- ix · Introduction · Carol Serling · in
- 1 · The Escape Route · Rod Serling · na The Season to be Wary, Little Brown: Boston, 1967
- 71 · The Dead Man · Fritz Leiber · nv Weird Tales Nov ’50
- 104 · The Little Black Bag · C. M. Kornbluth · nv Astounding Jul ’50
- 138 · The House · André Maurois · vi Harper’s Jun ’31
- 141 · The Boy Who Predicted Earthquakes · Margaret St. Clair · ss Maclean’s, 1950
- 152 · The Academy · David Ely · ss Playboy Jun ’65
- 163 · The Devil Is Not Mocked · Manly Wade Wellman · ss Unknown Jun ’43
- 171 · Brenda · Margaret St. Clair · ss Weird Tales Mar ’54
- 184 · Big Surprise [“What Was in the Box?”] · Richard Matheson · ss EQMM Apr ’59
- 191 · House—with Ghost · August Derleth · ss Lonesome Places, Arkham: Sauk City, WI, 1962
- 199 · The Dark Boy · August Derleth · ss F&SF Feb ’57
- 215 · Pickman’s Model · H. P. Lovecraft · ss Weird Tales Oct ’27
- 230 · Cool Air · H. P. Lovecraft · ss Tales of Magic and Mystery Mar ’28; reprinted in Weird Tales Sep ’39
- 240 · Sorworth Place [“Old Place of Sorworth”; Ralph Bain] · Russell Kirk · nv London Mystery Magazine #14 ’52
- 261 · The Return of the Sorcerer · Clark Ashton Smith · ss Strange Tales of Mystery and Terror Sep ’31
- 279 · The Girl with the Hungry Eyes · Fritz Leiber · ss The Girl With the Hungry Eyes, ed. Donald A. Wollheim, Avon, 1949
- 297 · The Horsehair Trunk · Davis Grubb · ss Colliers May 25 ’46; ; as “The Secret Darkness”, EQMM Oct ’56
- 308 · The Ring with the Velvet Ropes · Edward D. Hoch · ss With Malice Toward All, ed. Robert L. Fish, Putnam, 1968
Wednesday, January 20, 2021
Short Story Wednesday: stories from ROD SERLING'S NIGHT GALLERY READER edited by Carol Serling, Martin H. Greenberg & Charles G. Waugh (Dembner, 1987)
Wednesday, January 13, 2021
SHORT STORY WEDNESDAY: Doris Pitkin Buck: "Why They Mobbed the White House"; Kate Wilhelm: "The Planners" (ORBIT 3, edited by Damon Knight, G. P. Putnam 1968); Donald Barthelme: "Robert Kennedy Saved from Drowning"; Leonard Michaels: "Crossbones" (NEW AMERICAN REVIEW #3, edited by Theodore Solotaroff, Signet/New American Library 1968); Rod Serling: "The Escape Route" ('TIS THE SEASON TO BE WARY by Serling, Little, Brown 1967)
The fifth story, Rod Serling's "The Escape Route", was one of the three newly-published novellas in his first (legitimate, not ghost-written) collection, The Season to be Wary, in 1967. Serling hoped to launch a career as a novelist, apparently (his brother, Robert Serling, had one, after all), and it, too, is about self-delusion...the fugitive concentration-camp second-in-command's delusions about his service to the Nazi regime, and his relative lack of self-delusion about his circumstances as the Nazi hunters of the 1960s are after him, in his unpleasant circumstances in Buenos Aires. Also about Serling's self-delusion that this novella (I've managed to get 20 pages in, about a third of the way through, as it was reprinted in Rod Serling's Night Gallery Reader, edited by widow Carol Serling, RS's old campus colleague Charles Waugh, and Waugh's typical editing partner Martin H. Greenberg; this trio presumably decided this novella was the least worst of the three. Sadly, while "The Escape Route" made for a decent if unsurprising segment of the Night Gallery pilot film (as I remember it from some 45 years ago), the prose of the novella can be described as passable treatment writing...clumsy, overstated, using poor word choices in the narrative passages...while the dialog, given Serling was not a novice as a playwright, isn't too shabby at all, and at times has a nice snap to it--when the preaching isn't getting a bit thick...another Serling flaw).
If not for the hour, or the nature of this day, I'd probably transcribe the first paragraph of the story...perhaps tomorrow...
For more Short Story Wednesday reviews, please see Patti Abbott's blog.
Saturday, January 9, 2021
FRIDAY'S "FORGOTTEN" BOOKS AND MORE: the links to the reviews and related texts: 23 October 2020
Patricia Abbott: The End of Everything by Megan Abbott; "Doctor Jack O' Lantern" by Richard Yates (1954 ?Charm; collected in Eleven Kinds of Loneliness, 1962) and Short Story Wednesday links (read the Yates story here)
Barry Alfonso: The Grandmothers by Glenway Westcott
Mark Baker: Hot Enough to Kill by Paula Boyd
Brad Bigelow: The Hiding Place by Robert Shaw
Les Blatt: The Complete Stories by Dorothy L. Sayers; The Glimpses of the Moon by "Edmund Crispin" (Robert B. Montgomery)
Joachim Boaz: The Wind from Nowhere by J. G. Ballard
Joe Brosnan: Beat Not the Bones by Charlotte Jay
Doug Cohen: Realms of Fantasy, December 1996, edited by Shawna McCarthy
Liz Dexter: A Bird in the Bush by Stephen Moss
Michael Dirda: New small press horror anthologies and collections for All Hallows...
Scott Edelman: Robert Shearman
Martin Edwards: No Coffin for the Grave by Clayton Rawson; Jill Patton Walsh
Peter Enfantino and Jack Seabrook: 1980s Batman comics: January 1981
Will Errickson: "Chimney" by Ramsey Campbell (first in Whispers edited by Stuart David Schiff, the 1977 first Doubleday anthology in the series that ran more or less parallel with the magazine for a number of years); "The Answer Tree" by Steven R. Boyett (Silver Scream edited by David J. Schow)
José Ignacio Escribano: The Plague Court Murders by "Carter Dickson" (John Dickson Carr)
Curtis Evans: Alfred Hitchcock Presents: Stories They Wouldn't Let Me Do On TV (ghost-)edited by Robert Arthur (with assistance from sponsors and NBC censors) and Friday Fright Night links; The Lake of Darkness by Ruth Rendell and Friday Fright Night links
"Olman Feelyus": The Wooden Horse by Eric Williams; Hunting the Fairies by Compton Mackenzie
Paul Fraser: New Writings in SF: 6 edited by E. J. Carnell
Christopher Fulbright: the Zebra Books horror line
Cullen Gallagher: Razorback by Peter Brennan; Dead Man's Tide by "W. M. Richards" (Gunard Hjerstedt, novel aka It's a Sin to Kill as by "Day Keene"); We Are the Dead: Day Keene in the Detective Pulps, Volume 2 by "Day Keene" (still Hjerstedt!)
Aubrey Hamilton: Away Went the Little Fish by Margot Bennett; Practice to Deceive by David Housewright
Bev Hankins: Gorgeous Ghoul Murder Case by Dwight Babcock and other Halloween-themed titles
Grady Hendrix: Familiar Spirit and Gabriel by Lisa Tuttle
Rich Horton: Claremont Tales II and some short fiction by Richard A. Lupoff; Declare by Tim Powers; Chelsea by "Nancy Fitzgerald" (Waverly Fitzgerald); Engaging the Enemy by Elizabeth Moon
Jerry House: The Diamond Lens and Other Stories by Fitz-James O'Brien; "The Gods and Ritter Tanhuser" by "Vernon Lee" (Violet Paget); Freelance, August/September 1946, written by Ted McCall and drawn by Ed Furness
Kate Jackson: Blood from a Stone by Ruth Sawtell Wallis; Are You a Heroine in Jeopardy? quiz
Tracy K: A Trick of the Light by Louise Penny; Clarkesworld: Year 5 edited by Neil Clarke and Sean Wallace
Colman Keene: Gun in Cheek by Bill Pronzini; The Nobody by Tom Piccirilli
George Kelley: Bourbon Street/Hot Cargo by "G. H. Otis" (Otis Hemingway Gaylord)
Joe Kenney: The Rose by Leonore Fleischer; Kane's War #4: Crackdown by "Nick Stone"
Margot Kinberg: artistic desire vs. pragmatism
Rob Kitchin: Eureka Street by Robert McLiam Wilson
Karen Langley: Penguin Modern Poets #8 by Edwin Brock, Geoffrey Hill and Stevie Smith; The Gigolo by Françoise Sagan (translated by Joanna Kilmartin); Glittering City by Cyprian Ekwensi
B. V. Lawson: Good Cop, Bad Cop by Barbara D'Amato
Des/D. F. Lewis: Powers and Presences by John Howard and Mark Valentine
Evan Lewis: "Lady Luck" by Dick French (script) and Chuck Mazoujian (art), The Spirit, 7 July 1940; "The Girl with the Silver Eyes" by Dashiell Hammett (The Black Mask, June 1924) as serialized in the Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph (December 1936) and advertised in the Allentown Morning Call (September 1938)
Steve Lewis: "Fixing Hanover" by Jeff VanderMeer (first in Extraordinary Engines, edited by Nick Gevers); Decoys by Richard Hoyt; "Beyond the Wall of Sleep" adapted from the story by H. P. Lovecraft by Steven Philip Jones and Octavio Cariello, from Lovecraft in Full Color, March 1992
Library of America: "Kerfol" by Edith Wharton, Scribner's Magazine, March 1916, edited by Robert Bridges; "The Masque of the Red Death" by Edgar Allan Poe, Graham's Lady's and Gentlemen's Magazine, May 1842, edited by Poe; "The Black Dog" by Stephen Crane, The New York Tribune, 24 July 1892
Richard Lupoff: World Without Women by "Day Keene" and Leonard Pruyn; on Bill Crider; What If? Volume 3, edited by Richard Lupoff
Richard Lupoff, Richard Wolinsky and Lawrence Davidson: Walter Tevis
John Miller: Weird Tales, May 1923, edited by Edwin Baird
Jess Nevins: the best science fiction of 1889
John F. Norris: The Half Pint Flask by DuBose Heyward
Jim Noy: The African Poison Murders by Elspeth Huxley
Ray O'Leary: The Boy in the Vestibule by Katherine Hall Page
Paperback Warrior: Solomon's Vineyard by Jonathan Latimer; A Piece of This Country by Thomas Taylor; Hatch's Island by Don Merritt; Satan Takes the Helm by Calvin Clements
Jason Steger: All That I Am by Anna Funder
G. W. Thomas: Manly Wade Wellman
Kevin Tipple: Inhuman Condition: Mystery and Suspense Fiction by Kate Thornton
Tuesday, January 5, 2021
TAKE THIS HAMMER with James Baldwin, and Toni Morrison, Janet Flanner and "Ross Macdonald" and others on THE WRITER IN AMERICA, and producer/director/editor/interviewer Richard O. Moore
THE WRITER IN AMERICA series producer/director/editor/
The 30-minute film is embedded at the link [at CrimeReads]
Tiny URL: