthology just to make sure you round out your literary background. The one essential classic anthology that has NEVER been bettered since it was first published. Cannot really be compared to anything else.

If you are a horror buff, then you owe it to yourself to read this to find out where it all came from and what the best can be. ( )
  Gumbywan | Jun 24, 2022 |
This anthology was my favorite book of all time from the age of 10 until the age of 12. I spent the weekend re-reading it. There are many favorite stories here that almost everyone has heard of and read: The Most Dangerous Game, Leiningen Versus the Ants, Shredni Vashtar, The Open Window, The Monkey's Paw.. Many here are still widely read because they were anthologized here first.

For the most part the stories still thrilled me. Even so I could not get over how many of them used the framing device of a bunch of white Englishmen at the club who are just lighting their cigars and settling down to hear one man's hair-raising yarn...or something very close to it. A few are culturally offensive, relying on witch-doctor tropes and colonial points of view that jar, but mostly their frame of reference is stiff-upper-lippish, rather than unreadably inappropriate. I still love them all albeit nostalgically at times rather than for their currency. ( )
  poingu | Feb 22, 2020 |
My favorite collection of stories ever. I've read this to many times to count. This is the book that sits on my night stand. I reach for it after I've read a handful of crappy horror stories. Or after I've written a handful of crappy horror stories. ( )
2 vote imaginationzombie | Sep 28, 2014 |
A very wide-ranging selection --everything from Fauikner to Lovecraft. Mostly British and American nineteenth century or early 20th century, with a few French. Divided into 2 parts, Tales of Terror and Tales of the Supernatural, but many in the supernatural section are equally terrifying. The distinction seems to be the first group are not supernatural (e.g. A Rose for Emily) ( )
  antiquary | Jun 17, 2011 |
My 2011 'review' of this read, in its entirety "This is the single finest collection of tales of the supernatural I have ever encountered. Wall to wall classics of their kind."

I don't violently disagree with this ten years later; however, because I just completed my first complete read of the book, I would like to say a little more.

First: I think it was silly of me to declare this as the 'finest' of its kind when I haven't read that many of its kind. Ahem. It's a wide-ranging anthology that contains stuff from roughly the early 19th (Balzac, et al) to the early 20th centuries. It ends with a pair of Lovecraft stories, & he died in 1937.

The editors' split of the material into tales of 'terror' (alarming but explicable, even if you have to stretch) and 'the supernatural' (inexplicable without allowing the existence of realms or powers beyond the known) is *somewhat* artificial. Poe's "The Facts in the Case of M. Valdemar" for example, fits better for me under "supernatural." Plus this means if you are a completist reader like me, and you are really far more interested in the "supernatural," you have to wade through the tales of "terror" that come first. This isn't that big a burden, however, since many of them are excellent and exciting.

What else to say? of the major "supernatural" writers, their choices are for the most part solid. The slight exception, I'd say, is Algernon Blackwood. His "Ancient Sorceries," included here, is far better than I remember it being on first reading, but "Confession," while not bad, should have made way for either "The Willows" or "The Wendigo," in my opinion. The editors say neither of these were included because of how often they're anthologized, but that didn't stop them from including "Green Tea" for Le Fanu.

But these are quibbles. This is a great anthology, full of old chestnuts AND neat surprises, and is still a fine introduction to the genre. NB: all the writers are male. I just called this to mind. Hmm. ( )
  tungsten_peerts | Jan 11, 2011 |
One hardly expects to be transfixed by an innocent looking Modern Library horror collection--one expects a rather dry "representative historical collection." This one though has an atmosphere about it, though . . . the lines of influence run fairly strongly through the stories of this collection. While the authors, styles and approaches to creating a sense of the uncanny are distinct, there is also something mutually reinforcing in these stories. A really great collection. ( )
1 vote ehines | Dec 5, 2010 |
Excellent, excellent, excellent! Some of the early stories had me reading the sentences aloud. Words perfectly chosen to give mood, beautiful old little used words that fit perfectly. An English major horror freak's dream book. ( )
2 vote odamae | Apr 27, 2008 |
From a world long before Stephen King, this is the best compilation of classic horror writing I've ever read. My father had an older (identical) version when I was a child, and it was the first place I discovered H.P. Lovecraft, Algernon Blackwood, and Arthur Machen. You'll find all the greats here: M.R. James (oft called the world's best ghost story writer), Edgar Allan Poe, Ambrose Bierce, and H.G. Wells; as well as some shadowy works by such rare and extremely influential writers as Le Fanu, Maupassant, and W.W. Jacobs (The Monkey's Paw). These tales are drawn from great literature, so don't be surprised to find Faulkner, Dickens, and Hemmingway here as well. Essential. ( )
2 vote scratchdesigns | Dec 12, 2007 |
From ghoulies and ghosties
and long-legged beasties
and things that go bump in the night,
Good Lord deliver us!
Old Scotch Invocation
  GreyRoger | Jun 4, 2006 |
I've had this forever. I should read it or something.
  beabatllori | Apr 2, 2013 |
Showing 12 of 12

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