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Daniel W. Davison's avatar

This was a marvelous essay. I agree that “The Willows” is chilling! Further to Dorian Gray and Poe, there is one Poe doppelgänger story that I think you might enjoy if you haven’t read it yet. It’s called “William Wilson”. Very creepy. “Melmoth the Wanderer” by Charles Maturin is a pretty good read and has some funny moments, but is a bit long. But when it comes to “chill factor” I think my favorite horror story writer was M.R. James. If you haven’t read them, check out: “Oh, Whistle and I’ll Come for You, My Lad” or “The Tractate Middoth.” (And that’s just two examples.) I think his stories are just as good if not better than Algernon Blackwood, although “The Willows” and “The Wendigo” are first rate.

It’s interesting because my Latin professor who grew up in Dundee in the ‘30s and ‘40s, told me that Algernon Blackwood had a weekly radio program in which he would read his original ghost stories, and his reading voice was evidently magnificent. It may also explain his output. I have two beefy volume of ghost stories alone by him. I had a hard time getting into the John Silence stories; I think it was all the outdated pseudo-science that destroys the enchantment of those tales for me. When they start talking about psychic residues being left in the wainscoting like tobacco smoke, it’s hard not to laugh.

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Harold Ember's avatar

I just read the Willows and I love the way he writes. I want to read more of his stuff.

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