The second in Stephen Volk's
Dark Masters
trilogy of novellas, each of which delves into the fictional psyche of a real-life figure from the darker end of the popular arts,
Leytonstone is an extended riff upon a well-known incident from the early life of Alfred Hitchcock. I was honoured to be asked to write an afterword to its original edition from the Spectral Press.
Now all three novellas have been collected together into a single volume by PS Publishing, and a thing of great beauty it is.
Leytonstone now takes its place between
Whitstable (featuring Peter Cushing) and
Netherwood (Dennis Wheatley, in a tale of an uneasy alliance with 'Great Beast' Aleister Crowley).
There are no afterwords in this new edition, either mine or that of Mark Morris for
Whitstable; but you can read my little Hitchcock essay
here, if you like.
You don't have to have read the novella. Though you may want to, afterwards...
Don't say you were never warned.
Read OnBuy the Trilogy
Published on November 20, 2018 05:50