Weird Winter Tales: A Fifth Collection of Classic Ghost Stories for Christmas

AutorDiverse
Verlag Black Heath Editions
Erscheinungsdatum 13. Dezember 2018
FormatKindle Ausgabe
Seiten275 (Print-Ausgabe)
SpracheEnglish
ASINB07LCRD26J

„I have never until now given any account of the strange proceedings that occurred at Faildyke Hall on the evening of Christmas Eve in the year 1890.” (Zitat Pos. 77, aus: Tarnhelm by Hugh Walpole)

Inhalt, Thema und Genre

Dies ist bereits die fünfte Sammlung von klassischen englischen Grusel- und Geistergeschichten, die im Viktorianischen und Edwardianischen Zeitalter, also zwischen 1840 und 1914, entstanden sind. Teilweise waren diese Erzählungen bisher nicht wieder veröffentlicht worden. Es sind Geschichten, wie sie damals an den langen Abenden rund um die Weihnachtstage erzählt wurden. Im Mittelpunkt dieser dreiundzwanzig Geschichten stehen alte englische Herrenhäuser, man sitzt gemütlich vor dem Kamin versammelt, in dem ein wärmendes Feuer prasselt. Es ist meistens ein Erzähler, oder eine Erzählerin, die etwas selbst Erlebtes schildert, oder eine Geschichte, die damit in einem engen Zusammenhang steht. Denn eines haben alle diese Herrenhäuser gemeinsam, es gibt einen Geist, der in dieser besonderen Winterzeit in Erscheinung tritt.

Fazit

Auch dieser fünfte Band der Serie enthält die typisch englischen, klassischen Gothic Stories, wie wir sie gerade während der dunklen Wintertage mit Begeisterung lesen. Positiv ist, dass die Sprache nicht modernisiert wurde, sodass es ein wirklich authentisches Lesevergnügen ist, sich in abgelegenen, alten Herrenhäusern stilvoll zu gruseln.

Ghostly Winter Tales: A Fourth Collection of Classic Ghost Stories for Christmas

Author23 classical authors
PublisherBlack Heath Editions
EditorsB.M. Croker, Dick Donovan,
Fergus Hume, W.J. Wintle
Date11 November 2018
EditionKindle Edition
Pages235 (print version)
LanguageEnglish
ASINB07KFHWRL8

“It was about a fortnight before Christmas, when the days were at their shortest and darkest.” (Quotation page 129, from “Christmas Eve at Beach House” by Eliza Lynn Linton)

Content, Theme and Genre

This fourth collection of Classic Ghost Stories contains twenty-three stories by different authors, written in the nineteenth and early twentieth century. All stories take place during foggy winter days and dark winter nights around Christmas, where guests are invited to celebrate happy, festive Christmas days and New Years Eve in the beautiful manors and old country houses of their hosts. At this time of the year everything can happen, ghosts are to be seen, mostly unfriendly, and some of the invited guests might listen amused to the stories about haunted houses and rooms, definitely not believing in such supernatural things, and then may awake or not awake one morning, just having experienced otherwise, without any logical and possible explanation. “Much still remains obscure and cannot now be cleared up; for the only man who could perhaps throw further light on it is no longer with us.” (Quotation page 215, from “The Black Cat” by W. J. Wintle). Very interesting for me was the story “The Christmas Eve Vigil” by James Bowker, as I know the theme of the ghostly procession of figures towards a church, revealing the faces of the persons going to die during the following year, from a famous theatre play, “Der Müller und sein Kind”, written 1830 by the German writer Ernst Raupach.

Conclusion

A perfect collection for gripping, enjoyable reading hours during dark winter evenings.  

I Will Judge You by Your Bookshelf – Grant Snider

AuthorGrant Snider
PublisherAbrams & Chronicle Books
Date14 April 2020
EditionIllustrated Hardcover
Pages128
LanguageEnglish
ISBN-13978-1419737114

“MY HOLIDAY WISH LIST – The book everyone is reading – the book no one is reading … A place for all my new books.” (Quotation page 36, in part)

Theme and Content

A collection of literary comics by the well-known American cartoonist and writer Grant Snider, about booklovers, book hoarders, booksmell-addicted, but also about literature, writers and writing, including writer’s block.

Implementation

This beautifully crafted book contains 124 comics of one or two pages, grouped into fourteen chapters from “I’m in love with books” to “I write because I must”. There are stories about bookmarks, unpaid library fees, the smell of old books, about classics and about the daily dreams and problems of writers. Not only the cartoons are funny, but also the texts are witty, philosophical, poetical, giving words their true and real meaning, sometimes a different meaning, and always perfectly illustrated. This is a book to lose yourself time and time again, discovering new details, and just thinking: “so true, that’s me!”

Conclusion

A charming book, every bookworm will love from the first page.

Spectres in the Snow: A Third Collection of Classic Ghost Stories for Christmas

Author21 authors
PublisherBlack Heath Editions
Date9 September 2016
EditionKindle
Pages391 pages (print)
LanguageEnglish
ASINB01LW9TVHI

“Haunted or no, there was something so uncanny in the appearance of the old gables, fast rottering to ruin, that even in the crepuscular light and early evening, persons would hurry by it with a shudder, while later at night, many would go a long way round rather than pass its weather-worn walls.” (Quotation pos. 337 “The Phantom Riders” by Ernest R. Suffling)

Theme and Content

A collection of ghost stories set in the Victorian and Edwardian time. Written by different authors, these twenty-one old gothic tales too are multifaceted, but always gripping and spooky. The reader meets phantom riders, haunted houses and haunted rooms, the dead sexton, Mr. Morgan in Australia who always hurries home before it gets dark, and a friendly ghost who helps his descendants and real true stories about eerie appearances with no logical explanation. Mysterious things happen in these nights around Christmas, where the snow is falling and shadows might be not only shadows but also something else.  

Conclusion

This selection of traditional ghost stories, written in the poetic language of the olden times, is a perfect read for the dark winter nights around Christmas time.

Winter Ghosts: Classic Ghost Stories for Christmas – Charles Dickens, Elizabeth Gaskell and others

AuthorCharles Dickens, Elizabeth Gaskell and others
PublisherBlack Heath Editions
Date18 September 2014
EditionKindle
Pages378 (print version)
LanguageEnglish
ASINB00NQA0K1U

“As for me, I know very well that when I read him of a dark night, I am obliged to creep to bed without shutting ny book, and without daring to look behind me.” (Quotation from “The Dead Man’s Story”, pos. 1056)

“We talked on an extraordinary variety of subjects, I distinctly recollect a long argument on mushrooms-mushrooms, murders, racing, cholera; from cholera we came to sudden death, from sudden death to churchyards, and from churchyards, it was naturally but a step to ghosts.” (Quotation from “Number Ninety”, pos. 3878)

Content

The Phantom Coach by Amelia B Edwards

The Ghost of Christmas Eve by J.M. Barrie

The Governess’s Story by Amyas Northcote

The Story of the Goblins Who Stole a Sexton by Charles Dickens

The Dead Man’s Story by James Hain Friswell

Bone to His Bone by E.G. Swain

Jerry Bundler by W.W. Jacobs

The Old Nurse’s Story by Elizabeth Gaskell

Thurlow’s Christmas Story by John Kendrick Bangs

The Story of a Disappearance and an Appearance by M.R. James

The Real and the Counterfeit by Louisa Baldwin

Mustapha by S. Baring-Gould

Wolverden Tower by Grant Allen

Number Ninety by B.M. Croker

The Great Staircase at Landover Hall by Frank Stockton

A Strange Christmas Game by Charlotte Riddell

What Was He? by Theo Gift

The Brazen Cross by H.B. Marriott Watson

The Beeston Ghost by John Swaffield Orton

Theme and Genre

A collection of classic Victorian and Edwardian ghost stories about inexplicable, supernatural, spooky experiences, written by different authors.

Conclusion

A perfect collection for dark winter evenings, giving you spine-tingling feelings. Very different stories and different writing styles make this book a thrilling, enjoyable reading.

Worlds Apart: Stories about love, language and cultures – David Newby

AuthorDavid Newby
PublisherVerlag Klingenberg
Date5 December 2018
EditionHardcover
Pages176
LanguageEnglish
ISBN-13978-3903284005

„We’re concerned with literary fiction, not with our own personal reality.’ ’I don’t see how you can separate them,’ says Joy.” (Original quotation page 173, 174)

Content

This book contains six short novels: The Bird’s Trilogy, Culture Lovers, Carol’s Christmas, Joy of Man’s Desiring, Framing, The Reading Circle. Each story has different main characters, men and women in a relationship, but definitely focuses on the female protagonists. One of the stories is very amusing and special.

Themes

All stories are about love, relationships and the British way of life, seen from different point of views and as adopted by different cultures and they all contain unexpected turns and twists.

Language is important, not only connected to the content, but used in a splendid way, playing with idioms, giving words and phrases amusing new contexts, which makes the book a real pleasure to read and makes the reader not only smile but laugh out loud.

Conclusion

Everyday life and marriage, including misunderstandings, humorously analyzed and described and told in a sensitive way, with subtle wit and irony.

he Turn of the Screw and Other Ghost Stories – Henry James

AuthorHenry James
PublisherSchooner & Co Publishing
Date2016
EditionKindle
Pages258 (Print edition
LanguageEnglish
ASIN B003JTHFTI

“This moon made the night extraordinary penetrable and showed me on the lawn a person, diminished by distance, who stood there motionless and as if fascinated, looking up to where I had appeared looking, that is, not so much straight at me as at something that was apparently above me.” (Citation pos. 1100)

Content

The Turn of the Screw

“This moon made the night extraordinary penetrable and showed me on the lawn a person, diminished by distance, who stood there motionless and as if fascinated, looking up to where I had appeared looking, that is, not so much straight at me as at something that was apparently above me.” (Citation pos. 1100)

A wealthy Gentleman from London, guardian for his nephew and niece, looks for a governess and hires a young woman. The two children live in his country home in Essex. Flora, the little girl, is beautiful, well educated and just loveable and after just one hour, she and her new governess have become friends. Her elder brother, Miles, too is a beautiful child, gentle, with good manners. Everything seems to be absolutely perfect – but things are not always, as they seem to be.

A famous, celebrated and well-known Gothic novella.

The Romance of Certain Old Cloths

“One of these days my daughter shall wear them – my rings and my laces and silks.” (Citation pos. 2364)

Two sisters, Rosalind and Perdita, fall in love with the same man, Mr. Arthur Lloyd, who marries Perdita. Perdita dies in childbed. Arthur has to promise her to keep her chest with all her belongings and beautiful dresses for their daughter. After some time, Arthur marries Rosalind and she is very curious about the chest.

An American Gothic tale. 

The Ghostly Rental

“The last red light of the sunset disengaged itself, as it was about to vanish, and rested faintly for a moment on the time-silvered front of the old house.” (Citation pos. 2540)

One grey December afternoon, the narrator, a young Cambridge student, takes an old road to shorten his way. He comes to a house in an orchard of old apple-trees and he is curious about the house. The house is haunted, he is told, but he feels that there must be more, some secret. So he returns to the place and one day he sees a mysterious old man enter the house. He has several more meetings with the old man, Captain Diamond. One day in September, the old man sends for the narrator, he is dying and has one favor to ask.

Sir Edmund Orme

“From the first time of her seeing me she had been sure there were things I should not escape knowing.” (Citation pos. 3224)

It is season in Brighton and the un-named narrator falls in love with charming Charlotte Marden. Her mother has a secret and one day something happens and the narrator shares the secret of Mrs. Marden.

A ghost story told by an outer narrator and based on a written report of the events by the inner narrator.

Owen Wingrave

“He talked about the ‘immeasurable misery’ of wars, and asked me why nations don’t tear to pieces the governments, the rulers that go in for them.” (Citation pos. 3881)

Young Owen Wingrave is prepared for a brilliant military career like all his ancestors, but he prefers Goethe and books to the military life of a soldier. Therefore, his coach Spencer Coyle, his best friend and family members come together at Paramore House, the home of the Wingraves, the house with a haunted room, where no one ever sleeps. Owen is against war, but not a coward as assumed by his family and is ready to proof it.

The Friends of the Friends

 “Certainly they ought to meet, my friend and he; certainly they would have something in common.” (Citation pos. 4406)

Their friends think that they should meet: she had been abroad with her aunt when she sees her father waiting for her in a museum – it was the moment he had dies back at home in England. He had been a student in Oxford many years ago, when he saw his mother waiting in his room – it was the day when she had died in Wales. However, for years all appointments for some reasons failed.

The Real Right Thing

“The first night our young man was alone in the room it seemed to him that his master and he were really for the first time together.” (Citation pos. 4895)

Mrs. Doyne asks George Withermore, a writer and journalist, to write a biography about her husband Ashton Doyle, who had suddenly died some months ago. Doyne, a well-known writer and young Withermore had been very close friends. George is allowed to work in Ashton’s study, to go through his documents and papers to get information for the biography on his friend. After some time, George has a negative feeling while writing about Ashton.

The Third Person

“The person the elder of the pair had seen in her room was not – well, just simply was not any one in from outside.” (Citation pos. 5244)

Miss Susan and Miss Amy, second grade cousins, have inherited an old house in Marr and the will said it should be sold. But they both were so happy about the house; they liked it and decided to live there together, in the house of their anchestors. One day they find a small chest full of old papers and they ask the vicar to do some researches.

A humorous ghost story.

The Jolly Corner

“For me it is lived in, for me it is furnished.” (Citation pos. 5869)

Spencer Brydon left New York with twenty-three and returned thirty-three years later. Owner of several houses, family property, he had lived in Europe from the leases and has come back for some renovation and construction works. Just one of the houses remains as it is with its great, grey, empty rooms.

A story about alternative futures and possibilities.

Conclusion

A selection of the famous Gothic ghost stories by Henry James. Family secrets and spooky tales about the unknown, the mysterious in life and occurrences that remain inexplicable. A perfect read for dark winter days.

Letters from Father Christmas – J.R.R. Tolkien

AuthorJ.R.R. Tolkien
PublisherHarper Collins Publ. UK
Date1 September 2012
EditionHardcover
Pages191
LanguageEnglish
ISBN-13978-0007463374

„Every December J.R.R. Tolkien´s children would receive letters from Father Christmas.“ (Quotation cover)

Content and Theme

This book is a collection of the famous author´s letters he wrote to his children as Father Christmas from the North Pole. Every year´s letter tells stories about how Father Christmas, together with his assistant Polar Bear, prepares everything for Christmas, but also about their helpers, the Elves, and the troubles they have with the bad Goblins that try to steal all the presents. Each letter tells about adventures and funny troubles, especially connected with Polar Bear.

The Book includes photos of the original written letters, envelopes and the beautiful drawings that were sent together with the letters.

From 1939 until 1943 Father Christmas also writes about the war and low storages because of the war, explaining that he could not get everything the the children´s wishlists worldwide.

Conclusion

This is a book for children, to be read by the parents to the smaller children and will sure be read by the children themselves as soon as they can read. But also adults will really enjoy the stories and the illustrations. The perfect read to shorten the days before Christmas.

Murder on Christmas Eve, Classic Mysteries for the Festive Season

AuthorEllis Peters, Ian Rankin et al.
PublisherProfile Books Ltd.
Date2 November 2017
EditionPaperback
Pages233
LanguageEnglish
ISBN-13978-1781259184

‚Tis the season to be jolly … or is it’? (Book cover)

Content (Book cover)

Christmas Eve. While the world sleeps, snow falls gently from the sky, presents lie under the tree … and murder is afoot. In this collection of ten classic murder mysteries by the best crime writers from the 1920s to today, death and mayhem take many festive forma, from the inventive to the unexpected.
From a Santa Claus with a grudge to a cat who knows who killed its owner on Christmas Eve, these are stories to enjoy – and by mystified by – in front of a roaring fire, mince pie in hand.

Theme and Genre

A collection of classic short stories, written by well-known authors. We meet a cat that helps uncover the truth,  strange “Footprints in the Sky”, a valuable unique manuscript and a thoughtful making story about “On a Christmas day in the morning.

Conclusion

Special, thrilling and enjoyable short stories, perfect for this time of the year.

The Travelling Bag – And other Ghostly Stories – Susan Hill

AuthorSusan Hill
PublisherProfile Books Ltd.
Date28 September 2017
EditionPaperback
Pages288
LanguageEnglish
ISBN-13978-1 78125 620 6

This is Susan Hill at her best, telling characteristically creepy and surprising tales of thwarted ambition, terrifying revenge and supernatural stirrings that will leave you wide-awake long into the night. (Citation book cover)

Content – Back cover

From the foggy streets of Victorian London to the eerie perfection of 1950s suburbia, the everyday is invaded by the otherwordly in this unforgettable collection of ghost stories from the bestselling author of The Woman in Black.

Theme and Genre

I normally do not read short stories, because I prefer novels. But this collection of ghost stories caught my eyes and definitely did not disappoint me.

Five gripping stories, written in the best tradition of the well-known Gothic stories and novels of the 18th and 19th century, kept me reading, wondering and sharing the thrills with the protagonists. Susan Hill knows perfectly how to develop stories with hints to supernatural and ghostly events, offering almost logical explanations to the reader, but each story finishing with new twists, facts, that are no longer explainable.

Conclusion

For readers that enjoy a really good ghost story, safely nestled up in a wing chair on a dark November evening.