BOTTOM LINE: Suspensers, scary stories, and a few bits of crime-related nonfiction from 1975 has a nice mix of classics and current-day authors, from one of the most prolific anthologists of the 1960s and 1970s.
My favorites were “Stay of Execution”, Michael Gilbert; “The Yellow Wall-Paper”, Charlotte Gilman; “The Beast with Five Fingers”, William Fryer Harvey; “A Time for Hyacinth”, Julian Symons. Also includes stories and articles by E.F. Benson, Stella Benson, Jorge Luis Borges, Gerald Bullet, Janet Flanner, Elizabeth Gaskell, Violet Hunt, Shirley Jackson, W.W. Jacobs, Alister Kershaw, Christopher Lazare, Edgar Lustgarten, W. Somerset Maugham, Maurice Moisewitsch, Lenore Glen Offord, Sir Walter Scott, Osbert Sitwell, Jan Gerhard Toonder, Oscar Wilde, Henry Wilson, P.G. Wodehouse.
E.F. Benson, “Mrs Amworth”, 1924 — wonderfully creepy “take” on vampirism Stella Benson, “The Man Who Missed the Bus”, 1929 — odd little bon mot about a lonely man with an identity problem Jorge Luis Borges, “Death and the Compass”, 1968 — stilted bit of legerdemain with a decent ending twist Gerald Bullet, “The Mole”, 1923 — dull story about a dull, if hellish, marriage Janet Flanner, “Murder Among the Lovebirds”, 1935, NF — nifty, trendy tale of two murderesses Elizabeth Cleghorn Gaskell, “The Squire’s Story — 18th century Highwayman-esque tale of cruelty and murder Michael Gilbert, “Stay of Execution”, 1963 — superb novella about a miscarriage of justice Charlotte Gilman, “The Yellow Wall-Paper” — classic creeper still grabs ya William Fryer Harvey, “The Beast with Five Fingers”, 1947 — a classic, and deservedly so; far better than the fun 40s movie Violet Hunt, “The Coach”, 1911 — moody Victoriana, “with a moral”, I think... Shirley Jackson, “The Daemon Lover”, 1949 — dated but scary tale of love lost W.W. Jacobs, “The Toll-House”, — horrors in an old house, nicely calibrated Alister Kershaw, “Murder in Solitude”, 1955, NF — French Ripper Joseph Vacher, long-winded yet fascinating grisly Victoriana Christopher Lazare, “Last Visit”, 1944 — madness, in the old style Edgar Lustgarten, “Elvira Barney”, 1958, NF — very good rendition of a sensational society murder case circa 1930 W. Somerset Maugham, “A Man From Glasgow”, 1947 — lunacy, beyond measure Maurice Moisewitsch, “Steinie Morrison”, 1962, NF — nicely wrought tale of ugly murder circa 1911 Lenore Glen Offord, “Eleven Days Wonder”, 1947, NF — murder in Oakland, for profit, unrealized, circa 1925 Sir Walter Scott, “The Fortunes of Martin Waldeck” — Grimm-ish tale of a forest demon up to old tricks Osbert Sitwell, “A Place of One’s Own”, 1953 — genteel hauntings at an Edwardian spa, edgily funny Julian Symons, “A Time for Hyacinth”, 1967 — creepy classic about old love, and new lovers Jan Gerhard Toonder, “The Spider”, 1961 — a marriage gone really bad, gruesome Oscar Wilde, “Pen, Pencil, and Poison”, NF — Regency poisoner Wainwright, his lives and loves Henry Wilson, “Miss Parsons”, NF — dry account of 18th century hauntings that may, or may not, have been real P.G. Wodehouse, “Sensational Occurrence at a Poetry Reading”, 1943 —