Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Mrs. Rahlo's Closet and Other Mad Tales

Rate this book
Mrs. Rahlo's It was a simple request, really. All the aged landlady asked of the young medical student who rented a room in her decaying home was to refrain from opening the closet door. Yes, a simple request. And an impossible one . . .

272 pages, Paperback

First published July 1, 2001

Loading...
Loading...

About the author

R.E. Klein

5 books2 followers

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
3 (60%)
4 stars
1 (20%)
3 stars
1 (20%)
2 stars
0 (0%)
1 star
0 (0%)
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Jim.
2,455 reviews817 followers
July 5, 2017
I have (though now I should say "had") known the author of these stories for over 40 years. Robert E Klein taught English at Santa Monica College and co-owned a used bookstore called Sam: Johnson's. Although he and I were on the opposite sides of the political spectrum, we enjoyed talking to each other and had similar taste in books.

Mrs. Rahlo's Closet and Other Mad Tales is a collection mostly of horror stories, with one mystery (not so good) hrown in and a couple of sci-fi stories (not at all bad). I particularly enjoyed the title story, along with "The Apprenticeship of Alan Patch," "Harla," "Cowpants," "The Verms," and "We Three and the Stars." At times, there is a hint of H P Lovecraft, but Bob Klein had a style of his own.

It's sad that he is gone now, but his three books continue to enchant me. For the record, they are The History of Our World Beyond the Wave: A Fantasy and The Way to Mount Lowe. And of course, this one, which is a worthy member of the trio.
Profile Image for Robert Beveridge.
2,402 reviews199 followers
January 21, 2008
R. E. Klein, Mrs. Rahlo's Closet and Other Mad Tales (iPublish, 2001)

Well, it was rather inevitable, wasn't it? It took H. P. Lovecraft almost sixty years to spawn a worthwhile descendant in Thomas Ligotti; Ligotti, on the other hand, took less than ten until the first writer of worth to wear the influence on his sleeve came along. That writer is R. E. Klein.

Don't get me wrong; a lot of other authors have been influenced by Ligotti, but none this obviously. Where other authors balance the Ligotti influence with various other things (Kiernan's gothic twist, for example), Klein seems to balance Ligotti against Lovecraft, and focuses on those parts of Ligotti that are most obvious when translated into an author's own voice. Klein also brings back in the science fiction vibe of Lovecraft's that has seem to have been bred out of most other horror writers, and it's refreshing. This isn't bad B-grade alien horror flicks (though one can imagine a number of these stories being turned into bad B-grade alien horror flicks), but manages to keep the tone and content above the drowning level, just as Lovecraft did and Ligotti does.

Klein is more, for lack of a better term, earthy than either of his predecessors, however. Lovecraft's diction (and Ligotti's distillations of Lovecraft's diction) are very much of a piece with nineteenth-century literature; one can imagine all of their heroes enunciating, with cultured Oxford accents. Not so Klein, whose protagonists are just as easily imagined with the flat Beantown delivery one should get from folks in that part of the country.

Put simply, this is fun stuff. The title story is straight out of Lovecraft's fake book. Other stories include tales of a private investigator who solves crimes that have not yet been committed, what happens when the artifact of a celestial war lands on the doorstep of your average Joe, and various other amusing little tidbits.

Fun stuff. Definitely worth a look-see. *** ½
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews