Blackwood’s “The Wendigo”

British author Algernon Blackwood was born on this date, March 14, in 1869. Blackwood was a major influence on many writers of the weird tale in the early years of the 20th Century, including H. P. Lovecraft and Robert E. Howard.

Along with “The Willows”, “The Wendigo” is one of Blackwood’s best known tales.

It concerns a group on a moose hunting expedition in the Canadian wilderness.  A psychiatrist, his nephew, two guides, and a cook are having no luck on their hunt, so they decide to split up.  The uncle and his guide go west, the nephew and his guide canoe across the lake they are camped by and hike some distance to another lake, and the cook stays in the base camp await their return. Continue reading

Happy Birthday, Novalyne

Robert E. Howard’s girlfriend, Novalyne Price Ellis, was born on this date, March 9 in 1908.  She passed away on March 30, 1999.

Her memoir, One Who Walked Alone, detailing her relationship with Howard, is one of the major sources of information about Bob’s life. Howard fans and scholars owe her a debt of gratitude for writing it.

If’ you’ve never read the book, I suggest you get your hands on a copy. It’s well worth your time.

One Who Walked Alone was the basis of the film The Whole Wide World, which starred Vincent D’Onofrio and an unknown-at-the-time actress named Renee Zellweger.  (It was released a few months before Jerry McGuire.) It’s a fairly faithful adaptation and worth watching.

There have been two editions of One Who Walked Alone, the second published to coincide with the film and having a picture of Zellweger on the cover.  The first edition is the one shown to the left. Both editions were published by Donald M. Grant.

“The Fireplace” by Henry S. Whitehead

“The Fireplace”
Henry S. Whitehead
originally published in Weird Tales, January 1925
reprinted in Weird Tales, February 1935
currently available in Voodoo Tales: The Ghost Stories of Henry S. Whitehead
paperback $8.51
ebook $3.99

Henry S. Whitehead (1882-1932) was born on this date, March 5. He was well on his way to becoming one of the major authors for Weird Tales when he died far too young.

I was going to take a look at “The Lips” for today’s post, which I had intended to call “The Lips of Henry S. Whitehead”.  Continue reading

Arthur Machen

March 3 marks the birthday of Arthur Machen (1863-1947).  He is regarded as one of the influences on H. P. Lovecraft. among others.

I have a confession to make.

I’ve never read his work. (Don’t judge me.)

So rather than discuss a story I’ve read to commemorate Machen’s birth, I’m going to do something different. I’m going to ask what I should read.

Is there a particular Machen story that stands out among the others? Something that everyone who reads Machen should be familiar with? I ask this honestly, because I really don’t have a good idea where to start.

Let me know in the comments, and thanks in advance.

Sturgeon’s Teddy Bear

“The Professor’s Teddy Bear”
Theodore Sturgeon
Originally published in Weird Tales, March 1948
Currently available in Thunder and Roses Volume IV: The Complete Stories of Theodore Sturgeon
ebook $8.99

Things have been extra hectic this last week or two, and I’ve missed several  birthdays that I wanted to post about.  I’ll do some posts about the authors I wanted to discuss over the next few weeks. Today is Theodore Sturgeon’s birthday, and I didn’t want to miss it. Sturgeon (1918-1985) was born on February 26. He was one of the first sf authors I read as a teenager, and some of his short stories left a big impressions. Continue reading

Latest Publication in Death’s Sting

My latest short story, “Ghosts of the Staked Plains”, is now available in Death’s Sting.  It’s from Rogue Blades Entertainment and is available in print and electronic formats. The theme of the anthology is immortals.  The print version is $13, and the ebook is $4.

G. W. Thomas is hosting a series of posts on his blog this week. I’ve got an essay that went up earlier today.  There’s also an interview with Jason M. Waltz and a review of the book by G. W. Thomas.

 

Brief Reflections on August Derleth

August Derleth

Today, February 24, marks the birth of August Derleth (1909-1971). He founded Arkham House publisher to keep the work of H. P. Lovecraft in print. For this we all owe him a great debt of gratitude.  Derleth was something of a controversial figure in the field for the way he handled the literary estate of H. P. Lovecraft, especially his “posthumous collaborations” in which he completed some stories Lovecraft left unfinished at his death.

My purpose with this post is not to focus on Arkham House, but on an aspect of Derleth’s legacy that is sadly neglected today, and that’s his work as a writer of weird fiction.

It’s been over a decade since there was a collection of Derleth’s work published. I did a quick check online, and the starting price for a collection of his ghost stories was $200.  Too rich for my blood.

I was going to review a couple of short pieces I have in anthologies, “Muggeridge’s Aunt” and “The Shuttered House”. Both were fairly standard ghost stories.  While not rising to the level of a James or Wakefield, they were still well told and provided a pleasant way to while away a few spare minutes. The problem is the former isn’t readily available in either electronic or print format, and the latter is only in a facsimile of The Avon Fantasy Reader Number 1. For these birthday posts, I’m not going to review stories that aren’t readily available.

I would hope some ambitious publisher would take a chance and produce an inexpensive collection, or better yet a set, of Derleth’s weird fiction.

Mayhar and Matheson

Today, February 20, marks the anniversary of the births of two great short story writers.  One of them, Richard Matheson (1926-2013), will need no introduction. Ardath Mayhar (1930-2012), on the other hand, might not be familiar to you. We’ll start with Matheson because he was born first, but I’m going to focus more on Ardath. Continue reading

Sailing on The Bone Ships

The Bone Ships
R. J. Barker
Orbit
Paper $15.99
ebook $9.99

I really liked The Bone Ships. It is a nautical fantasy set about warfare, redemption, loyalty, and honor. It’s also the first book of a trilogy, and I’ll be reading the next two books when they come out.

The Hundred Isles and the Gaunt Islands have been at war for centuries, fighting with ships made from the bones of great sea-going dragons.

The last dragon was killed over a generation ago. The bones are becoming a more and more scarce commodity. But a dragon has been spotted… Continue reading

Margaret St. Clair’s Little Red Owl

“The Little Red Owl”
first published in Weird Tales, July 1951
currently available in The Hole in the Moon
Dover Books
Paperback $14.95

Margaret St. Clair was born on this date, February 17, in 1911.  She passed away in 1995.

St. Clair wrote primarily short stories, with most published in the 1940s and 1950s. She also published eight novels between 1956 to 1973. In addition to writing under her own name, she published under the name of Idris Seabright. These stories appeared primarily F&SF in the 50s. Continue reading