Author Archives: Keith West

Christmas Ghosts: “The Governess’s Story” by Amyas Northcote

“The Governess’s Story”
Amyas Northcote
available in Winter Ghosts: Classic Ghost Stories for Christmas
ebook only $0.99

There’s an old English tradition of sitting around the fire on December evenings, especially on Christmas Eve, and telling ghost stories. I’m not sure when or how this tradition got started, but I like it.  The practice never caught on here in the States, which makes me think it started in the late 1700s or early 1800s. I’ve always associated telling ghost stories at Christmas with the Victorians, probably because Charles Dickens had some success with them.

But I digress.  I’m going to attempt something here, and that’s to post a review of a ghost story set at Christmas every day until Christmas.  (I’m writing this on the 17th.)  We’ll see how it goes.  I’ll be drawing from a number of different books and will try not to review stories from the same book two days in a row.  I will also try to avoid spoilers as much as I can. Continue reading

Spider John is Back in A Bottle of Rum

A Bottle of Rum
Steve Goble
Seventh Street
Paper $15.95
ebook $9.99

I became a fan of Steve Goble’s Spider John mysteries from the first book. The idea of a pirate solving mysteries is one of the freshest I’ve come across in a long time. The current installment in the series is no exception.

Before I get to the review, I would like to thank Samantha Lien from Seventh Street Books for providing me with a PDF review copy. I have been spending so much time staring at a screen the last couple of months that I went ahead and bought a print copy to save strain on my eyes.  It was money well spent. Continue reading

Pierre Louys’s Birthday

Pierre Louys (no, I don’t know how to get WordPress to put the oomlaut or whatever its called over the “y”) was born on this date, December 10, 1870.

The reason he is remembered much today is that Robert E. Howard gave his girlfriend Novalyne Price a copy of his collected works for Christmas in 1934.  Much of the book (I have a copy but haven’t read it) is erotic in nature.  Novalyne called it pornography. Howard strongly disagreed.

So just for giggles I thought I would do a birthday post on ol’ Pierre.

Margaret Brundage’s Birthday, 2019

Margaret Brundage was born on December 9, 1900. She passed away in 1976. She is best remembered as a cover artist for Weird Tales. Some of her most famous works appeared in the 1030s. Since I’m swamped with grading final exams, I’m going to let her art speak for itself.  You’ll find the art below the fold. Keep in mind, some of these may not be safe for your work. Continue reading

“Mars Minus Bisha” and Leigh Brackett

“Mars Minus Bisha”
Originally published in Planet Stories, January 1954

Today, December 7, marks the birth of Leigh Brackett (1915-1978). As has become customary in these here parts, we observed that day by reading one of her works. This year it’s the story “Mars Minus Bisha”.

The was collected in the long out of print book The Coming of the Terrans. It’s set in the year 2016. Fraser is a doctor doing research on viruses outside a remote Martian village. He lives in a Quonset hut juts past the edge of town. He’s not exactly welcome there. Continue reading

Cornell Woolrich and “Tired Old Man”

Cornell Woolrich

Cornell George Hopley-Woolrich was born on this date (December 3) in 1903. He passed away in 1968. He wrote most of his novels and stories under the name Cornell Woolrich, but a few, such as my favorite, Phantom Lady, were published under the by-line of William Irish. A number of his works were adapted for film and television, often under other titles. The most famous of these was the Alfred Hitchcock film, Rear Window.

So why am I doing this birthday post here rather than at Gumshoes, Gats, and Gams? Well aside from the fact that that blog is currently dormant, Woolrich did write a few stories involving the fantastic.

But I want to do something a little different. Harlan Ellison has a story entitled “Tired Old Man“, which he says is based on something that happened to him. Ellison had gone to a party and got to talking to an older gentlemen there. Ellison didn’t get his name. Later when he described the man to his host and some other friends, they all insisted that the person Ellison had been talking to was Cornell Woolrich. Only none of them saw him there.

Ellison explains all this in his introduction to the collection No Doors, No Windows, which is where the story was first published.  “Tired Old Man” is worth a read. Ellison adds some fantastic elements and a surprising amount of emotional depth to what is a brief story. I first read it years ago, and it’s stuck with me ever since.

I checked this morning to see what is available by Woolrich in ebook form. I’d bought the Centipede Press editions when they came out a few years ago, but I wanted something a little more portable.

There’s a lot that’s been published in recent years. I bought five short story collections. Here’s one of them, An Obsession with Death and Dying. And if you want a novel, start with Phantom Lady or Night Has a Thousand Eyes.

 

Black Friday, Adventures Fantastic Style: Ladies Edition

If you saw my post last year, I observed Black Friday by looking at a number stories by Robert E. Howard that contained the word “black” in the title.

If you are unaware of what Black Friday is, I envy you here’s the scoop. Because our consumer driven economy is totally whacked, we have to make our year’s profit in about a month. (I’m a hardcore free-market capitalist, but give me a break.) So anyone not living in a cave or under a rock (Is there room under there for me?) will find themselves bombarded with advertising, sales, and spam. Pohl and Kornbluth’s The Space Merchants nailed it.

In order to provide relief from the insanity last year, I looked at Howard. This year, in the interest of gender equity, it’s the ladies’ turn.  Last year I had enough time to read all the stories I listed. This year I was a little pressed for time, so I’m providing links to previous reviews. Continue reading

Happy Thanksgiving

Here in the States, it’s Thanksgiving, the annual holiday for, well, showing gratitude.

What, you thought I would go for the cheap joke and say “giving thanks”? Puh-lease. Even I won’t go fruit that low-hanging.

Thanksgiving is the fourth Thursday in November, which puts it late this year, and shortening the Christmas shopping season by something like six days. I would be fine with that if we haven’t been inundated by Christmas commercials and hype for the last two weeks.

But I digress. Here are a few things I’m thankful for. Continue reading