Mammoth Book of Twentieth Century Ghost Stories

Haining, Peter, ed. The Mammoth Book of Twentieth Century Ghost Stories. Carroll and Graf Publishers, 1998.

Reason read: November 1st is Day of the Dead in Mexico. Read in honor of ghosts everywhere.

The stories:
The Golden Era –

  • “The Third Person” by Henry James – two spinster women live together in a haunted house.
  • “The Presence By the Fire” by H.G. Wells – a man mourns the loss of his wife.
  • “How It Happened” by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle – a man crashes his brand new car.
  • “Ghostly Duel” by Jack London – published in the Oakland Aegis and renamed “Who Believes in Ghosts?”
  • “The Hand” by Theodore Dreiser
  • “The Ghost of Down Hill” by Edgar Wallace – Wallace’s short stories were made into movies.
  • “Honeysuckle Cottage” by P.G. Wodehouse – no one is who they say they are in this haunted house.
  • “The Old Dark House” by J.B. Priestly
  • “Sophy Mason Comes Back” by E.M. Delafield – Dorothy Sayers was a fan of Delafield.
  • “In a Glass Darkly” by Agatha Christie – a man saves a woman from murder…or does he?
    Two: the Phantom Army –
  • “The Bowman” by Arthur Machen – is this story really fiction when there have been eye witness accounts of the World War I phenomenon?
  • “The Other Side of the Medal” by Stella Gibbons – another version of the Bowmen story.
  • “Three Lines of Old French” by Abraham Merritt – Haining said this could be a benchmark ghost story.
  • “The Lusitania Waits” by Alfred Noyes – Noyes was an English poet who, like John Mayer, did not wait to graduate college before becoming famous.
  • “Vengeance is Mine” by Algernon Blackwood – a chance encounter with a stranger changes a mild-mannered man’s life.
  • “We are the Dead” by Henry Kuttner – from the pulp magazine called Weird Tales.
  • “The Escort” by Daphne du Maurier
  • “The Elf in Algiers” by John Steinbeck
  • “The Mirror in Toom 22” by James Hadley Case – written while Case was serving in the Royal Air Force.
  • “Is there Life Beyond the Gravy?” by Stevie Smith
    Three: The Modern Tradition –
  • “Sloane Square” by Pamela Hansford Johnson – a ghostly subway ride.
  • “The Leaf-Sweeper” by Muriel Spark – one of my favorites about a man who confronts his living ghost.
  • “At the Chalet Lartrec” by Winston Graham – a story about time spent in an isolated mountain hotel.
  • “The Love of a Good Woman” by William Trern – mild-mannered salesman murders his wife for the sake of a mistress.
  • “The Haunting of Shawley Rectory” by Ruth Rendell – does history repeat itself?
  • “Voices From the Coalbin” by Mary Higgins Clark – a woman slowly goes insane thanks to childhood traumas.
  • “A Good Sound Marriage” by Fay Weldon – a pregnant woman has a heart to heart with her ghost of a grandmother.
  • “A Self-Possessed Woman” by Julian Barnes
  • A Programmed Christmas Carol” by John Mortimer – published in the London Daily Mail in 1994.
  • “A Figment in Time” by Peter Haining

My favorite observations: the spinsters in “The Third Person” were happy to have a man in the house, even if he was a ghost and in “A Programmed Christmas Carol” a descendant of Scrooge’s is living in the world of Apple computers and paternity leave.

Line I liked, “James Rodman had a congenital horror of matrimony” (p 147), “Rage pertained to savage days” (p 263), “The dangerous thing is for a woman to wait too long, so she end with nothing” (p 445)and “Curiously, too, I thought that although a lot of people die naked, I could not find a single story of a nude phantom” (p 480).

Author Editor fact: Haining has over 200 works to his credit. I am only reading The Mammoth Book of Twentieth Century Ghost Stories for the Challenge.

Music: “Good-bye to Tipperary,” “The Holly and the Ivy,” “Lillibullero,” “The Rogue’s March,”

BookLust Twist: from Book Lust in the very obvious chapter called “Ghost Stories” (p 99).

Greater Nowheres

Finkelstein, Dave and Jack London. Greater Nowheres: a Journey Through the Australian Bush.New York: Harper & Row Publishers, 1988.

The premise of Greater Nowheres is simple. Dave Finkelstein and Jack London are on the hunt for a mythical yet terrifying and elusive crocodile in the Australian bush. Despite their lackadaisical searching Finkelstein and London never really meet up with the famed creature (sorry to disappoint – Jack sees it but Dave doesn’t). Instead, Greater Nowheres becomes an eye opening account of a region in Western and Northern Australia few have traveled just for the fun of it. Finkelstein and London take turns writing chapters about their adventures and it is interesting to see their differing styles on the page (London is much more descriptive, in case you were wondering). One thing they both comment on is the inhospitable climate of the Australian Bush, a place where temperatures can soar and stay elevated (above 100 degrees) even at 10 o’clock at night. There are two seasons – the Wet and the Dry and both wreak havoc on travelers and residents alike. After awhile you sense a pattern, every place Jack and Dave visit is desolate but fiercely loved by the people who call it home.

As an aside, before I started reading Greater Nowheres I wondered if London’s drinking would play a part in the story. Neither Finkelstein or London shy away from mentioning London’s love of drink, even while in the arid deserts of the outback. Jack makes reference to his hangovers and the local pub being the only place he did his best verbal sparring.

Quotes that stuck with me, “Once again small athletes had come up short, but such narrow mindedness may soon be a prejudice of the past, at least in Australia, where the rapidly proliferating sport of dwarf-throwing is winning fans and enthusiastic devotees” (p 143), “To refer to Wyndham as a dead end is to make it sound a more appealing place than it actually is” (p 172), “We passed through a town called Kumarina without even realizing it” (p 192),

Reason read: Jack London’s birth month is in January.

Author facts: Finkelstein once was a Chinese interpreter and London once was an English professor.

Book trivia: there are no photographs to speak of in Greater Nowheres. Just illustrated maps.

BookLust Twist: from Book Lust To Go in the chapter called “Australia, the Land of Oz” (p 28).