Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Walls of Fear

Rate this book
Gathers stories about haunted houses and buildings by Ian Watson, Gene Wolfe, and Karl Edward Wagner

400 pages, Paperback

Published January 1, 1991

Loading...
Loading...

About the author

Kathryn Cramer

56 books41 followers
Kathryn Cramer lives in Westport, NY. She is an editor of the Hieroglyph project sponsored by the Center for Science and the Imagination at Arizona State University. Her story, "Am I Free to Go?" was published by Tor.com in December 2012.

She co-edited the Year's Best Fantasy and Year's Best SF series with David G. Hartwell. Her most recent historical anthologies include The Space Opera Renaissance and The Hard SF Renaissance, both co-edited with Hartwell. Their previous hard SF anthology was The Ascent of Wonder (1994).

She is working on a film adaptation of her story "You, in Emulation" with director Edward Cornell.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
6 (30%)
4 stars
6 (30%)
3 stars
7 (35%)
2 stars
1 (5%)
1 star
0 (0%)
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Jeff.
905 reviews25 followers
August 15, 2015
I love a good short story book, and if it has stories about haunted houses, that's even better.

Walls of Fear did not disappoint. 16 stories, if I'm counting correctly, all dealing with the hauntedness of structures with walls. "Hauntedness" probably isn't a word, but I don't care.

Even the introduction was worth reading, and enticed me to give Stanley Kubrick's The Shining another look. Which paid off. I found that I didn't hate it nearly as much as I did the first time I saw it, when it originally released at the theater. There are still parts I don't care for, as it differs drastically from the book, and Jack Nicholson's "Jack" seems crazy right from the start, which is not how Jack Torrance should appear. But this is not a review of The Shining, is it?

"Out of Sight, Out of Mind," by Jack Womack, is a tale of going through a dead man's house, the dead man being a bit of a hoarder. It's not so much a haunted house story, but definitely inspires fear, as they make a surprise discovery in one of the bedrooms.

"Tales From A New England Telephone Directory," by James Morrow, is one of my favorite stories. A phone booth isn't exactly a house, but it has walls, and it was most definitely haunted by something.

"Firetrap," by Greg Cox, is about three college students who rent a cheap house. Two guys and one girl rent a house, and some strange things begin to happen. However, when one of the guys finally realizes what the noises are, that he is hearing from the basement, things take a deadly turn. Another favorite.

"The Art of Falling Down" is a strange story about an old photographer and a boy he has been commissioned to photograph. It's a bit humorous, I think, because, in the midst of all the weird stuff that is happening, what the boy keys in on is when the photographer says a "forbidden" four letter word.

"The Cairnwell Horror," Chet Williamson, is one of those truly horrible tales, reminiscent of the style of Lovecraft. There's not exactly a ghost in this house, but whatever it is is cursed, and is ancient. It also holds great influence over the inheritance.

"Erosion," by Susan Palwick, is about an odd condition that seems to affect the women of a family that lives close to the sea. I like how the ending leaves much to the imagination.

"Happy Hour," by Ian Watson, involves a haunted exhaust fan in the country pub known as the Roebuck. A group of four, two married couples, meets weekly with a rather strange woman named Alice. Another of my favorites.

"The Haunted Boardinghouse," by Gene Wolfe, is about a young man who is having to withdraw from university because he is out of funds. However, he gets a letter about a position over the library, with a bit of tutoring thrown in, at a nearby boarding school. But there is something odd about that town. So odd, that the coaches don't go there anymore. He finally gets there, but is he alive or dead?

"Inside the Walled City," by Garry Kilworth, involves the tearing down of a large building in Hong Kong. The building, full of maze-like passages, is one of those that used to house thousands of homeless, hence the "walled city" designation. It seems, however, to have a life of its own. Another favorite.

"Grandmother's Footsteps," by Gwyneth Jones, is said in its introduction to be about the psychology of oppression. It certainly seems to chronicle a young mother's descent into madness as she attempts to restore a house. But it seems the house has a life of its own, characterized by the ghost of an old woman.

"Madame Enchantia and the Maze of Dreams," by Jessica Amanda Salmonson, seems to be about someone who is already slightly mad. It, too, is one of my favorites, employing imagery that is quite fantastic.

"Slippage," by Edward Bryant, is less than four pages, but involves a couple of ghosts who are in love with themselves as much as they are in love with each other.

"The House on Rue Chartres," by Richard A. Lupoff, involves H.P. Lovecraft, E. Hoffmann Price, and some absinthe. And something horrible, which may or may not have actually happened. This, too, was a favorite.

"House Hunter," by Sharon Baker, is about a man who had a terrible relationship with his mother. It also seems to involve a couple of people who play off of the fear from that terrible relationship. Again, one of those that dances over the fine line of reality and hallucination.

"Penelope Comes Home," by M.J. Engh, is the only story in the book that I really didn't like. I found it to be extremely pretentious, and didn't care for the main characters at all. It's a sixty-page story that doesn't even begin to exhibit characteristics of a horror story until about forty pages in. I mean, there is a hint that something supernatural is going on, but barely a hint. By far, my least favorite story in the book.

"Cedar Lane," by Karl Edward Wagner, is a chilling tale about the many possible lives of a young man who, apparently, never got to live them, all centered around his boyhood home.

Walls of Fear is definitely worth reading, especially if you are a fan of horror/haunted house short fiction. I highly recommend it.
Profile Image for Temucano.
589 reviews23 followers
February 15, 2026
Una irregular antología de relatos sobre casas complicadas más que terroríficas. Varias historias sugieren más que expresan los horrores que acechan tras esas paredes y varios son los escenarios que invitan a más, con tramas que merecían finales más horrendos para tan oscuros rincones. Hay que darle tiempo, sobre todo si te gustan los morbos psicológicos por sobre los sangrientos.

Mi relato favorito, "El horror de Cairnwell" de Chet Williamson, sobre un castillo que esconde un terrible secreto con una progresión creciente del espanto muy bien lograda. Después me quedo con la aventura agobiante en "Dentro de la ciudad amurallada" de Garry Kilworth y la construcción más singular de todo el libro. Luego, dentro de diversos delirios parecidos, me gustó "Madame Enchantia y el laberinto del sueño" de Jessica Amanda Salmonson, con una puesta en escena distinta al resto. Punto aparte, para el relato de Richard Lupoff, "La casa de la Rue Chartres", nunca imaginé iba a leer sobre una visita de Lovecraft a un burdel en New Orleans. Y finalmente "El camino de los Cedros" de Karl Edward Wagner, de corte más onírico y existencial distinto a lo típico de este autor, extraño corolario para este libro de terror ligero.
Profile Image for Jeff  McIntosh.
345 reviews4 followers
June 8, 2018
Not particularly impressed.

I was hoping for more traditional "haunted House" tales, and this collection wasn't it.

Still, some of the stories were interesting, just not frightening.



Jeff McIntosh
1,670 reviews12 followers
Read
August 22, 2008
Walls of Fear by Kathryn Cramer (1991)
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews