I was actually surprised by how good this collection of horror stories was! I came across this old paperback published in 1972 (and all of 60 cents back then!) and thought I'd read it because it had stories by so many good authors--Ray Bradbury, H.P. Lovecraft, Robert E. Howard, Arthur Conan Doyle, August Derleth, and Robert Bloch. With the exception of the Howard story, "The Dead Remember," I thought that I hadn't read any of the stories included in the book by those authors before. Interestingly, the Bloch story, "The Skeleton in the Closet," was an enjoyable humorous story, not at all what I was expecting from the author of "Psycho.".
There was a story by Max Brand (Frederick Faust), who is today best-known for his Western stories. But when he was turning out stories for the pulp magazines, he wrote fantasy, science fiction, and supernatural stories. His story in this collection, titled "That Receding Brow," was published in "All-Story Weekly" in 1919--and was my favorite of all of the ten tales in the book. It's basically an adventure story, about an expedition into the mountains of Abyssinia (Ethiopia) to find the "missing-link." It becomes a story of increasing terror...
Included were three authors who were obscure (to me, anyway). I certainly had never heard of them. One of them was Dorothy Baker and her story,"The Gorgon's Head," was one I had read many years ago, in the 70s--and, amazingly enough, I remembered it. There are stories by W.C. Morrow and Ralph Adams Cram. The Cram one was a really effective horror story--"The Dead Valley," published in 1895. Some might say that one is the best in this collection!
If there's a weak story in the bunch, it's the one by Doyle--"The Captain of the Pole Star"--a tale that he wrote before he wrote the Sherlock Holmes adventures, that is, while he was still trying to make a go of it as a medical doctor! It's still a good horror story.
5 stars for a great read that got me in the mood for Halloween!