With indices courtesy William Contento, 13 April 1947-13 December 2021.
So, here's the Contento index of this volume; imagine the effect on a young reader such as myself at age 10 or 11, upon opening such a magisterial selection, not the first AHP: I read, nor certainly the last, but one of the best of a brilliant set...drawn from sources as eclectic as the nature of the stories, save that they featured characters drawn into or trapped by extraordinary circumstances of one outre sort or another, usually told in excellent or at least engaging prose, and usually both intense and shot through with often grim wit:
- Alfred Hitchcock Presents: Stories My Mother Never Told Me ed. Alfred Hitchcock (ghost edited by Robert Arthur) (Random House LCC# 63-16155, 1963, $5.95, 401pp, hc)
- Introduction · Alfred Hitchcock (ghosted by Robert Arthur) · in
- The Child Who Believed · Grace Amundson · ss The Saturday Evening Post Dec 16 1950
- Just a Dreamer [Murchison Morks] · Robert Arthur · ss Argosy Jul 5 1941
- The Wall-to-Wall Grave · Andrew Benedict · ss Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine Sep 1962, as “Walkup to Death”
- The Wind · Ray Bradbury · ss Weird Tales Mar 1943
- Congo · Stuart Cloete · ss Story Mar/Apr 1943
- Witch’s Money · John Collier · ss The New Yorker May 6 1939
- Dip in the Pool · Roald Dahl · ss The New Yorker Jan 19 1952
- The Secret of the Bottle · Gerald Kersh · nv The Saturday Evening Post Dec 7 1957
- I Do Not Hear You, Sir · Avram Davidson · ss The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction Feb 1958
- The Arbutus Collar · Jeremiah Digges · ss Story Aug 1936
- A Short Trip Home · F. Scott Fitzgerald · nv The Saturday Evening Post Dec 17 1927
- An Invitation to the Hunt · George Hitchcock · ss San Francisco Review Mar 1960
- The Man Who Was Everywhere · Edward D. Hoch · ss Manhunt Mar 1957
- The Summer People · Shirley Jackson · ss Charm Sep 1950
- Adjustments · George Mandel · ss Great Tales of the Far West, ed. Alex Austin, Lion Books 1956
- The Children of Noah · Richard Matheson · ss Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine Mar 1957
- The Idol of the Flies · Jane Rice · nv Unknown Worlds Jun 1942
- Courtesy of the Road · Mack Morriss · ss Collier’s Nov 5 1949
- Remains to Be Seen · Jack Ritchie · ss Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine Jun 1961, as by Steve O’Connell
- The Man Who Sold Rope to the Gnoles · Idris Seabright (pseudonym of Margaret St. Clair) · ss The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction Oct 1951
- Lost Dog · Henry Slesar · ss Mike Shayne Mystery Magazine Feb 1958
- Slime · Joseph Payne Brennan · nv Weird Tales Mar 1953 [Dell paperback reprint edition only]
- How Love Came to Professor Guildea · Robert S. Hichens · na Pearson’s Magazine Oct 1897, as “The Man Who Was Beloved” [Dell paperback reprint edition only]
- Hostage · Don Stanford · ss Cosmopolitan Aug 1953
- Natural Selection · Gilbert Thomas · ss Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine Aug 1950
- Simone · Joan Vatsek · ss Today’s Woman 1949
- Smart Sucker · Richard Wormser · ss Manhunt Jan 1957
- Some of Your Blood · Theodore Sturgeon · n. Ballantine Books 1961 [missing from the Dell editions]
Derivative anthologies: Alfred Hitchcock Presents: Stories My Mother Never Told Me (Dell 1966), Alfred Hitchcock Presents: More Stories My Mother Never Told Me, Alfred Hitchcock Presents: Stories My Mother Never Told Me, Part I, Alfred Hitchcock Presents: Stories My Mother Never Told Me, Part II.
1970s edition... |
Sergio Angelini's fine review-essay |
- Alfred Hitchcock’s Monster Museum ed. Anon. (by Robert Arthur) (Random House, 1965, $3.95, 207pp, hc)
- Introduction: A Variety of Monsters · Alfred Hitchcock · in
- 1 · The Day of the Dragon · Guy Endore · nv The Blue Book Magazine Jun 1934
- 29 · The King of the Cats · Stephen Vincent Benét · ss Harper’s Bazaar Feb 1929
- 46 · Slime · Joseph Payne Brennan · nv Weird Tales Mar 1953
- 73 · The Man Who Sold Rope to the Gnoles · Idris Seabright · ss F&SF Oct 1951
- 79 · Henry Martindale, Great Dane · Miriam Allen deFord · ss Beyond Fantasy Fiction Mar 1954
- 95 · The Microscopic Giants · Paul Ernst · ss Thrilling Wonder Stories Oct 1936
- 114 · The Young One · Jerome Bixby · nv Fantastic Apr 1954
- 144 · Doomsday Deferred · Will F. Jenkins · ss The Saturday Evening Post Sep 24 1949
- 162 · Shadow, Shadow, on the Wall · Theodore Sturgeon · ss Imagination Feb 1951
- 174 · The Desrick on Yandro [Silver John] · Manly Wade Wellman · ss F&SF Jun 1952
- 188 · The Wheelbarrow Boy · Richard Parker · ss Lilliput Oct 1950
- 193 · Homecoming · Ray Bradbury · ss Mademoiselle Oct 1946
12 comments:
I was a big fan of these ALFRED HITCHCOCK anthologies when I was a kid. In the 1980s, I lost interest but now I'm buying the missing anthologies whenever I run across them.
I never quite lost interest, but the ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S ANTHOLOGY issues published in the 1980s reflected the blander nature of the magazine as edited by Cathleen Jordan (not awful, and featuring a scrap more horror fiction than Eleanor Sullivan had before her, but blander)(sadly notable, how Davis Publications editors Sullivan and Jordan both died rather young, in their early '60s...crime fiction doesn't Usually do that to one).
Editors: (from the FictionMags Index)
William Manners - Editor: Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine, Dec 1956 – Aug 1961.
Lisa Belknap - Editor: Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine, Sep 1961 – Jan 1963.
Richard E. Decker - Editor: Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine, Feb 1963 – Sep 1964.
G. F. Foster - Editor: Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine, Oct 1964 – May 1967.
Ernest M. Hutter - Editor: Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine, Jun 1967 – Feb 1976.
Eleanor Sullivan - Editor: Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine, Mar 1976 – Nov 1981.
Cathleen Jordan - Editor: Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine, Dec 1981 – Jun 2002.
Linda Landrigan - Editor: Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine, Jul 2002—.Publishers:
Davis Publications, Inc.; New York: Alfred Hitchcock’s Anthology
Editors:
Eleanor Sullivan - Editor: Alfred Hitchcock’s Anthology, 1977 – Mar 1982.
Cathleen Jordan - Editor: Alfred Hitchcock’s Anthology, Sep 1982 – 1989.Awesome post Todd (and thanks for the nice shout out) - I had no idea the Sturgeon book had been published in one of the Hitchcock anthologies. One would imagine that more readers would have found it this way than in the original paperback, do you think?
Considering how well most paperbacks were still selling in the early '60s in the US, no, unless there was some distributor resistance to that title or Ballantine. But given how many AHP: books were in libraries, it might have eventually come close (in those bad old days that paperbacks weren't so welcome in libraries and paperbacks rack life in non-booskstores could be as little as a few days or a week...
Check ISFDB's record of editions for the Sturgeon novel here: http://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/title.cgi?14529I read this anthology (and all of Arthur's AHP anthologies) when I was much younger. They have stayed with me as an example of what an anthology should be. Thanks for the review, Todd.
Two points: "Andrew Benedict" was an Arthur pseudonym; and you published this review on Gerald Kersh's birthday.Thanks! I was utterly unaware of Benedict, and really should've mentioned Kersh, as well as reading the ISFDB page of birthdays...AHP anthologies introduced me to his work...
Thanks for the link Todd - had far more reprints than I would have imagined!
The face even a mother would have trouble loving.
Todd, do you have any idea what story by Robert Arthur was used as the source for the Hitchcock hour "The Cadaver"? I've searched everywhere but have not found it yet. I am sure the story was not called "The Cadaver" and I know it wasn't in AHMM.
Other than to guess *maybe* "The Jokester" as by Anthony Morton (The Mysterious Traveler Magazine Mar 1952; The Saint Detective Magazine (UK) Jan 1956) or "Welcome Home"(Dime Mystery Magazine Oct 1948, as “Calling All Corpses!” by Robert Jay Arthur; The Mysterious Traveler Magazine Jun 1952). not even a vague suspicion. I will ask around.
Loved these Hitchcock collections. Read them all as a teenager.
ReplyDeleteAnd they kept on coming...the ones associated with the magazine, even after AH's death...
ReplyDeleteAlthough I watched the show and saw his movies, I don't think I ever read these anthologies or even the magazine.
ReplyDeleteSill available! Albeit the various sorts of "Hitchcock" anthology are mostly out of print, save recent ones associated with the magazine...and the magazine continues to publish, along with ELLERY QUEEN'S and the two sf magazines, ASIMOV'S and ANALOG, as its stablemates...Hitchcock had little to do with the various sorts of anthologies, with the arguable exception of AHP: STORIES THEY WOULDN'T LET ME DO ON TV, which was co-edited by the censors, or the magazine, even though his daughter was briefly on staff at the magazine and officially ghosted one of his anthologies...father Hitchcock presumably cashed the licensing checks.
ReplyDeleteOriginally I used to buy the Dell paperback anthologies more for the covers than the contents, now I am checking out the stories within also. Although the print is usually tiny.
ReplyDeleteThis is a wonderful post, Todd.
Thanks, Tracy!
ReplyDeleteThe Dell editions did have some splashy covers...though the the first set of 1960s covers often were almost as clumsily put together as the covers for ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S MYSTERY MAGAZINE in those years...(AHMM usually has fairly handsome covers these days, and they were kind of a mixed bag in the Davis Publications years, but in the HSD Publications years, man, they came up with no few ugly slapped-together items...the drawn cover were usually better than the photo covers, but altogether too often not enough better).
Great post on a great series of anthologies! My favorite is BAR THE DOORS.
ReplyDeleteThanks, John! BAR THE DOORS is from an earlier sequence of Dell original paperbacks, apparently edited by their veteran editor Don Ward (who would collaborate on western stories with Theodore Sturgeon, eventually, after years of service editing ZANE GRAY WESTERN magazine for Dell), than is the Robert Arthur set of books from Random House (which were reprinted in paperback volumes by Dell) or the best-of volumes from ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S MYSTERY MAGAZINE, published by Dell from the early '60s into the 1980s.
ReplyDeleteDell was in the Hitchcock business longer than anyone else in books...and the long sold-off Dell Magazines (a division of Penny Press) publishes AHMM today...