Tag Archive for 'classics'

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Book Review: The Woman in Black by Susan Hill

The Woman in Black by Susan Hill CoverSubtitled “A Ghost Story”, The Woman in Black by Susan Hill had me sold after reading the blurb on the back, which reads, “What real reader does not yearn, somewhere in the recesses of his or her heart, for a really literate, first-class thriller … blah blah blah… blah blah blah… proof positive that this neglected genre, the ghost story, isn’t dead after all.” There was a lot of verbiage in between the yearning and the words “ghost story”, but I successfully made the connection. I love a good old fashioned ghost story!

Let’s talk about the ingredients of an old-fashioned ghost story. OK so obviously you’ve got a ghost. Very often you’ve got a haunted house. The house is probably somewhere out of the way and must be traveled to. So there is a travel component of a good ghost story. We take the train with the protagonist, or travel by horse and carriage. The landscape is described in detail. So is the weather and the season. The Woman in Black has all these elements and does a great job of creating atmosphere and pacing. It’s also a book where the reward for attention is delight. There are a number of factors that the story doesn’t make a big deal out of, but that become very important as the situation begins to reveal itself.

And that’s a good way to describe it, really. The book is a reveal. A veil is lifted, a corner is turned, and the reader thinks to themselves, “Oh. That’s not so horrible. Just a sad tragedy replaying itself in the fog.” Ah! But is that branch sticking out from behind the next corner just a particularly hairy twig, or is it the very tip of a leg that is attached to a giant black widow spider?

Our protagonist Arthur Kipps, a junior in a law firm, is sent by his firm to attend the funeral of a Mrs. Alice Drablow and put her affairs in order. What he finds is a small town of horrified men who refuse to talk to him, a very frankly haunted house, and a spectral woman dressed in black. Yes, the ghosts in this story are not coy by any stretch of the imagination. Instead, it is the townsfolk who refuse to divulge the true gravity of the situation to poor Kipps.

In terms of a ghost story, I think this one compares well to the stories of M.R. James, which you should be adding to your list if you haven’t read any yet. It is set in the same time period, and has very much the same flavor. For that matter, Hill pays tribute to James with the title of one of the chapters, “Whistle and I’ll Come to You”.

I loved this book! Incidentally, Susan Hill writes mystery novels, and has another ghost story out, The Man in the Picture.

STOP THE PRESSES! It also turns out that The Woman in Black is being made into a movie starring Daniel Radcliffe.

Daniel Radcliffe in The Woman in Black

Creepy Factor: 4 out of 5
Suspense Factor: 3 out of 5
Weird Erotic Tension Factor: 0 out of 5
Funny and/or Strange Factor: 3 out of 5

Did I mention that this ghost story is little on the short side? It is the perfect length for a rainy day spent in a nice dark basement, listening to the things upstairs move their indelible trunks around and drop other things that clatter to the floor and then scuttle away after gaining their feet.

The Woman in Black by Susan HillDavid R. Godine, Publisher1983

Alternate History/Steampunk Week

Welcome to Steampunk/Alternate History week at Dark in the Dark. I’m joining a group of book bloggers who have united to declare their support for Steampunk/Alt History authors such as D.M. Cornish, Jenny Davidson, and Ysabeau Wilce. Check out this link here for more details and a list of participating blog posts.

I love D.M Cornish. I’m not going to spend too much time talking about him, because instead you can read my review of the first two books in D.M. Cornish’s Monster Blood Tattoo series (now re-titled “The Foundling’s Tale” series). It is worth noting that the third book in the series is out now.

Personally, I think that it’s impossible to talk about Steampunk without mentioning Philip Pullman’s His Dark Materials trilogy. This trilogy is comprised of The Golden Compass (which you probably know was made into an awful movie), The Subtle Knife, and The Amber Spyglass. This series gets a little weird in the last book. And when I say weird, you know that it means weird, and usually when I say “weird”, I mean AWESOME. They stand out as some of the most memorable books I’ve read over the past few years. They have it all: Intricate clockwork technology, dirigibles, talking polar bears, deranged adults, you name it!

More books that I’ve reviewed here which I think belong under the Steampunk/Alternate History moniker:

But enough about me and my opinions. As I mentioned above, there are other blogs with Steampunk/Alt History stuff going on. Bookshelves of Doom is having a cover illustration contest (which ends today – oops). Also don’t forget to stop by Chasing Ray to see what other bloggers are writing about this week.

The First Four Things to do with a Kindle

Now that they’re so cheap, I’m sure that a lot of you have been debating whether or not to get an Amazon Kindle. The Kindle WiFi is 137 clams and the Kindle 3G is only 189 clams. From reading reviews about Kindles in the past, I was bummed out about the Amazonian data rights management and how you couldn’t read some of the more open formats. Luckily, Amazon chose to support some more formats, and the world changed to accommodate the Kindle. I finally took the plunge when I found out that the entire collection of the Gutenberg Project can be read on a Kindle. Here are the first things you should do after you get your Kindle.

Gutenberg Project on the Kindle

One: Get Yourself Some Public Domain Horror at the Gutenberg Project

That’s right. Just about anything older than 90 years is in the public domain. This is a staggering amount of literature, and even if you’re not really into old books, there will be something there for you. The collection at the Gutenberg Project is available for the Kindle via the MOBI format. Here are some suggestions for places and authors you should check out:

Check out the The Horror Bookshelf page. Authors included here are Ambrose Bierce, Algernon Blackwood, Robert W. Chambers, John Meade Falkner, Paul H. C. Féval, William Hope Hodgson, Henry James, M. R. James (the best ghost stories, period), Franz Kafka, Sheridan Le Fanu (Carmilla), H.P. Lovecraft, Arthur Machen, Charles Nodier, Elliott O’Donnell, Oliver Onions, Edgar Allan Poe, John William Polidori, Thomas Preskett Prest, Robert Louis Stevenson, Bram Stoker, George Sylvester Viereck.

Strangely, some great authors are missing from the above page. For example, Lafcadio Hearn (who translated Japanese Ghost Stories), Oscar Wilde (Picture of Dorian Gray and a lot of really amazing short stories), Mary Shelley (Frankenstein), H.G. Wells, H.C. Andersen (fairy tales), and The Brothers Grimm. This isn’t EXACTLY in the horror genre, but if you’ve never read the Sir Richard Francis Burton translation of The Book of the Thousand Nights and a Night (a.k.a. Arabian Nights), then you should go get it. NOW!

Here is another Gutenberg Project page on the topic of Horror.

You can use the on-board browser on the Kindle to browse the Gutenberg Project, but it’s a lot easier to download these on your computer and then copy them over to the Kindle via your USB connection. Now that you’ve got some great free horror literature, it’s time to make sure that you’re reading it in style.

Two: Jailbreak Your Kindle

This isn’t a big deal in and of itself (although obviously one should be careful so as to not brick their device). Jailbreaking a Kindle is something you do so that you can apply the Screensaver and Font hacks. Maybe there will be more hacks coming later, but for now those are the exciting ones. If you’re a real geek, there is also a way that you can network your Kindle over the USB connection and then use ssh with it. I’m not interested in that here. Instead, here are the instructions for Jailbreaking. It basically involves loading some files onto the Kindle over your USB connection and then rebooting it.

Three: Change the Typefaces

Now comes the first reward for having a jailbroken Kindle. You can install about any typeface you want. Go here for Kindle Font hack instructions. They don’t do a great job of describing how you can put your fonts into the Kindle. What you do is select the fonts you want, copy them into a folder, and rename them using the same naming scheme of the fonts in hack folder that is now installed on the Kindle. Then you copy them into that folder, over-writing the fonts there, and reboot.

Font Hack Kindle Typefaces

Obviously, I went for a font that I find much more readable and pleasing to the eye. My favorite reading font happens to be the HPLHS-Old Style font from the HP Lovecraft Historical Society’s Prop Font Collection. These fonts are really cool. Some of them are free for personal use, but I recommend buying the whole collection because then you get the Metro family. It’s super-cheap for some great fun fonts. The photo above shows HPLHS Old Style for the text and Metro Black for the bolded text. If you’re looking for an alternate nice reading font, check out the Fell family that Igino Marini has revived.

Four: Hack the Screen Saver

When the Kindle goes to sleep, it displays various pre-installed pictures. Mostly these are of famous authors. Most of them are also pretty boring. Me, I go more for the likes of the Other Mother, Elsa Lanchester, Myrna Loy, and old movie posters. Here are instructions for how to do the screen saver hack.

Making the pictures for the screen saver is pretty easy. You need to resize and/or crop the photos to 600 x 800 pixels. To make pictures look nice on the Kindle screen, they really need to be high contrast. So it’s usually best to make the picture black and white and then adjust the contrast a lot. A LOT. Here are some I made to get you started: Frankenstein movie poster, Black Cat movie poster, Bride of Frankenstein Elsa Lanchester, Les Vampires Irma Vep, Myrna Loy, Nosferatu, Other Mother, and what I call “teeth chan.”

More Information

I would be remiss if I didn’t point out that there is a good alternate set of Kindle hacking instructions, here. If you have a new Kindle (Kindle 3) and want to change the fonts without hacking, there are instructions to do that here.

That’s it for my introduction to the Amazon Kindle for fans of Terror and the Supernatural. There’s always more coming out. I’ll update this as I find more.

Pin-Up of the Week: Mr. Anthony’s LOVE CLINIC

Mr. Anthony's Love Clinic

As you all know this section is reserved for vintage magazine covers of damsels in distress. And this week’s installment is no exception. Look at how twisted up in knots our subject is today. Observe the stern finger of Mr. Anthony. Feel embarrassed for the poor schmuck who is most likely, unknowingly, killing all the good in his life.

Yes yes. I know that this is pretty far out of the standard date range in the charter, being from the early 1950s, and I’m sorry for that. I thought from the hairstyles, her hat, and her dress that this was probably ’40s, but a little Internet research has revealed that this issue is probably from 1950.

Intimate Revelations of Love and Romance


Real Stories from Life as told to John J. Anthony… Director Marital Relations Institute and Conductor of the Famous Radio Hour heard weekly by millions of people.

The horror!

darkinthedark does not claim copyright on these images. If you are the copyright holder and object to their presence here, please contact me and I will remove them.

* Search for Shudder Pulps on eBay *

SpaceWreck by Stewart Cowley

Spacewreck by Stewart CowleyIt seems like a meme that’s been coming up a lot lately, for me at least, has been: Two great flavors that go great together. This is definitely the case with this book. Great Flavor Number One being: aliens. Great Flavor Number Two being: Exploring ancient ruins, haunted houses, and/or derelict ships. If you’re anything like me, when you first saw the movie Alien, the most fascinating part of the movie was when they went into the giant derelict space ship and found H.R. Giger’s “space jockey”. That was one of those moments where you remember exactly where you were when you first experienced it. Of course it helps that I was in a movie theater. That was awesome!

The title of this book is Spacewreck – Ghostships and Derelicts of Space and it was published in 1979. The author, Stewart Cowley, wrote a couple of these that all went together and were called “Terran Trade Authority Handbooks”. They’ve become something like collectors items over the years. Besides Spacewreck, there was Starliners, Great Space Battles, and Spacecraft 2100 to 2200 AD. None of the other books held as much interest for me, though, because they didn’t have ruined civilizations, scientific experiments gone horribly wrong, or haunted planets.

Illustration from Spacewreck by Tony Roberts

Illustration from Spacewreck by Tony Roberts

In addition to the great stories, the book is lavishly illustrated. To me, this is like an extensive catalog of exotic vacation spots. I would definitely pay money to visit a quarantined space derelict where an ill-advised agricultural experiment went awry and took the lives of an entire crew.

Illustration from Spacewreck by Tony Roberts

Illustration from Spacewreck by Tony Roberts

Another place I would pay to visit is a planet with numerous giant derelict space ships that are worshiped as holy places by the strange humanoid inhabitants. Are they the descended from the space voyagers, or did the unlucky visitors meet their fates on the planet, and leave massive crumbling hulks of alien technology?

Illustration from Spacewreck by Bob Layzell

Illustration from Spacewreck by Bob Layzell

One place that sounds too horrible to visit is a planet where the wars got out of hand and thrust the population back to stone-age civilization.

Illustration from Spacewreck by Fred Gambino

Illustration from Spacewreck by Fred Gambino

Of course, none of these places are real, but a monster can certainly dream. Here’s a list of illustrators who contributed to this book (links go to artist websites): Alan Daniels, Peter Elson, Fred Gambino, Colin Hay, Robin Hiddon, Bob Layzell, Angus McKie, and Tony Roberts. It’s interesting to see what these artists are up to thirty years later.

This isn’t so much a book review as it is a “look at this cool thing. Wow!” article, but my OCD is forcing me to grade this book in the normal manner.

Creepy Factor: 3 out of 5
Suspense Factor: 2 out of 5 (short stories)
Weird Erotic Tension Factor: 0 out of 5
Funny and/or Strange Factor: 5 out of 5

Final result: Look at this cool thing. Wow!

Spacewreck – Ghostships and Derelicts of Space by Stewart Cowley – Hamlyn Publishing – 1979
Buy Spacewreck at Amazon – what are you waiting for?!?

Thanks for reading another one of my book reviews. See you next time!

The flying monkeys let our technician out for a minute and he snuck away into the light of day. Thanks for your patience during this difficult transition.
I ated Tinkerbell.

Fhtagn Spoken Here.

... the attic, a vast raftered length lighted only by small blinking windows in the gable ends, and filled with a massed wreckage of chests, chairs, and spinning-wheels which infinite years of deposit had shrouded and festooned into monstrous and hellish shapes.
The Shunned House
H.P. Lovecraft




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