Author: | David Case, Stephen Jones, Kim Newman | ISBN: | 1230000720991 |
Publisher: | Valancourt Books | Publication: | October 14, 2015 |
Imprint: | Language: | English |
Author: | David Case, Stephen Jones, Kim Newman |
ISBN: | 1230000720991 |
Publisher: | Valancourt Books |
Publication: | October 14, 2015 |
Imprint: | |
Language: | English |
More than forty-five years after his first collection was published, here is an original volume of David Case’s macabre Gothic tales that showcases the author’s remarkable psycho-sexual fiction combined with the tropes of the classic horror story.
Taking its title from the classic 1971 novella, Fengriffen & Other Gothic Tales also includes such memorable stories as ‘Anachrona’, ‘The Foreign Bride’ and his Frankenstein-inspired short novel ‘The Dead End’. With a personal Introduction from award-winning editor Stephen Jones and an exclusive Afterword by acclaimed film writer Kim Newman, in which he discusses how the title story was adapted into the crawling-hand horror movie —And Now the Screaming Starts!, this volume celebrates the work of one of the genre’s finest exponents of the macabre.
“Let us hear more of David Case . . . The field needs more from the author of ‘The Hunter’, a modern classic worthy to stand beside ‘The Most Dangerous Game’.” -- Ramsey Campbell
More than forty-five years after his first collection was published, here is an original volume of David Case’s macabre Gothic tales that showcases the author’s remarkable psycho-sexual fiction combined with the tropes of the classic horror story.
Taking its title from the classic 1971 novella, Fengriffen & Other Gothic Tales also includes such memorable stories as ‘Anachrona’, ‘The Foreign Bride’ and his Frankenstein-inspired short novel ‘The Dead End’. With a personal Introduction from award-winning editor Stephen Jones and an exclusive Afterword by acclaimed film writer Kim Newman, in which he discusses how the title story was adapted into the crawling-hand horror movie —And Now the Screaming Starts!, this volume celebrates the work of one of the genre’s finest exponents of the macabre.
“Let us hear more of David Case . . . The field needs more from the author of ‘The Hunter’, a modern classic worthy to stand beside ‘The Most Dangerous Game’.” -- Ramsey Campbell