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Saturday, 16 May 2026
NEWS: Tartarus Press release 'The Sanctuary And Other Strange Stories' by R.B. Russell
Sunday, 19 April 2026
NEWS: Tartarus Press invite you to 'Tea and Gargoyles' with Mark Valentine
These collections are always fascinating and always manage to be the cause of much consternation with my bank account as Mark lifts the lid on more strange delights.
From the Tartarus Press website...
In Tea and Gargoyles, Mark Valentine explores fiction that seems to hover on the edge of the uncanny, including work by Robert Aickman, Elizabeth Bowen, Gladys Mitchell and Walter de la Mare. He also discusses the more unusual and obscure metaphysical thrillers of the mid twentieth century.
Another essay looks at books that are rarer still: the imaginary titles conjured up in fiction which often, however, seem strangely familiar. His enjoyment of the recondite continues with a delight in a forgotten Edwardian nonsense poet and a shadowy relic of the 1890s, in old board games, and in the esoteric music and journals of the 1970s.
Valentine also celebrates the menagerie of seventeenth-century book-sellers’ signs, an old book about a town populated by bears which has a bookshop open all night, and the book¬shop detectives who uncover even more places to find books. The collection concludes with joyful accounts of book-browsing expeditions in the Marcher country.
'Tea and Gargoyles' is published in a 350 limited edition run of Tartarus Press' beautiful hardbacks and is available now from the publisher here...
http://www.tartaruspress.com/valentine-tea-gargoyles.html
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Wednesday, 4 February 2026
NEWS: Tartarus Press publish new edition of 'The Picture of Dorian Gray'
If you enjoy what we do here on Wyrd Britain and would like to help us continue then we would very much welcome a donation towards keeping the blog going - paypal.me/wyrdbritain
Saturday, 3 January 2026
Fifty Forgotten Records
Tartarus Press
The follow up to Ray's 'Fifty Forgotten Books' from a few years back is a musical memoir of a life spent immersed in music. Through it's pages Ray takes us on a journey of discovery that takes in his early finds amongst his parent's record collections - sappy love songs (Ricky Valance) and stirring military epics (The Dam Busters soundtrack) - through the incidental music of TV faves - the BBC Radiophonic Workshop wibbling of 'The Tomorrow People' and the suave soundtracking of the James Bond movies. He wanders through teenage obsessions - The Fall, The Television Personalities, Kate Bush, and a host of wonderfully obscure Peel show 7 inchers - and eventually into an adulthood of continuous musical exploration - Stars of the Lid, Labradford, Current 93, Antony (now ANOHNI) and the Johnsons - as well as his own musical endeavours.
Personally, growing up I was never much of an indie rock lover - it was music or the posh kids - but like Ray my tastes were ever for the obscure and I chuckled several times as he gently discounted some of my favourite bands and albums and cringed occasionally as he praised those that I, in turn, have discounted. A number of his choices were distinctly personal and those were the most interesting to me, but in combination with his reflections the entire book made for an affectionate read that revealed the crucial role that music has played in his life and the ways in which it has interwoven with his work with Tartarus Press, and one that both introduced me to some new artists and gave me pause to reconsider some others.Addendum: in the interest of full disclosure I should note that I - in my musical guise - am mentioned twice in the book, and Ray is entirely correct on both occasions.
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Monday, 1 December 2025
NEWS: Tartarus Press publish Mark Valentine's 'The Uncertainty of All Earthly Things'
From the Tartarus Press release notes...
All the stories were originally selected for anthologies or journals. ‘Vain Shadows Flee’ was included in Best British Short Stories 2016 edited by Nicholas Royle (Salt Publishing), and ‘Yes, I Knew the Venusian Commodore’ was translated into Spanish by MarĂa Pilar San Roman in an award-winning anthology.
And, that he takes us on, "journeys both sinister and beautiful (often simultaneously) to places terrifying and beguiling (often simultaneously) in the company of the lost, the curious, the brave and the foolish and in each we can see ourselves as they react to the outrageous in deeply human ways."
This new edition of 'The Uncertainty of All Earthly Things' is available as a 350 copy limited edition hardback and is sure to sell out fast. Order now at...
http://tartaruspress.com/valentine-uncertainty.html
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If you enjoy what we do here on Wyrd Britain and would like to help us continue then we would very much welcome a donation towards keeping the blog going - paypal.me/wyrdbritain
Wednesday, 5 November 2025
The Thunderstorm Collectors
Tartarus Press
Mark Valentine’s book-collecting began with classic supernatural and fantastic fiction and decadent poetry but soon included antiquities, folklore and the Arthurian legends. The first of these enthusiasms is reflected here in essays on Walter de la Mare, M.R. James, Arthur Machen, William Hope Hodgson and David Lindsay and on lesser-known modern ghost stories. There are also several essays on slim volumes of rare and strange verse.
He also explores the origins of the Red Lion inn sign, the enjoyable wanderings of 1930s antiquarians and ramblers, and the keen weather-watchers behind the irresistible title British Thunderstorms, Continuing Summer Thunderstorms. The author speculates on the secrets behind an interwar listing of obscure periodicals and on the odd finds at a village hall flea market. Readers will find in all these essays a delight in the obscurer byways and an engaging interest in the unlikeliest places
I'm a bit of a whim reader of non-fiction these days, I used to read lots but now, with very few exceptions, I rarely find myself picking up anything other than fiction. Those exceptions tend to be an occasional music study, a random curio and any and all of Mark Valentine's explorations of forgotten books and underappreciated authors, with intermittent digressions into the likes of pub signs and barometric observations.
'The Thunderstorm Collectors' is not the latest of Mark's collections from Tartarus Press, I still have that one waiting on my shelf. This one came out a year or so ago and got lost amidst my long-COVID malaise but is still available from the publisher as one of their lovely paperback editions.
I love these books although my bank balance is less keen as Mark guides us through a tantalising and often irresitable array of goodies interlaced with fascinating and typcally erudite examinations of those authors of more lasting reputations such as Walter de la Mare, Arthur Machen & William Hope Hodgson.
There's much to entice here and several things have, inevitably, been added to the wants list. Additionally, some of the most interesting pieces here are the ones dealing with Mark's love of ephemera and of the edges of his main focus as he takes us into various Earth mysteries, landscape records and the vagaries of collecting.
As ever, with Mark's books - both fiction and non - we heartily recommend this and suggest that those wishing to try out his work would be well advised to grab one of these fabulous collections and to check out his Wormwoodiana blog.
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If you enjoy what we do here on Wyrd Britain and would like to help us continue then we would very much welcome a donation towards keeping the blog going - paypal.me/wyrdbritain
Saturday, 11 October 2025
The Good Unknown and Other Ghost Stories
Tartarus Press
In this new collection of eleven stories, Stephen Volk explores the wide span of possibilities of the ghost story in its various manifestations — from hauntings set in the quotidian modern world, to ones that hark back to traditional, but no less chilling, tales of the past.
When battle-scarred army veterans are recruited for an archaeological dig in Wiltshire, more than bones are unearthed, in ‘Unrecovered’. A pleasure park becomes anything but pleasurable in ‘Three Fingers, One Thumb’. In ‘31/10’ a notorious, fateful BBC TV studio is revisited, while in ‘The Waiting Room’ a supernatural encounter makes Charles Dickens himself come to question both his creative inspiration and his fundamental beliefs.
Three brand new stories are included here: ‘The Crossing’, ‘Baby on Board’, and ‘Lost Loved Ones’ — the latter novella being a sequel to Volk’s television series Afterlife and a welcome return for him to the much-loved character of Alison Mundy, the troubled psychic medium, in a world post-Covid.
Novelist and screenwriter Stephen Volk has an impressive pedigree of dark delights to his name but is perhaps best remembered for scripting the BBC 'documentary', 'Ghostwatch', although in the pages of Wyrd Britain he's praised for penning the very excellent 'I'll Be Watching You' for the BBC anthology series 'Ghosts'.
One can always rely on the good folks at Tartarus to provide an unusual and entertaining read and this definitely proved to be so. Going into this I only knew Volk for his TV work and so was hoping for good things but not really knowing whether his screenwriting skills would translate into prose, but I shouldn't have worried as he has a striking imagination and a prepossessing style and as I've since discovered he has a number of books to his name, I'm retroactively unsurprised at how much I enjoyed this collection. ..........................................................................................
If you enjoy what we do here on Wyrd Britain and would like to help us continue then we would very much welcome a donation towards keeping the blog going - paypal.me/wyrdbritain
Tuesday, 30 September 2025
T. Lobsang Rampa And Other Characters of Questionable Faith
Tartarus Press
R.B. Russell has written the first definitive biography of Rampa (also known as Cyril Henry Hoskin). The identity of Rampa may have been conclusively debunked by anybody who knew anything about Tibet, Buddhism, or basic scientific principles, but he would always claim that everything he wrote was true, and until his death in 1980 he doesn’t ever seem to have come out of character.
Russell’s biography of Rampa is accompanied in this volume by three further studies of alternative belief systems that have fascinated him over the years.
In the big, wide, wonderful, wacky world of books few things bring me as much joy as the cover art to one of those entertainingly ridiculous pseudoscience / occult / UFO paperbacks of the 60s and 70s and I cannot resist a book adorned with the likes of a drawing of a UFO hovering over a stone circle or an astronaut teleporting onto a pyramid. Amongst the stacks I've acquired for the Wyrd Britain bookshop over the years there are two names that stand out, king of the ancient astronauts, Erich von Däniken and reincarnated Tibetan Lama, T. Lobsang Rampa.
In his newest book, R.B. (Ray) Russell presents four essays on various "Characters of Questionable Faith" that includes the aforementioned Lama; the immortal (but now deceased) leader the Nigerian millenarian church, the 'Brotherhood of the Cross and Star'; the pulp sci-fi hokum peddlers of the Scientology cult and the - initially - ironic, pseudo-cult of Thee Temple ov Psychick Youth.
The bulk of the book is taken up by Ray's biography of Rampa, born Cyril Henry Hoskin, a former surgical fitter from Plympton in Devon, who, in a 1956 "autobiography"called, 'The Third Eye', claimed to be, or perhaps to be home to, a reincarnated Tibetan Buddhist Lama named Tuesday Lobsang Rampa. Despite being outed as fraudulent pretty much immediately 'The Third Eye' proved to be a sensation and over the next quarter decade, until his death in 1981, Rampa would go on to write and have published another 19 books detailing the increasingly unlikely adventures of the Lama as he travelled in UFOs and explored the hollow Earth, met Yetis and fulfilled his cat's literary ambitions.Focussing primarily on the publication of 'The Third Eye' and it's subsequent controversies, Ray takes an enjoyably frivolous but never judgemental tone and provides an engaging and fascinating overview of the life of a cultural enigma.
Ray's investigation of the 'Brotherhood of the Cross and Star' is an altogether more personal affair prompted by a friends involvement with the group and the outlandish claims of immortality, divinity and devastation made by it's founder 'Olumba Olumba Obu'. The story Ray relates of the 'Brotherhood' and of it's leader's failed prophecies will be depressingly familiar to anyone with a passing knowledge of the sociology of millenarian movements but for me what was more interesting was the sudden realisation that Ray had previously used his friends conversion as the catalyst for his novel, 'Waiting for the End of the World'.
Again, the impetus for Ray's short chapter on Scientology is based in personal experience, this time of being caught up in one of their bogus personality tests as a young man. Here he takes the opportunity to discuss the personality cult behind Scientology's founder, L. Ron Hubbard and his willingness to take, or be assigned, credit for everything, which brings us nicely around to Genesis P-Orridge.
Formed from the ashes of pioneering industrial group, Throbbing Gristle, Psychic TV was, initially a multimedia project for P-Orridge, fellow ex-TG and future Coil member Peter Christopherson and Alex Fergusson formerly of Alternative TV from which grew the associated fanclub / magickal self-help network / pseudo-cult, Thee Temple ov Psychick Youth (TOPY).Originally aping the trappings of a religious cult, as various founding members began to move away and distance themselves from the PTV / TOPY, P-Orridge's egomaniacal tendencies and fascination with the likes of Charles Manson and Jim Jones became ever more prominent as (s)he moulded it into a cult of personality based around themself that came to an acrimonious end in the early 90s.
Ray is careful throughout this fascinating book to try, whenever possible, not to belittle the experiences of the various adherents, but he is less kind to those wielding the adhesive; with the exception of Rampa who appears no more than an imaginative eccentric who, beyond his books, seemed to have had little interest in profiting from or manipulating any followers.
The three chapters on the Brotherhood, the Scientologists and TOPY offer compelling glimpses into the lives of both the manipulators and the manipulated, exploring some of the ways some folks allow themselves to be subsumed inside another's ego, but, it's the Rampa biography that is the gem here. Ray avoids any attempt at psychoanalysing his subject or forming any definitive conclusions on whether he was devious or deluded instead providing a superbly readable glimpse into the life of a man who must surely be considered alongside the greatest of British eccentrics.
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If you enjoy what we do here on Wyrd Britain and would like to help us continue then we would very much welcome a donation towards keeping the blog going - paypal.me/wyrdbritain
Thursday, 24 July 2025
NEWS: Tartarus Press to publish 'T. Lobsang Rampa And Other Characters of Questionable Faith' by R.B. Russell
From the website...
T. Lobsang Rampa’s autobiography, The Third Eye was an international bestseller in 1956, but the author had to face some awkward questions from critics. There were two possibilities; either he really was a Tibetan lama whose third eye had been physically opened (and who could reveal secrets of levitation, invisibility, gilded extraterrestrials, giant temple cats, etc), or he was really the eccentric son of a plumber from Plympton in Devon.
Rampa would explain himself by discussing transmigration, and over the next quarter of a century (and in another eighteen books) he would reveal the secrets of the human aura, astral travel, UFOs, life on Venus, and the hollow Earth (and hollow Moon), among many other alternative, New Age ideas. For Rampa, there was no wild, left-field belief that was not true.
R.B. Russell has written the first definitive biography of Rampa (also known as Cyril Henry Hoskin). The identity of Rampa may have been conclusively debunked by anybody who knew anything about Tibet, Buddhism, or basic scientific principles, but he would always claim that everything he wrote was true, and until his death in 1980 he doesn’t ever seem to have come out of character.
Russell’s biography of Rampa is accompanied in this volume by three further studies of alternative belief systems that have fascinated him over the years.
Following the biography of Rampa, Russell writes about the Millenarian church, the Brotherhood of the Cross and Star, who believed their leader was Christ and immortal, and that the world would end in 2000. (Spoiler alert: we are still here, and nobody has seen the leader for several years.)
A further essay is a brief look at one of the Church of Scientology’s techniques for recruiting members, the Oxford Capacity Analysis test. Russell argues that the test is based on a series of small, apparently innocuous lies, but he shows that they are indicative of Scientology’s complete disregard for honesty or integrity.
The final essay looks at the Temple of Psychic Youth, the knowing attempt by Genesis P-Orridge to create a modern cult. Was it exploitative and manipulative, or simply an ironic experiment? And how did it backfire when the 1980s tabloids created the Satanic Panic?
You can order the book from the website here - http://tartaruspress.com/russell-rampa.html
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If you enjoy what we do here on Wyrd Britain and would like to help us continue then we would very much welcome a donation towards keeping the blog going - paypal.me/wyrdbritain
Sunday, 6 April 2025
NEWS: Tartarus Press to publish Charlotte Brontë's 'Book Of Ryhmes'.
Now, on 21st April 2025, "A Book Of Ryhmes By Charlotte Bronte, Sold By Nobody, And Printed By Herself', is finally being sold and printed by somebody else. Tartarus Press have taken on the task of reproducing Bronte's book in both hardback and jacketed paperback editions for which pre-orders are now open here. Both editions feature reproductions of the original pages presented alongside transcriptions of the poems and include an Introduction by singer, poet and book collector Patti Smith as well as essays by rare books specialist Barbara Heritage and author and antiquarian bookseller Henry Wessells.
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Monday, 14 August 2023
Dream Fox and Other Strange Stories
Tartarus PressThe humans who inhabit Dream Fox and Other Strange Stories seem destined to test the limitations of rational existence. Some have accidentally strayed into no-man’s land, such as the narrator of ‘Bipolarity’ who must decide how to learn to live (or not) with her mental illness; or the protagonist of ‘Beguiled’ who may be forced by family attitudes into social obscurity; or, in ‘School Trip’, unpromising June’s unexpected discovery of her own ‘special powers’. Other stories, such as ‘Home Comforts’, are more playful, although the uncanny is never far away.
Over the last few years of Wyrd Britain I've had the pleasure of reading a couple of books by Tartarus Press co-publisher Rosalie Parker and have found them to be a wonder of the strange and the sublime and this most recent collection - the first of hers from the publishing house she so expertly oversees - is no different.
In previous reviews I've made mention of how the essences of Rosalie's literary influences are occasionally apparent in her stories which gave them roots in stories past and which showed the vigour that remains in the work of those authors to inspire new and unique creations of such quality but, with the exception of the two stories originally written for a Zagava homage to L.A. Lewis, her stories here, while still springing from the same soil, feel like they come from a more distinctly individual place.
In stories that are as likely to speak of love as they are of loss and of hope as much as of despair and where the strange or the supernatural is often only suggested we find ourselves beguiled by the tantalising glimpses Rosalie allows us into her worlds. There is an empathetic delicacy to her writing that infuses these stories of place, of love lost and found and of family in it's many and varied forms with a feminine focus that imparts a sinuous and thoughtful subtlety to the underlying frisson of the strange.
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Saturday, 17 December 2022
Literary Hauntings
Available now from Tartarus Press is this fantastic new guide book to the uncanny or perhaps I should say to uncanny influences.
The literary equivalent of Janet and Colin Bord's essential 'Mysterious Britain' and 'The Secret Country' it provides an exploration of the real world locations that have "inspired the best fictional ghost stories of Britain and Ireland". Contributors include Tartarus Press head honchos R.B. Russell and Rosalie Parker along with Mark Valentine, John Howard, Mike Ashley, Swan River Press' Brian J Showers and others and it makes for fascinating readingIf you've ever been fabulous enough to want to float down the canals of Elizabeth Jane Howard's 'Three Miles Up', visit Thomas Carnacki at Cheyne Walk or to climb Arthur Machen's Hill of Dreams then in this fantastic book you'll find your guide to the destinations of all your best nightmares.
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Thursday, 9 September 2021
Sphinxes & Obelisks
Tartarus Press
These and many other enigmas are discussed in this new book of essays from Mark Valentine. As in his previous well-received collections, you will also be offered suggestions for recondite reading in overlooked books that ought to be better known: an interplanetary fantasy by a Welsh squire; a timeslip into a mysterious England by a priest once called the original of Dorian Gray; an avant-garde novel about a tea-party and the Holy Grail.
If you enjoy what we do here on Wyrd Britain and would like to help us continue then we would very much welcome a donation towards keeping the blog going - paypal.me/wyrdbritain
Wednesday, 9 December 2020
The Nightfarers
Tartarus Press
In The Nightfarers, you
will discover the secret of a remote Lincolnshire island, visit the
last official of a seventeenth century company of explorers, and watch
for the light from a Moorish heliograph tower.
You’ll encounter a
book that speaks for itself, books that aren’t quite books, and a rare
book that really draws you in. There’s also the reincarnation of a
decadent occult detective and another, reluctant sleuth who investigates
an unusual printing press.
Other stories are set in the
afterglow of old Empires in interwar Europe, in the same milieu as the
author’s work in Secret Europe and Inner Europe (shared volumes with
John Howard). They depict apocalyptic dawns, strange faiths, the stare
of stone masks, a Prague actuary, an astrologer in Trieste, a scholar of
lost languages.
This new edition of The Nightfarers, the first
for over ten years, includes twelve of the original stories and adds two
more from the same period.
Over the last few years I've come to regard Mark as one of my absolute favourite authors both for his fiction - 'The Collected Connoisseur' - and non - 'A Country Still All Mystery'. As such whenever something new to me appears I jump at it.
'The Nightfarers' was originally published in 2009 be Ex-Occidente Press but with copies now selling on the second hand market for eye-watering prices I had long written it off as ome I'd never get to read until that is the lovely folks at Tartarus Press reprinted it.
The fourteen stories presented here all display Mark's customary elegance of both prose and concept with stories of lost lives and secret places and of liminal lands and unsettled people. Alongside these are gently poignant tributes to those who have gone before either inthe form of a namecheck - Hubert Crackanthorpe - homage - William Hope Hodgson - or pastiche - M.P. Shiel.
It's a stunning collection of stories that once again displays the scope of the gentleman's imagination and is, as ever, hugely recommended.
Available from the publisher at the link above.
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If
you enjoy what we do here on Wyrd Britain and would like to help us
continue then we would very much welcome a donation towards keeping the
blog going - paypal.me/wyrdbritain
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Tuesday, 22 September 2020
Time, A Falconer: A Study of Sarban
Tartarus Press
In this new biographical study Mark Valentine enables us to understand more of John William Wall (1910-1989), the diffident, compassionate, highly intelligent and sensitive man who wrote under the pseudonym Sarban.
Having read and very much enjoyed Sarban's 'Ringstones' a short while ago I was delighted to unexpectedly take delivery of a copy of 'Time, A Falconer' Mark Valentine's short biography of the author and analysis of his published and unpublished work.
I very much enjoy Mark's studies of forgotten and underappreciated authors, his 'A Country Still All Mystery' and 'A Wild Tumultory Library' (both Tartarus Press) are both fantastic reads full of interesting details and intriguing diversions. Reading each has proved to be enlightening to both mind and wallet and I've learned to always keep a notebook handy when reading one of his studies which again proved useful here as I now have (another) small list of books to track down.
John William Wall published 3 books under the Sarban pseudonym - 'The Sound of His Horn' (1952), 'Ringstones and Other Curious Tales' (1951) and 'The Doll Maker and Other Tales of the Uncanny' (1953) - whilst working in various parts of the world as a diplomat for the UK government. Based mostly in the Middle East his stories often reflected life in the Levant whilst also sharing a Machen or Blackwood like love for the wild spaces and the thin places.
Mark's study provides an overview of Sarban's life and the places he served but happily the focus is very much on the literary work he produced in his spare time. He gives his typically thorough examination of the published work providing context and possible inspiration and further to this we are gifted tantalising insights into unpublished works that saw the light for the first time in a Tartarus Press volume published alongside this one.
Obviously as a study of the work of an obscure author this is likely to be of interest only to those already familiar with Sarban's work and to those people I highly commend it. If however you haven't sampled his writing then I can only recommend that you rectify that situation immediately by tracking down one of the trio of works and then coming back and treating yourself to this fascinating exploration.
Available from the link above.
Below is a short video by Tartarus Press co-publisher R.B. Russell exploring Sarban's books as well as the unfinished works left in the authors archives.
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If you enjoy what we do here on Wyrd Britain and would like to help us continue then we would very much welcome a donation towards keeping the blog going - paypal.me/wyrdbritain
Tuesday, 8 September 2020
The Cosy Room and other stories
Tartarus Press
The Cosy Room and Other Stories is a collection of Arthur Machen’s short stories curated by John Gawsworth (aka Fytton Armstrong) in 1936. As well as exhuming some very early tales published in the first half of the 1890s, Gawsworth included Machen’s decadent prose poems from Ornaments in Jade, and later work commissioned by Lady Cynthia Asquith for collec¬tions such as The Ghost Book (1926) and Shudders (1929).
This collection from Machen runs the gamut of his entire literary career featuring stories dating from his 1890s heyday through to his late period masterpiece 'N'. The collection was originally assembled by Machen's would be biographer John Gawsworth (real name Terrance Fytton Armstrong) for publication in 1936. Gawsworth was a noted champion of writers such as Machen and M.P. Shiel (and possibly an exploiter of) and it has to be said that here he has assembled an intriguing pot pouri of tales.
It certainly isn't all gold, there are a couple of real duffers in there - 'A New Christmas Carol is particularly woeful - but equally he's included some gems, 'Opening the Door' remains a favourite as does 'Midsummer' and, of course, we have the undisputed gem of Machen's later years, 'N'.
This isn't a Machen collection for the newcomer. It's too fast and too fleeting to be a definitive introduction (for that I'd direct your attention here) and too scattershot to find the soul of the man. It does though give an insight into the breadth of his writing and the many roads his imagination travelled.
Available from the publisher via the link at the top of the page.
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If you enjoy what we do here on Wyrd Britain and would like to help us continue then we would very much welcome a donation towards keeping the blog going - paypal.me/wyrdbritain
Friday, 17 July 2020
The Children of the Pool and Other Stories
Tartarus Press
'The Children of the Pool' was (I think) the final work of Arthur Machen's long writing career. It's a collection of 6 stories that all touch on the various preoccupations of his work that followed him through the years with the possible exception of 'The Tree of Life'.
'The Exalted Omega' that opens the book is the story of a lost and dispirited man who in his lonely digs (Machen's own) begins to hear voices and see flashes of light that offer tantalising glimpses into what appears to be the planning of a murder. In the middle of this we are treated to a short diversion into the world of spiritualism.
The title piece is much anthologised and is an odd piece that like much of Machen's work tells of a thin place between the worlds that Machen spends much of the story explaining away. I like these sort of stories, my habit is always to lean towards the supernatural explanations but I like the over earnest defences for rationality he makes.
'The Bright Boy' is a much more straight forward tale, if you can call a tale about the crimes of a morally repellent, seemingly unaging man with the physical appearance of a 7 year old boy (like an evil Gary Coleman) hiding in plain sight with his fake parents straightforward. It's a story I've read before, and one I didn't think much of then or now.
The aforementioned 'Tree of Life' is a real anomaly as it's ostensibly the story of a bedridden land owner dictating the use of his land to his estate manager that has a rather lovely twist in the tail.
'Out of the Picture' is one I'm surprised I've not seen before. It harks back to Machen's early love of Robert Louis Stevenson with a tale redolent of Jekyll and Hyde that I enjoyed it very much and, as I said, am surprised it's not been more widely anthologised.
The book ends with another hark back in the story 'Change' where we are witness to a tale of child abduction a la 'The Shining Pyramid' but with a more folkoric changeling twist to it.
It's a solid and engaging collection from a writer who knew his glory days were behind him but was still willing to put pen to paper and try to find a new angle and a new tale and it's always a joy to read that.
Available as an ebook from the publisher here.
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If you enjoy what we do here on Wyrd Britain and would like to help us continue then we would very much welcome a donation towards keeping the blog going - paypal.me/wyrdbritain
Tuesday, 30 June 2020
Ringstones and Other Curious Tales
Tartarus Press
Ringstones and Other Curious Tales ‘have a curiously-imparted quality of strangeness; the feeling of having strayed over the border of experience into a world where other dimensions operate.’ So said one of the original reviewers of these unique stories, first published in 1951.
John William Wall was a British diplomat who worked in various Middle Eastern contries and who published three books under the pen name Sarban. 'Ringstones' was the first of the three and collected five stories , two set in the Middle East, one in Greece and two, including the title piece, set in the UK.
I'd been intrigued to read Sarban for a while having first discovered him by accident having uncovered a hideously lurid paperback edition of his 'The Sound of His Horn' with a drawing of a cross-eyed cat lady on the cover. Indeed the cover art was so bad that I found I couldn't read it and so traded it in and used the proceeds to buy two nicer Tartarus Press editions. Memories of the awful art are still too fresh so I decided to delve into Ringstones first, with the thought of a stone circle helping make my decision.
Opening the book is the quick and slight 'A Christmas Story' about a pair of Russian aviators stuck in the middle of nowhere as winter starts to bite who have a close encounter with a creature of some sort. For me the framing device here was of more interest than the story and felt a little more considered than the story within.
'Capra' is a far more interesting prospect that builds slowly from an almost unconnected opening act into a nifty little tale of vapid society life and old gods. It's filled with vibrant characterisations and a real sense of crushing inevitability.
The surprise gem of the book proved to be 'Calmahain' a beautiful, bittersweet tale of two children taking refuge from the restrictions of their home life in a deeply imaginative fantasy. I was however much less enamoured of 'The Khan' which while boasting the delightful prose I've come to now expect was just a weak and unexceptional tale, particularly after the wonders of its predecessor.
The book's title piece, also its longest, proved to be another wonder. Sarban seemed to be at his strongest when dealing with stories that embraced the myths and legends of, not necessarily his homeland, but those he would have grown up with. Here a young lady is hired for the holidays to act as tutor and governess for a trio of children at Ringstone Hall. Over the course of a preternaturally sunny summer she is slowly drawn under the spell of the young boy and embroiled more deeply in his play until the actuality of her dilemma finally dawns. It's a wonderfully enchanting piece spoiled somewhat by a coda that seemed heavy handed and unnecessary.
As a whole though the book turned out to be a revelation. Wall's prose is captivating and his ideas are gently terrifying and occasionally achingly beautiful. There is a common theme of confinement and of being trapped that runs through the stories that one can't help but relate to the writer inside the diplomat but it's very pleasing to know he did occasionally break free.
Buy it from the publisher at the link above.
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Thursday, 23 April 2020
A Wild Tumultory Library
Tartarus Press
Read about the most dangerous man in the West; the poem written by a stuffed crocodile; the alchemist called the great-nephew to the Queen of Faerie; aesthetes, dandies, visionaries, antiquaries, fortune tellers and fakirs, forgotten writers and much more.
Mark Valentine’s third collection of essays explores the curious byways of literature and lore in a similar manner to his earlier volumes Haunted by Books and A Country Still All Mystery.
Taking its title from an encounter in Thomas De Quincey’s youthful wanderings, Valentine’s writing shares that author’s delight in the arcane, the recondite and the obscure.
Mark's previous volume of essays 'A Country Still All Mystery' was one of the finest things I read in all of 2017. In its pages he introduced us to authors such as Mary Butts and Randolph Stow alongside articles on more established names such as William Hope Hodgson, Lord Dunsany, Sarban and the inevitable Arthur Machen. This third collection (there was a first called 'Haunted by Books' which I've yet to track down) continues in the noble bookman tradition of exposing the lives and works of little known authors to us all and 'A Wild Tumultory Library' is crammed with writers that with few exceptions - Elizabeth Bowen, L.P. Hartley, M.R. James, Oscar Wilde & Dylan Thomas - were entirely new to me.
Even when there seems little chance of ever finding the elusive authors for your own library there's much to enjoy here. Mark is a delightful wordsmith and as such always a joy to read, the lives and ideas of his subjects make for engaging topics and you're always going to find at least one author that you're going to absolutely need to track something down by whether it be books by John Davidson, P.M. Hubbard, Richard Oke, E.V. Jones or, for me in particular, A.E. Coppard along with a couple of other possibles that I've jotted into my notebook.
Mark is a bibliophile par excellence but happily for us all is one for whom the joy in collecting is enhanced in the sharing of his finds and the revivification of those he enjoys and I for one thank him for it - my bank account less so but I'd rather listen to Mark than to him.
Buy it here - A Wild Tumultory Library
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If you enjoy what we do here on Wyrd Britain and would like to help us continue then we would very much appreciate a donation towards keeping the blog going - paypal.me/wyrdbritain
Monday, 20 April 2020
Collecting Arthur Machen
Over the few years I've been reading him I've picked up a few old editions of some of his books - both in tasteful hardback and fabulously lurid paperbacks - but by far the largest part of my Machen collection consists of the beautiful hardbacks produced by Tartarus Press who have championed Machen for decades keeping his work (and the work of many of his contemporaries) in print during the times when he had been largely forgotten.
Recently Ray Russell of Tartarus took the time to make another of his wonderfully relaxing and informative videos - check out his video of Mark Valentine talking about his enviable collection here - this time exploring the various editions of Machen's work that have been published through the years.
Note - Ray has subsequently made several more videos documenting Sarban and Robert Aickman.
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If you enjoy what we do here on Wyrd Britain and would like to help us continue then we would very much welcome a donation towards keeping the blog going - paypal.me/wyrdbritain