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| cheap,flashy little crook Join Date: Nov 2003
Posts: 2,999
| Essential Horror Anthologies I vastly prefer short stories to novels, in the horror genre. I find that it's hard to extend a sense of the horrific over an extended length without descending into some degree of a pornography of cruelty (as in Dean Koontz's Intensity), or simply having too much tension and a consequently flat resolution (as in Ramsey Campbell's To Wake The Dead). Nearly all the horror I've read over the years and enjoyed has been in the form of short stories, but I recently had the chance to read a horror anthology that stood out as a real quality collection and essential to any horror reader's library: Dark Forces, edited by Kirby McAuley. Another anthology which I found remarkably consistent and essential was (ed)Hugh Lamb's A Taste of Fear. The Far Reaches of Fear (ed: Ramsey Campbell) also. So, I was wondering what horror anthologies you'd like to add to this list. They could be widely accepted genre landmarks like Dark Forces, relatively lesser known collections, and not necessarily multi-author collections but even those published by a single author. |
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| Erikson is GOD > period Join Date: Nov 2004
Posts: 560
| Re: Essential Horror Anthologies i dont know if i would consider them "horror" to the upmost but they definitely required an odd mind to think up... stephen king used to write under the name richard bachman and there is a book called The Bachman Books with four short stories... rage the long walk roadwork and thinner i think. i liked that one. and i have read alot of short stories by ambrose bierce such as oil of dog occurance at owl creek bridge chikamauga... he is oooollllddddd but i love him. the devils dictionary rules. |
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| | #4 (permalink) |
| Outside Join Date: Nov 2004
Posts: 2,340
| Re: Essential Horror Anthologies The best horror anthology I've read recently was Swamp foetus by Poppy Z Brite. But in the horror genre, short stories as novels are welcomed. Anything written by Graham Masterton will certainly grap my attention for example. Since Bags of Bones, Stephen King's writing is very deceiving. Whaterver the name he use, he's always been an hit-and-miss writer but now IMO he's only a miss one. |
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| | #5 (permalink) |
| Moderator Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 8,744
| Re: Essential Horror Anthologies On the whole, I tend to prefer the older horror, though there are definite exceptions (Ligotti, Klein -- at his best, Campbell -- usually shorts, etc.) I'd suggest, if you can find it, Montague Summers' Supernatural Omnibus for a nice dose of things from the latter 19th-early 20th centuries; a couple of anthologies edited by S. T. Joshi: Great Weird Tales and Great Tales of Terror (not particularly original titles, but very good contents); and a large (1076 pages) old book titled Great Tales of Terror and the Supernatural, edited by Herbert A. Wise and Phyllis Fraser which came out in the 1940s and has had many, many printings (I believe it was recently reissued yet again), which begins with Balzac and goes through Lovecraft. A lot of old reliables here, but also some not so well known. A new overview of Ligotti's work, The Shadow at the Bottom of the World, would be a good introduction, if any haven't read him yet, and (again, if you can find it) T. E. D. Klein's Dark Gods is a nice set of four novellas worth reading. (Though I believe one of these was in the Dark Forces anthology originally.) |
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| | #9 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 3,596
| Re: Essential Horror Anthologies I cant believe how little activity it is in this thread. I expected to see more recommendation for essential anthologies. Doesnt help a horror newbie this thread as you might think from the thread name. |
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| | #10 (permalink) | |
| Moderator Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 8,744
| Re: Essential Horror Anthologies Quote:
Part of the problem, Connavar, is that it depends on what you are looking for as "horror" -- whether it is the older "classics", the more modern work, the splatterpunks, "quiet" horror, or a broad range of all of these (and beyond). But, since this thread has once more been brought to my attention: The Evil Image: Two Centuries of Gothic Short Fiction and Poetry (1983), ed. by Patricia L. Skarda and Nora Crow Jaffe The Haunted Omnibus (1937), ed. by Alexander Laing The Arbor House Necropolis (1981), ed. by Bill Pronzini, containing three anthologies: Voodoo! A Chrestomathy of Necromancy, Mummy! A Chrestomathy of "Crypt-ology", and Ghoul! A Chrestomathy of "Ogrery" (it has also had a later incarnation as Tales of the Dead, with very slight changes). Werewolf! A Chrestomathy of Lycanthropy (1979), ed. by Bill Pronzini Specter! A Chrestomathy of "Spookery" (1982), ed. by Bill Pronzini The Oxford Book of Gothic Tales (new ed. 2001), ed. by Chris Baldick Victorian Ghost Stories (1991), ed. by Michael Cox and R. A. Gilbert The Mammoth Book of Victorian & Edwardian Ghost Stories (1995), ed. by Richard Dalby The Mammoth Book of Classic Chillers (1986), ed. by Tim Haydock To Sleep, Perchance to Dream... Nightmare (1993), ed. by Stefan R. Dziemianowicz, Robert Weinberg, & Martin H. Greenberg Not all of these are "essentials", by any means, but they are all good-sized selections from throughout the fields represented, and a hefty dose of really good reading in the genre.... I'll post some others a little later on.... | |
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| Heretic Join Date: Jun 2004
Posts: 1,361
| Re: Essential Horror Anthologies The Mammoth Book of Terror was an excellent antho as I recall. Tales of Terror and Darkness by Algernon Blackwood I enjoyed . Nightmare Factory by Thomas Ligotti is a lovely compendium of his previous short story collections. |
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| | #12 (permalink) | |
| Registered User Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 3,596
| Re: Essential Horror Anthologies Quote:
The trouble of being a newbie of the genre is you dont whats good of the many different types. Only type i can say im not interested is Splatter type, crap that is only brutal violence and nothing other to it. The stuff that dominate hollywood these in other words. I would never read short stories/book stories of the type Saw,Final Destination etc | |
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| | #13 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: Apr 2006
Posts: 1,530
| Re: Essential Horror Anthologies Don't foreget Stephen King's Skeleton Crew. It has The Mist, The Raft, Ballad of the Flexible Bullet, The Jaunt,...actaully every single story in the book is really, really good; some of his best work I think. |
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| | #14 (permalink) |
| Terror From Tatary Join Date: Sep 2007
Posts: 85
| Re: Essential Horror Anthologies Although long OOP, Robert Aickman's Fontana anthologies are still relatively easy to find, and a great introduction to some classic horror authors. They're also one of the few affordable ways to read Aickman himself, a writer frustratingly hard to find unless you're prepared to pay the ludicrous prices asked for them. |
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| | #15 (permalink) | |
| Moderator Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 8,744
| Re: Essential Horror Anthologies Quote:
Connavar: Several of those I mentioned also were a mix of classic and modern, the exceptions being the older anthologies or those which specifically went for the Victorian and Edwardian tales. Even The Evil Image and the Baldick, by tracing the history of the Gothic, brought in recent tales (The Evil Image, for instance, going from Defoe to King), while the Pronzini were usually divided into sections devoted to the classic and the modern, and so forth. The same is true of several of the suggested collections by others, too. Another series worth looking up is the Year's Best Horror Stories put out by DAW here in the States, though the first few volumes of those were reprints of British anthologies, as I recall. The first three were edited by Richard Davis, followed by Gerald W. Page (IV-VII) and then Karl Edward Wagner (VIII-XXII). When Wagner died, the series was discontinued. These have an awful lot of very good new material in them. Not all are classics, but a rather high percentage are close to. Stephen Jones has also done a fair number of very good modern horror anthologies, and is very knowledgeable on the field. In fact, he co-edited two anthologies of essays by various writers choosing what they felt were the 100 best books in the field; both of these are well worth looking up. Here's a listing of the books Jones has edited or co-edited, from fantasticfiction.com: Stephen Jones As you can see, he has also edited a series of Year's Best for quite some time now.... Question: we seem to keep including single-author collections as well as anthologies (collections of tales by various writers) here. I suppose this should require a change to "Anthologies and Collections", no? As for the suggestions made on such collections -- all have been top-notch so far. | |
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