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Obscure Weirdness Hunt
Posted by: David Kartas (IP Logged)
Date: 12 December, 2008 08:48AM
My new project to discover obscure Public domain weird or strange stories.

I have already passed through "supernatural fiction database" and some of Violet Books' "Lost Race Checklist",but the details are rather flimsy.So the curent stage of my research is going through all fiction L.W.Currey has from the period 1800-1923.

Just passed title # 2936.

What I found there,and some other places in the past weeks will be posted here-a rather lengthy list, but I'll update what will be real good.All theese are availible online.

* A BOOK OF STRANGE SINS BY COULSON KERNAHAN

* ALFRED NOYES-Walking Shadows (some tales)

* AN ITINERANT HOUSE AND OTHER STORIES by EMMA FRANCES DAWSON

* Archibald Malmaison by Julian Hawthorne

* AT A WINTER'S FIRE-Bernad Capes

* AT LA GLORIEUSE by M.E.M.Davis

* AUT DIABOLUS AUT NIHIL AND OTHER TALES by Field

* AVATAR-BY THÉOPHILE GAUTIER

* Cecilia de Noël-LANOE FALCONER

* DAN COSTARD'S TALE by Maurice Hewlett from ""New Canterbury tales"

* Daughters of Babylon A Novel By Wilson Barrett and Robert Hichens

* DER SCHARFRICHTER-by M.Y. Halidom

* Dream stories by Anna B. Kingsford (from "Dreams and Dream-Stories")

* E. F. Benson Collected Stories

* Stories by E.Nesbit:Man-size in marble,"The Ebony Frame","John Charrington's Wedding",The Mystery of the Semi-Detached,Uncle Abraham's Romance,and In the Dark

* Two tales from E.W.Peattie-The Shape of Fear, and other ghostly tales

* Encounters-Stories by Elizabeth Bowen

* FLOATING FANCIES AMONG THE WEIRD AND THE OCCULT BY CLARA H. HOLMES

* Rudyard Kipling tales:BUBBLING WELL ROAD,THE DREAM OF DUNCAN PARRENNESS, THE COURTING OF DINAH SHADD, AT THE END OF THE PASSAGE, In The Same Boa,'Swept And Garnished,The Strange Ride of Morrowbie Jukes,'THE FINEST STORY IN THE WORLD',A MATTER OF FACT, THE LOST LEGION

* GEOFFREY'S WIFE BY MARY CHOLOMONDELY

* GHOST STORIES OF AN ANTIQUARY By M. R. JAMES

* GODS AND WOOD-THINGS BY L. H. ALLEN

* GREEN MANSIONS A Romance of the Tropical Forest by W. H. Hudson

* Some tales by H.B. MARRIOTT WATSON

* HANS OF ICELAND BY VICTOR HUGO

* HAUNTINGS by VERNON LEE

* HIDDEN WITCHERY BY NIGEL TOURNEUR

* Honolulu BY W. SOMERSET MAUGHAM

* HOW LOVE CAME TO PROFESSOR GUILDEA-Robert Hichens

* In Amundsens tent-by John Martin Leahy

* IN SEARCH OF THE OKAPI By ERNEST GLANVILLE

* IN THE SANCTUARY-by A. VAN DER NAILLEN

* IN THE STRANGER PEOPLES COUNTRY-Cradock

* Some tales from J. D. BERESFORD -NINETEEN IMPRESSIONS

* JERRY BUNDLER by W.W.Jacobs

* Kerfol-Edith Wharton

* Lazarus by Leonid Andryev

* Leabhar Sgeulaigheachta-translated by Douglas Hyde

* Limehouse Nights by Thomas Burke

* LOST BORDERS BY MARY AUSTIN

* LOUQUIER‘S THIRD ACT and BELSHAZZAR S LETTER by KATHARINE FULLERTON GEROULD

* MAURICE BARING-Orpheus in Mayfair

* MODERN GHOSTS
SELECTED AND TRANSLATED FROM THE WORKS
OF GUY DE MAUPASSANT, PEDRO ANTONIO
DE ALARCON, ALEXANDER L. KIELLAND, LEO-
POLD KOMPFRT, GUSTAVO ADOLFO BEG
QUER, AND GIOVANNI MAGHERINI-GRAZIANI

* Morgan Robertson-Over the border

* NIGHT ON THE BORDERS OF THE BLACK FOREST-AMELIA B. EDWARDS

* NOUGHTS AND CROSSES-ARTHUR THOMAS QUILLER-COUCH

* OFF SANDY HOOK AND OTHER STORIES BY RICHARD DEHAN

* OMEGA THE LAST DAYS OF THE WORLD BY CAMILLE FLAMMARION

* ON THE STAIRCASE by Katharine F. Gerould

* OWEN WINGRAVE by Henry James

* PAN AND THE TWINS BY EDEN PHILLPOTTS

* Pharos the Egyptian-Guy Boothby

* PRINCESS SAYRANE A ROMANCE OF THE DAYS OF PRESTER JOHN by EDITH OGDEN HARRISON

* Richard Middleton stories (including The Coffin Merchant)

* Robert Barr stories

* ROMANTIC LEGENDS OF SPAIN By GUSTAVO ADOLFO BECQUER

* Six cent sam's by Julian Hawthorne

* SOULS ON FIFTH BY GRANVILLE BARKER

* Some stories from th enigmatic "B", including "The Strange Fate of
Mr Peach"

* SUBTERRANEAN TEMPLES by Pierre Loti

* STIVINGHOE BANK by H.R.Malden

* The Ashes of a God By F. W. BAIN

* THE AZTEC TREASURE-HOUSE By Thomas Allibone Janvier

* THE BATTLE FOR THE PACIFIC AND OTHER ADVENTURES AT SEA

* The Bell in the Fog And Other Stories By Gertrude Atherton

* The Black Douglas By S.R. Crockett

* THE BLACK SPANIEL BY ROBERT HICHENS

* THE CAPTAIN'S STORY by Rebecca Harding Davis

* THE COLUMN OF DUST by EVELYN UNDERHILL

* THE CRUSHED FLOWER AND OTHER STORIES-Leonid Andreyev

* The Crystal Cup By Bram Stoker

* THE CURATE'S TALE, by Christian Isobel Johnstone

* THE CUTTING-OF OF THE 'QUEEN CHARLOTTE' AND A POINT OF THEOLOGY ON MADURO by Lousi Becke

* THE DEVIL OF THE MARSH-by H. B. Marriott-Watson

* THE EMPEROR OF ELAM AND OTHER STORIES BY H. G. DWIGHT

* THE EYE OF ISTAR BY WILLIAM LE QUEUX

* THE FAIR MISSISSIPPIAN by Mary Noailles Murfree

* The Fearsome Island By Albert Kinross

* THE FIFTH MESSAGE FROM THE TIDELESS SEA-by William Hope Hodgson

* THE FOLLOWER and A RIP VAN WINKLE OF THE KALAHARI by Frederick Cornell

* THE FROZEN PIRATE-W. CLARK RUSSELL (an adventure tale,but with striking imagery in the begining)

* THE GRAY MAN-by Sarah Orne Jewett

* THE GREAT TABOO by GRANT ALLEN

* The Harbor-Master-R.W.Chambers

* THE HORSE-THIEVES by Alexander Kuprin

* THE HOUSE BY THE CHURCH-YARD by J. SHERIDAN LE FANU

* The House on Stilts A Novel BY R. H. HAZARD

* THE CHARMER OF SNAKES and THE TRIBUTE OF SOULS by Robert Hichens

* THE INTOXICATED GHOST AND OTHER STORIES BY ARLO BATES

* The Island of the Stairs By CYRUS TOWNSEND BRADY

* THE LAGOON OF DESIRE BY W. F. ALDER

* THE LITTLE ROOM by Madelene Yale Wynne

* THE LORD OF THE DARK RED STAR BY EUGENE LEE-HAMILTON

* THE LORD OF THE SEA By M.P.Shiel

* THE LOST STRADIVARIUS-BY J. MEADE FALKNER

* The Man on the Other Side by Ada Barnett

* The Man With The Cough- Mrs Molesworth

* THE MARQUIS OF TUSCANY by Jeremiah Cummings

* The Master Key by L. Frank Baum

* The Master of Silence A Romance By Irving Bacheller

* The Minions Of Midas by Jack London

* The Moon-Gazer and One other by D.N.J

* THE MUMMY OF THOMPSON-PRATT by C. J. CUTCLIFFE HYNE

* The Night Wire-H. F. Arnold-a very powerfull short tale.Reminds one of M.P.Shiel

* THE NINTH VIBRATION AND OTHER STORIES-BY L. ADAMS BECK

* THE OCTAVE OF CLAUDIUS-BARRY PAIN

* The People of the Pit-by Abraham Merritt (absolutely marvelous)

* The Phantom Death-by W. Clark Russell

* The Phial of Dread by Fitz Hugh Ludlow

* The Prayer by Violet Hunt

* The Professional and Other Psychic Stories

* THE RED LAUGH-by Leonid Andreyev-one of the most marvelous strange tales ever writen.Like Kafka going to war and keeping focus.

* THE ROMANCE OF GOLDEN STAR by GEORGE GRIFFITH

* THE SECRET OF APOLLOPS SEPTRIO by Leonard Kip

* THE SEVEN WHO WERE HANGED-Andreyev.A very wonderfull book.

* The Seventh Man-Arthur Quiller-Couch

* The Ship That Saw a Ghost by Frank Norris

* THE SLAYER OF SOULS-R.W.Chambers

* THE SPIRIT OF BAMBATSE A ROMANCE By H. RIDER HAGGARD

* THE STRANGE ADVENTURE OF JAMES SHERVINTON AND OTHER STORIES By Louis Becke

* THE STRANGE STORY OF AHRINZIMAN by Anita Silvani

* The Thing in the Cellar by David H. Keller

* THE UNINHABITED HOUSE-MRS. J.H. RIDDELL

* The Villa of the Peacock And Other Stories By Richard Dehan

* THE TOLL-HOUSE-W.W. Jacobs

* THE WEIRD ORIENT-NINE MYSTIC TALES BY HENRY ILIOWIZI

* THE WHITE WATERFALL BY JAMES FRANCIS DWYER

* THE WITCH OF PRAGUE by F. MARION CRAWFORD

* THE WOMAN FROM PURGATORY by Marie Belloc Lowndes

* The Worshipper of the Image By RICHARD LE GALLIENNE

* THOSE WHO RETURN by Maurice Level

* Three stories By F. TENNYSON JESSE (A SHEPHERDESS OF FAUNS ,THE GREATEST GIFT )

* THURNLEY ABBEY-by Perceval Landon

* TOLD BY THE DEATH'S HEAD by Maurus Jokai(has a few supernatural episodes)

* TONGUES OF CONSCIENCE by ROBERT HICHENS

* Two OLIVE M.BRIGGS tales

* Two stories by A.E.Coppard

* Two tales of Henry Augustin Beers

* Under the Hermes and other Stories by Richard Dehan

* UNPATH'D WATERS BY FRANK HARRIS

* WAR AND THE WEIRD BY FORBES PHILLIPS AND R.T.Hopkins

* Weird tales from Northern seas by Jonas Lie

* WEIRD TALES FROM THE PAGES OF „IN A CANADIAN CANOE“-Barry Pain

* WINGS TALES OF THE PSYCHIC-ACHMED ABDULLAH

* WOLVERDEN TOWER by Grant Allen

* ZISKA THE PROBLEM OF A WICKED SOUL BY MARIE CORELLI

* THE HOUSE OF TERROR and others by A. E. W. MASON

* Five Storis by BRANDER MATTHEWS

Re: Obscure Weirdness Hunt
Posted by: Gavin Callaghan (IP Logged)
Date: 24 December, 2008 05:46PM
Intruiging project.

Anyone have $35,000.00 dollars to spend?....

[www.abebooks.com]

LETTERS FROM H. P. LOVECRAFT TO EMIL PETAJA, 1934-1937. 28 letters, totaling 104 pages, of which approximately 95% is unpublished. 23 of the letters are entirely unpublished. Extracts, some very brief, from five of the letters are published in SELECTED LETTERS, volume V. Together with: TYPED MANUSCRIPT. Six leaves (of 10) of an unidentified short story by Petaja with holograph corrections throughout by Lovecraft. According to Petaja, the manuscript, missing the first four leaves was written around 1935. The story, which remains unpublished, is a reincarnation fantasy involving Antony and Cleopatra; TYPED MANUSCRIPT. "Alphabetical List of Fantasy Authors." typed by Petaja, with extensive handwritten notes by Lovecraft. 2 pages on 1 sheet mea
Lovecraft, H[oward] P[hillips].

Bookseller:
Currey, L.W. Inc. ABAA/ILAB
(Elizabethtown, NY, U.S.A.)

Book Price:
US$ 35000.00
Quantity: 1

Description: Emil Petaja was admittedly one of the lesser satellites orbiting around H. P. Lovecraft. Still a college student in Montana when he sent him a fan letter in 1934, Petaja went on to carve out a small literary niche for himself in fantasy literature, primarily by using material from the Kalevala, the great epic of his ancestral Finland. Answering the boy's letter with characteristic generosity, Lovecraft sent back the requested autograph and snapshot, and went on to send him 27 more letters over the next two and a half years, the last a mere two weeks before his own death. Some are perfunctory, many are substantial and all have those characteristic felicities common to one of the great letter-writers of the 20th century. As a lot, they are of interest for documenting the entire span of one of HPL's literary friendships; for the fresh and full self- portrait required by the newness of the relationship; and by the rich, warm sunset tone found in some, when their author put aside his customary grandiosity and cynicism. Elsewhere the reader will find evidence of familiar virtues and idiosyncrasies. And everywhere we see Lovecraft, the person, at his best, in his patient encouragement and gentle tutelage of a wet-behind-the-ears youngster. Several letters contain de facto essays of moderate length that could easily be extracted for separate publication; in particular, letter #25 has a long and touching tribute to amateur journalism that should belong in any core collection of his nonfiction. A few highlights. Comparing himself unfavorably to the masters of weird fiction (Machen, Blackwood, etc.) leads to an unfavorable comparison of these to "the masters of general literature -- whose comprehension & reflection of the human scene are so much fuller & better-proportioned." Finding DRACULA overrated, he recalls the reaction to it by his friend Mrs. Miniter when she was offered (and turned down) the job of revising an early draft of it in 1893. Expounding his materialistic philosophy, he outlines the anthropological basis of superstitions and speculates on the possibility of extraterrestrial life. Answering the question of whether he had read the daring 1928 novel of lesbianism, THE WELL OF LONELINESS, Lovecraft expostulates at some length on the "homosexual vices" and other sexual depravities in ancient Greece and contemporary America. Mourns the death, in July 1936, of Robert E. Howard ("Two-Gun Bob"). Directing young Petaja's reading and informing him of the progress of one book or another on the postal book-lending circuit, he comments, sometimes at length, on a number of authors, including Machen, Blackwood, Shiel, Dunsany, Huysmans, Ibsen, Ellen Glasgow, Michael Arlen, James Branch Cabell, Hugh Walpole, Hodgson, Stapledon, Wilde, Homer, Plato, Aeschylus, Euripedes, Toksvig and Meyrink; as well as the contributors to Weird Tales (including, of course, himself), most of the important ones also being friends or at least acquaintances of Lovecraft -- "our weird gang." One of the most interesting items in the archive is Petaja's typewritten list of 169 names, titled "Alphabetical List of Fantasy Authors", with annotations by Lovecraft as well as his supplementary list of some 30 "High-Grade (more or less) Weird Writers" and 37 others, including himself, in an "Inferior Group -- the Pulp Writers." The former list by HPL will contain few surprises for anyone familiar with his essay on "Supernatural Horror in Literature", but Petaja's list contains a good many alluringly obscure names, including 75 not annotated by HPL or mentioned in his essay. Whether these were unfamiliar to him or unimportant to him is impossible to say without further study -- or even if all of them are, indeed, authors of fantasy fiction. But Lovecraft himself notes the foolhardiness of automatically discounting the unfamiliar, confessing that he had never heard of William Hope Hodgson until 1931 or read him until 1934. All in all, a significant cache of documents t. Bookseller Inventory # 108248

Re: Obscure Weirdness Hunt
Posted by: Jojo Lapin X (IP Logged)
Date: 25 December, 2008 06:56AM
Why is this listed on abebooks? It is not a book, or a publication of any kind. What is the world coming to? Also, the price seems a tad unrealistic.

Re: Obscure Weirdness Hunt
Posted by: Kyberean (IP Logged)
Date: 25 December, 2008 01:29PM
I am on record as advocating a tenth Circle of Hell for book publishers of the Durto, Ash Tree, or Tartarus type, and for the second-hand--uh, I mean, "antiquarian"--booksellers, a la Currey, who pander to them and to the "collectors' market", in general.

Merry Xmas, all! :-P

Re: Obscure Weirdness Hunt
Posted by: Martinus (IP Logged)
Date: 25 December, 2008 02:27PM
They wouldn't ask that kind of price if there weren't people willing to pay it. Supply and demand.

Re: Obscure Weirdness Hunt
Posted by: Kyberean (IP Logged)
Date: 25 December, 2008 03:29PM
That fact doesn't make the situation right, but it's a typical excuse, certainly: "It's how capitalism works". That naked assertion is supposed to justify anything, and to silence all dissent. Vox mercatus vox dei est. Even in the face of the economic events of the past several months, it appears that the ideology of unfettered capitalism as the summum bonum dies hard.

Anyway, I don't intend to argue the point; the above is just my opinion of the situation. In sum, long live online public domain texts, and to Hell with exploitative repackagers!



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 25 Dec 08 | 03:54PM by Kyberean.

Re: Obscure Weirdness Hunt
Posted by: Jojo Lapin X (IP Logged)
Date: 25 December, 2008 04:10PM
1. I repeat: It is not a book, it is a set of original documents. Hence it has nothing to do with the outrageous crimes allegedly perpetrated by publishers such as Tartarus and the Ash-Tree Press; at the very least it is a different category of crime.

2. I very much doubt the items will actually sell for $35,000.

Re: Obscure Weirdness Hunt
Posted by: Martinus (IP Logged)
Date: 25 December, 2008 04:50PM
Jojo Lapin X Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> 1. I repeat: It is not a book, it is a set of
> original documents. Hence it has nothing to do
> with the outrageous crimes allegedly perpetrated
> by publishers such as Tartarus and the Ash-Tree
> Press; at the very least it is a different
> category of crime.
>
> 2. I very much doubt the items will actually sell
> for $35,000.

Maybe not. Currey has a 10% discount in effect, so the asking price is currently $31,500. Hey, you can get the two Mss. for "The Shunned House" for $90,000! ;-)

Re: Obscure Weirdness Hunt
Posted by: Jojo Lapin X (IP Logged)
Date: 25 December, 2008 05:00PM
I would be interested in reading the contents of the Lovecraft-Petaja correspondence; my interest in owning the actual documents is practically nonexistent. In fact, I think they should be donated to the library at Brown University.

Re: Obscure Weirdness Hunt
Posted by: Jojo Lapin X (IP Logged)
Date: 25 December, 2008 06:57PM
By the way, and this is somewhat off-topic, why is there (as far as I know) no Lovecraft message board? Robert E Howard and Clark Ashton Smith have special message boards dedicated to them, but Lovecraft, the most popular of the three, does not have one. It is most curious.

Re: Obscure Weirdness Hunt
Posted by: Martinus (IP Logged)
Date: 26 December, 2008 04:16AM
I usually hang out at [www.sffchronicles.co.uk] (that's where I'm posting my errata for the B&N book). Pretty decent place.



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 26 Dec 08 | 05:13AM by Martinus.

Re: Obscure Weirdness Hunt
Posted by: Knygatin (IP Logged)
Date: 26 December, 2008 06:58AM
Jojo Lapin X Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> ...why is
> there (as far as I know) no Lovecraft message
> board? Robert E Howard and Clark Ashton Smith have
> special message boards dedicated to them, but
> Lovecraft, the most popular of the three, does not
> have one. It is most curious.

Here is your Lovecraft forum for you. Try and read it. It's full of spam. That's what happens with a hugely popular writer. Maybe there is some good stuff on that board, I have not looked very closely.

Re: Obscure Weirdness Hunt
Posted by: Jojo Lapin X (IP Logged)
Date: 26 December, 2008 10:37AM
Martinus Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> I usually hang out at
> [www.sffchronicles.co.uk]
> (that's where I'm posting my errata for the B&N
> book). Pretty decent place.

Thanks! There are indeed some interesting threads there (most of them the work of a single individual). As, however, there are some signs that the forum is one of the drama-oriented kind (e.g., some threads appear to have been deleted), I am not sure I would register and post there. I cannot stand the idea that I should have to watch what I say in order that nobody be "offended."

Re: Obscure Weirdness Hunt
Posted by: David Kartas (IP Logged)
Date: 26 December, 2008 08:02PM
I see im gting a lot of on topic responses :/

And I had gone up to 3861 till now. The aditions include

A Bachelor‘s Supper by J.A.Mitchell

THE SIGN OF THE SPIDER BY BERTRAM MITFORD

THE INDUNA'S WIFE by Bertram Mitford

BACK THERE IN THE GRASS by GOUVERNEUR MORRIS

POSSESSED by CLEVELAND MOFFETT

THE BROOCH by Neil Munro

THE JESTER BY LESLIE MOORE

ECKERMANN AND TANNEMEYER and one other by James O Neill

THE DOOM OF MAMELONS By William Murray

THE SENSE OF TOUCH by Ernest Dunlop Swinton

THE SOUL OF PIERRE BY GEORGE OHNET

VANDOVER AND THE BRUTE By Frank Norris

WILL by VINCENT O‘SULLIVAN

THE BECKSIDE BOGGLE and LOST ON THE MOOR by Alice Rea

THREE PENHALLOW TALES (my title for the documents of three tales from the "PENHALLOW" book) BY Edith Robinson

THE HAND OF THE MANDARIN QUONG and TCHERIAPIN by Sax Rohmer

EZRA CAINE BY JOSEPH SMARTS

THE SWEET-SCENTED NAME BY FYODOR SOLOGUB

The Fifth String By John Philip Sousa

OLD FIRES AND PROFITABLE GHOSTS by Quiller-Couch

THE HAUNTED YACHT by Quiler-Couch

THE ROLL-CALL OF THE REEF BY QUILLER-COUCH

----------------------

Also,ive just seen the original "Pym" on sale for not 10 000,but ONLY 9 000, arguably the bigest discount on a book ive ever seen.

Also,I share the local sentiments on Ash Tree and on Currey's prices,even though it serves me quite well.


Jojo-its a good place.All you need do is not insult anyone,or post garbage and then youll be okay,I dont know WHAT gave you that idea,nor the one that not insulting anybody is an "inconvenience".



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 26 Dec 08 | 08:20PM by David Kartas.

Re: Obscure Weirdness Hunt
Posted by: David Kartas (IP Logged)
Date: 26 December, 2008 08:16PM
also,"SUBTERRANEAN TEMPLES by Pierre Loti and "The litle red room" are both more then worth reading,the first having shudering implications and the second being reminescent of O.Onions, who had no idea his initials would serve as a smiley emoticon one day.

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