While thinking about horror stories for a forthcoming post, I stumbled upon the Gaslight Archive, a repository for out-of-copyright stories "from the genres of mystery, adventure and the Weird". (There's also a discussion list attached, but it appears to be defunct.) The archive includes Charles Dickens's "The Signal-Man" (1866), Thomas Hardy's "The Three Strangers" (1903), Robert Hichens's "How Love Came To Professor Guildea" (1900), E T A Hoffman's "The Sandman" (1818), W W Jacobs's "The Monkey's Paw" (1902), and Oscar Wilde's "The Canterville Ghost" (1887) - all of which are terrific. (Full list.) There's also Lovecraft's seminal study "Supernatural Horror in Literature" (1927) - and, elsewhere on the web, Robert W Chambers's "The Yellow Sign" (1895), Lucy Clifford's "The New Mother" (1882) and Oliver Onions's "The Beckoning Fair One" (1911). You could also read Dickens's "A Christmas Carol" (1843), but I'm a fan of the free podcast reading Mitch Benn made of it last year.
(I'm hoping that the horror post will follow at the weekend, but I have to finish my Locus column first to avoid Charles and Liza sending their unstoppable killer robots after me. Again.)
(I'm hoping that the horror post will follow at the weekend, but I have to finish my Locus column first to avoid Charles and Liza sending their unstoppable killer robots after me. Again.)
Labels: Horror



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