- Editor: Joan Kahn
- Date: 1969
- Publisher: Houghton Mifflin
- Price: $7.95
- Pages: xx+604
- Format: hc
- Type: ANTHOLOGY
index from ISFDB, slightly augmented
- ix • Foreword (Hanging by a Thread) • poem by Ogden Nash
- xv • Introduction (Hanging by a Thread) • essay by Eudora Welty
- 1 • The Scorched Face • (1925) • novelette by Dashiell Hammett
- 37 • The Murder of Arnold Rothstein • (1932) • essay by Russel Crouse
- 51 • The Splintered Monday • (1966) • short story by Charlotte Armstrong
- 69 • The Mysterious Occurrence at Lambeth • (1855) • novelette by G. P. R. James
- 93 • The Guest • (1952) • short story by Albert Camus (translated by Justin O'Brien)
- 107 • The Sandyford Mystery • (1935) • essay by William Roughead
- 142 • The Grandstand Complex • (1935) • short story by Horace McCoy
- 153 • The Other Place • (1952) • short story by Robert Borger
- 158 • The Blue Hotel • (1898) • novella by Stephen Crane
- 187 • "Other Than a Good One" • (1947) • essay by Joseph Henry Jackson
- 217 • The Hashish Man • (1910) • short story by Lord Dunsany
- 222 • The True Story • (1939) • short story by Dylan Thomas
- 226 • The Manhattan Well Murder • (1872) • essay by E. S. Gould
- 238 • The Way Up to Heaven • (1954) • short story by Roald Dahl
- 251 • The Haunted and the Haunters • (1919) • novelette by Edward Bulwer-Lytton (variant of The Haunted and the Haunters; or, The House and the Brain 1859)
- 287 • Escape from the Bastille • (1850) • essay by Jean Henry Latude
- 295 • Miss Holland's Elopement • (1936) • essay by Edmund Pearson
- 306 • The Peasant Girl • (1956) • short story by Algis Budrys
- 327 • A Strange Murderer • (1923) • short story by [as by Maxim Gorky]
- 335 • Lost Hearts • (1895) • short story by M. R. James
- 345 • A Marriage Tragedy • (1858) • novella by Wilkie Collins
- 402 • The Sea Raiders • (1896) • short story by H. G. Wells (variant of The Sea-Raiders)
- 413 • The Waste Land • (1961) • short story by Alan Paton
- 417 • The Death of Agrippina, The Mother of Nero • (1860) • essay by Tacitus (as translated by George Long)
- 423 • Beheaded in Error • (1965) • short story by unknown; translated from the Ching-pen t'ung-hsu hsaio-shuo by Gene Z. Hanrahan
- 437 • A Manner of Legacy • (1933) • short story by Donn Byrne
- 450 • A Sort of Genius • (1937) • essay by James Thurber
- 464 • Funny the Way Things Work Out • (1963) • short story by John D. MacDonald
- 476 • Captain John Porteous • (1824) • essay by uncredited
- 484 • The End • (1962) • short story by Jorge Luis Borges (translation of El fin 1953; translated by Anthony Kerrigan)
- 488 • Operation Enticement • (1952) • novelette by Henry Cecil
- 518 • To the South Sea Islands • (1950) • essay by Thor Heyerdahl
- 532 • Cambric Tea • (1925) • short story by Marjorie Bowen
- 552 • A Ghost of a Head • (1852) • short story by Charles Rabou (trans. of Le ministère public 1832) [as by Anonymous]
- 563 • A Winter's Tale • (1949) • novelette by Helen Eustis
- 588 • The Murder at the Towers • (1929) • short story by Evoe (Edmund George Valpy Knox) [as by E. V. Knox]
- 596 • Biographical Notes (Hanging by a Thread) • essay by Mary McGinn
Even at this late date, it's difficult to label the anthologies of Joan Kahn as obscure, given her importance throughout her career as an editor of crime fiction, most famously at Harper and Row, and not trivially at the end of her career at St. Martins. But it might well be that the significance of her career as a novel and otherwise publisher's editor has tended to overshadow her double-handful of anthologies aimed at adult and YA readers, as good and eclectic as they could be--she was one of the few who regularly mixed in not only historical fiction and classics of formerly contemporary mimetic and adventure fiction with the more straightforward crime and horror fiction in her suspense-oriented anthologies, but would also include true-crime and some other historical accounts...not too many other anthologists of her day would include Tacitus in translation cheek by jowl with Helen Eustis and John D. MacDonald. Nor any of these mixed in with an excerpt from Thor Heyerdahl and Kon-Tiki. In some ways, what we have here is a very fat, well-bound magazine issue, sans ads or illustration.
I liked, thus, the Kahn anthologies I read when in my second decade, but not as much as I loved somewhat similarly eclectic (but usually fiction-only, aside from introductions, afterwords, notes on the texts and contributors) anthologies from the likes of Robert Arthur or Harold Q. Masur (often ghosting their work for Alfred Hitchcock-branding), Bill Pronzini, Barry Malzberg, the early years of Martin H. Greenberg, and such prolific editors of anthologies mostly for young readers as Helen Hoke, Betty M. Owen, Seon Manley and Gogo Lewis, and the energetic (and relatively uneven, perhaps as a result) editor for adults and younger readers Peter Haining and, also published in the US by Taplinger ahead of other imprints, the less prolific and perhaps thereby more consistent Hugh Lamb...but there were always reasons to be glad one had a Kahn anthology in one's hands or at least on a convenient shelf.
And yet this one escaped me altogether in those years, despite my snapping up any anthology likely to contain actual horror fiction (as opposed to all those annoying, ill-written John Canning and similar "true weird tales" volumes of tripe...as enjoyable an early, sleazy read as Emile Schurmacher's Strange Unsolved Mysteries was). It's just arrived today, and in it is only the second short story I've managed to stumble across from Henry Cecil [Leon, his apparent full legal name, used in his primary career as a judge]...after reading his "Proof" when I was 8yo in Kathleen Lines's The House of the Nightmare and Other Eerie Tales (itself including a slightly annoying short set of "true" supernatural tales among its pages, but forgiven)...if I like this crime story, as I take it to be, nearly as much as the matter-of-fact horror story that is "Proof", I shall be forced to finally make a serious effort to find his own books all these decades later.
The familiar stories here, such excellences and happy memories as Jorge Luis Borges's "El fin"/"The End", James Thurber's "A Sort of Genius", the Hammett and even the more endlessly reprinted than actually good Bulwer-Lytton (Lines titled her next YA horror anthology for it) are mixed in with the promise of Algis Budrys's early sf story, from Astounding Science Fiction during his years in John Campbell's stable and his first volume of short stories, The Unexpected Dimension (which I belatedly read half of before it went into a storage box for the changing of one apartment for another), the very dimly familiar Wells and Crane stories (skimmed? seen/heard adapted? had to return the library book before I got to them? did I simply miss, say, the Bowen or the McCoy in not seeking out their collections?) and all the others...
It's an odd telescopic trip through some of my earliest and latest reading. I'm glad to have it.
4 comments:
How is the Helen Eustis novelette? I enjoyed her novel The Horizontal Man.
Haven't read it yet! The book literally arrived yesterday afternoon. Eustis one of Kahn's favorite writers. Will report!
I've never read any of Horace McCoy's short stories, but man, do I like his novels.
At least a couple of his novels are easy to like or hard not to respect...but he had a series of shorter works in BLACK MASK among other pulps and ESQUIRE among better-pay markets, to go with the likes of THEY SHOOT HORSES, DON'T THEY?
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