7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
My favorite book of ghost stories, June 17, 2002
By A Customer
This review is from: Ghosts: A Treasury of Chilling Tales Old and New (Hardcover)
I have had this book for 20 years, and I always go back to it to read my favorite stories. This is a collection of old, classic, better known stories and more modern ones you might not have heard of before. There is a section on ghost hunting, and a list by state of the "most haunted" houses. A nice collection of spooky stuff if you like ghost stories.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A grand anthology of literate ghost stories, March 23, 2010
This review is from: Ghosts: A Treasury of Chilling Tales Old and New (Hardcover)
"Ghosts" is one of those anthologies, like
Weird Tales: Seven Decades of Terror and
H.P.Lovecraft's Book of Horror, that I just happened to stumble upon and is now a favorite. I love ghost stories of all kinds, and in this book author and editor Marvin Kaye (editor of
H.P. Lovecraft's Magazine of Horror) has assembled a collection of the best.
In the introduction, Kaye talks about childhood memories of being a child on the cusp of the 1950s, when ghosts and other supernatural horrors were ushered back into their dark corners by the bright lights of the Atom Age and science fiction. In his childhood, the "ghost" as a motif was rare, and considered old-fashioned and outdated. The scientific and spiritual revolution that gave rise to agnosticism and atheism seemed to leave no room for creatures of the afterlife. Those bright atomic fires dimmed as well, however, and lurking in the shadowing corners the ghosts were still there, ready to come creeping back into our collective psyche.
For this anthology, Kaye assembled only "ghost stories," no witches or monsters (although he admits a vampire or two did sneak in, but figured that since they are reanimated corpses he would let them in on a technicality.) There are fifty-five stories in total in a book spanning over six-hundred pages, meaning that while the stories vary in length most run the length of ten pages or so. Most of the stories are collected from previously published sources, although Kaye says he did commission a few original pieces for this collection.
There are authors here whose names would be familiar to almost anyone. Isaac Asimov and Frederik Pohl (Legal Rites), Robert Louis Stevenson (The Body Snatcher), Charles Dickens (The Tale of the Bagman's Uncle), Oscar Wilde (The Canterville Ghost), Fritz Leiber (Four Ghosts in Hamlet), Washington Irving (The Tale of the German Student), H.G. Wells (The Red Room) and Helena Blavatsky (The Ensouled Violen) are all represented. Some stories are more familiar than the authors, and I was surprised when I read "Minuke" by Nigel Kneale, as it clearly seems to have at least partially inspired the first
Poltergeist film, including the house collapsing in on itself at the end.
One does notice that several of the more famous horror authors are missing. There is no Poe, no Lovecraft, no Hawthorne. I didn't mind these, as I have complete collections of those authors and it was nice to read some more obscure stories.
The copy I have is not the cool leather-bound version seen in the picture, but a faded hard cover with a dust jacked by Edward Gorey. The Gorey pictures are neat but I am a bit envious of the leather-bound version and might need an upgrade.
A further note: Kaye offers a warning at the beginning that "Ghosts: A Treasury of Chilling Tales Old and New" is best not read straight through like a regular book, but instead pulled from the shelf every now and then to read a story. The tales lose their power, he says, if read one after another. I don't normally like an editor telling me how to read my book any more than I like a chef telling me how to eat my food, but this is sound advice. This is a book to be savored a piece at a time rather than devoured.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
One of the Best Ghost Stories Books I've Ever Read, October 15, 2006
A Kid's Review
I am a big fan of ghost stories, so when I saw this book in the local bookstore I was immediatley attracted to it. I got the book for Christmas and started reading it immediatley. It has a lot of ghost stories in it that are scary, creepy, and funny. This book will leave you scared with delight. So if you know someone of any age who loves ghost stories, this would be one of the best ghost story books you could get for them.
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