Fright into Flight & An Infernal Invasion

One of our guest reviews today, dear listener, this time – a detailed one by writer Jill Hand, who considers the ins and outs of the anthology Fright into Flight, from Word Horde, edited by Amber Fallon. And for those who don’t know of it, a bit about the forthcoming anthology Hell’s Empire, from Ulthar Press, edited by John Linwood Grant. No time for lurchings and longdogses today, we fear (that is to say, we’ve walked, fed and hugged them, but their stories will have to wait).

fright into flight

Fright into Flight is a compilation of horror stories focused loosely around the concept of flight, written by women only. As such, it’s also a sort of riposte (whether pointed or tongue-in-cheek we cannot say) to the recent anthology Flight or Fright (Hodder & Stoughton 2018), edited by Stephen King and Bev Vincent, which somehow managed to include NO women writers. So kudos to Word Horde.

Hell’s Empire received about forty percent of its submissions from women, and that proportion is roughly represented in the final selection set between the two anchor stories, purely on merit. Hell’s Empire is also themed, but quite tightly – we’ll deal with that first.


Entering Hell’s Empire

The concept behind Hell’s Empire is that at some unspecified point in the early to mid-1890s, the forces of Hell invade Britain, in an unprecedented event called the Incursion. Not a steampunk, fantasy or alternate Victorian Britain, but the plain old historical one.

The Incursion takes many forms, including:

  • subtle attempts to undermine or demoralise the British;
  • lone demonic appearances in unexpected places;
  • strikes at key places and organisations;
  • seemingly random acts of terror and destruction, and/or
  • outbreaks of direct combat between Infernal and Victorian forces.

The background is therefore a time when the main forces of the British Empire are engaged elsewhere across the globe, and those units still in the United Kingdom are depleted from sending reinforcements to conflicts overseas for years. A vulnerable time, and an ideal one should the Infernal Prince be looking for an opportunity to expand His realm.

I was asked at the time if this would be a project which insisted on only Christian symbology and tropes – the classical Hell of the church. The answer was not necessarily. It was possible that the Incursion was not the onslaught of a literal Christian Inferno, but took such an appearance to most people in Victorian Britain because of their own history and upbringing.

Another plane of existence, malign, chaotic and using the most suitable guise for its assault? Entirely acceptable. One of many ‘Afterlifes’, from Abrahamic or other religions? Fine. And there remains the possibility that it was Hell itself, most of all, that believed itself to be Hell. Perhaps we shape our nightmares until they take the form we give them?

We were sent an amazing range of tales, some of which made me quite jealous as a writer – because they included things I’d never thought of. As an editor, I don’t think I’ve ever been more delighted by the results of asking for submissions to a project.

I did wonder if we’d be buried under loads of jingoistic tales of purely military interest. We weren’t – rather the opposite. There was action and excitement, yes, with strong plots, but also much subtlety and pathos – fleeting, personal victories; dreadful losses, and a sense of true horror at a world falling apart. Wonderful tales of humanity under pressure. This is not a book where everyone wins.

Here’s an extract from the interlinking text, to give you a feel for the scope of the action:

England bore the brunt of the onslaught. If things were worse in Scotland, it was hard to tell – communication with many Scottish centres of population was lost towards the end of the first month. We knew that fighting was stiff in Northern England – Durham and its cathedral a beacon of hope, York almost in ruins, Hull a besieged port reached and supplied when possible by sea. Armed trawlers and naval patrol boats, each with their parson or priest, kept a semblance of resistance going along the east coast. Hardened chapel men and women held the line inland, bolstered by what remained of the military and the police force.

London, and many large towns in the Midlands and South East, became battlefields. Confused arenas of a war fought in burning streets, where civilians shot at anything which they could not understand, and hasty garrisons were formed from a motley of regular troops.

Religious belief itself became a battlefield. Faith and Will seemed paramount. Three Mohammedan students from Balliol College survived the destruction of Oxford, as the lost souls which were sent against them seemed unwilling to engage. A priest in Leicester stood against a spiked horde, and found that the faith he professed to his flock was a sham. He died, several times.

Christian theologians and rabbinical authorities dug deep, and found partial answers – Faith, Will, and the symbolism of earlier times. The Enochian language of Dr John Dee, whether fabricated or not, held power, as did certain aspects of the Kabbalah. The curious fact that Dee had been advisor to the greatest queen of these isles until Victoria, and that he was reputed to have coined the term ‘British Empire, was lost on most. Bullets were blessed and scratched with such symbols as were known; the people turned to holy water, cold iron and silver, whatever might work…

Hell’s Empire is due out either late 2018 or very early 2019.



Now, to that review. The greydogtales.com reviewers are not ‘staffers’ – they’re free-lancers, writers and editors who kindly help us deal with the large number of books we come across or are sent. So any opinions below the line are those of the reviewer, not the website. If we ourselves have time to read and reflect on a book, we do it in-house and say so…

Boarding Fright into Flight

Review by Jill Hand

 

“Fallon has collected some true gems that will be perfect for fans of horror stories centered on female power and dangerous women.”

John Linwood Grant asked me to review Fright into Flight, an anthology of horror stories written by women. Mr Grant said he chose me for two reasons: the first being the more or less indisputable fact that I am a woman. The second is that I write horror. Sometimes I write smart-ass responses to the pictures that Mr Grant posts on his Facebook page. He likes to take illustrations from Victorian novels and children’s books – saccharine drawings featuring anthropomorphic bunnies and genteel young ladies having tea — and add funny cutlines. We all have our little hobbies, and since the copyrights have expired and the illustrations have entered into the public domain he won’t go to prison. At least not for plagiarism. I can’t speak for anything else that he may be up to.

Fright into Flight is edited by Amber Fallon and published by Word Horde. It has striking cover art by Peter Nicolai Arbo of a pensive-looking ginger-haired woman astride a horse. The woman clutches a spear in one hand while in the other she holds a shield with a pointy thing on the front. The woman’s legs and feet are bare, which seems a poor choice for someone engaged in equestrian activities. The horse appears somewhat panicked, as it should be, since it and the woman are soaring above the clouds. The woman is a Valkyrie, a creature from Norse mythology whose primary role was to choose who would die in battle and who would live. They also served mead to the warriors in Valhalla and had sex with heroes. Valkyries led busy lives.

But let’s move on, shall we? Paperback editions of Fright Into Flight cost $15.99. The eBook is $5.99, which is a good value, considering that you’re getting sixteen short stories. Some were first published in the 1990s, but most are more recent reprints. One, “I Did it for the Art,” by Izzy Lee makes its debut in Fright Into Flight.

All sixteen stories have to do with the theme of “flight,” although the term is loosely defined in some cases. There’s a mix of fantasy, dark fantasy, horror, and science-fiction-based horror.

There are some real gems here, as well as a few that failed to impress me as much. I’ll name the three I liked best, in no particular order:

The collection opens with Damien Angelica Walters’s story, ‘The Floating Girls: A Documentary.’ Twelve years ago, 300,000 girls from all over the world floated up into the sky and vanished. This phenomenon was hushed up, relegated to the status of urban myth. The documentarian, Tracy Richardson, shares her personal memories of one of the floating girls, her next-door neighbor and former best friend, Jessie. The two of them grew apart after Jessie’s mother died and her father remarried. Tracy witnesses Jessie’s disappearance. Her guilt that she didn’t do more to salvage the friendship is poignant, reminding the reader of all the friendships they allowed to wither and die for no good reason. The documentary intersperses film and audio in a way that feels genuine, as if we’re reading about an actual event. It’s deftly written, with powerful imagery.

‘Wilderness’ by Leticia Trent bears the stamp of Shirley Jackson’s influence on the horror genre. Trent captures Jackson’s signature brooding sense of not-quite-rightness that slowly builds to almost unbearable tension. The main character, Krista, is traveling alone. Her flight to New Haven is delayed and the airline personnel won’t say why. Krista has lost her job for reasons that aren’t clear, and she’s just had an unsatisfactory visit with her parents. She’s planning to start over fresh, but something tells us that won’t be happening. Not when the airport workers and the police are acting strangely. It seems there might be something toxic in the air, or in the water. The other passengers are starting to regard Krista with suspicion, and we can only wonder if she’s going to end up like Tessie Hutchinson in Jackson’s “The Lottery.”

‘Every Angel’ by Gemma Files is an absolutely kickass tale. Bob is a London crime boss in the mold of the brutal Kray twins. He has developed an obsession with religion that’s getting in the way of business to the point that it’s starting to worry his right-hand man, Darger. When what appears to be a female angel is discovered roosting beneath a freeway overpass, eating live rats and the occasional hapless passerby, Darger is tasked with capturing it. Penned up in Bob’s crime headquarters, what might be an angel or a demon or a harpy or something even worse starts messing with Bob’s mind with grim observations about God and the afterlife. It’s darkly funny and the East End accented dialogue is spot-on. This is a story that can be read and enjoyed again and again.

Two stories which I feel could have gone even further with more development were Izzy Lee’s ‘I Did it for the Art’ and ‘Consent’ by Nancy Baker. In the first one, the main character, Jeff, is a photographer who gets off on drugging and raping adolescent fashion models. He’s thoroughly reprehensible and the narrative would have worked better for me if he had some redeeming qualities. I would also have liked if there was a brief explanation of the curse of Dudleytown, Connecticut. Readers unfamiliar with the abandoned village’s history would fail to appreciate why it was a bad idea for Jeff to take his bevy of Lolitas there and why really bad stuff started to happen after he did.

In the second, a best-selling horror writer has inspired the crimes of a serial killer who tortured and disfigured his victims before killing them. One survived, and she takes her revenge against the writer in a deserted airplane hangar. In this case, the “flight” theme applies not only to the location where the writer is cornered, but also to the woman’s plans to fly away afterwards on a private jet. The story poses the excellent question of what is the purpose of horror writing. I would have preferred more development of that premise, rather than focusing on the plot-line from a slasher film.

There are other inclusions in the anthology which I found difficult to get on with because of the subject matter. The presence of Native American ghosts that rape women and steal white babies for sacrificial revenge doesn’t sit comfortably with me. This isn’t the golden age of pulp fiction, where Native Americans were either noble savages or sneaky, deranged baddies. It could be nice if writers would stop perpetuating stereotypes. And yes, one had a good guy who is native, but I wish the vengeful Indian thing would stop, or at least find a new way of being expressed. Shamans are an overdone trope, in my opinion. I wish someone would write about a Native American main character who’s not wise in the ways of nature or able to summon spirits.

Speaking of horror movies, Nadia Bulkin’s ‘When She was Bad’ takes on the theme of “final girl,” the girl who survives to the end of a horror movie (or at least is the last to die.) As always, Bulkin’s prose is a treat. Her description of how the girl takes revenge against the winged monster that killed her friends brings catharsis in the purest sense of the word. We feel pity and terror, both for the unnamed girl and for the monster. It’s gorgeously done.

Despite a few possible missteps, Fallon has collected some true gems that will be perfect for fans of horror stories centered on female power and dangerous women.

The question, I suppose, is why have an anthology of all-female writers? There’s been a lot of talk lately in the horror community about the need for “inclusion” of “under-represented” groups, meaning women and various minorities and people who identify as LGBTQ. I don’t see any harm in that, although women have been writing and publishing horror forever, or at least since a teenager named Mary Shelley wrote a scary story about a doctor who stitched together pieces of dead bodies and zapped them with electricity in order to bring his creation to life.

Women write horror at least as well as men do. Mary Shelley certainly did, and Ann Radcliffe, who is credited with inventing the Gothic novel. Then there’s Charlotte Perkins Gilman, author of ‘The Yellow Wallpaper’, the super-creepy short story about a rest cure that’s decidedly less than restful, and of course Shirley Jackson, whose The Haunting of Hill House is currently having a redo in the form of a Netflix miniseries loosely based on the original book. The new contingent of women horror writers walk in the footsteps of Shelley and Gilman and Jackson and Rebecca du Maurier and Margaret Oliphant and all the rest and are doing an admirable job.

I highly recommend Fright Into Flight. It’s got some of the best current creators of horror who just happen to be women.

Fright into Flight is available now:

http://amzn.eu/d/3HboLZD

http://a.co/d/hiQu9SF

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Redcap, Coffman, and the Doom of Lord Soulis

Dark folklore and verse today, dear listener. We travel up to the Scottish borders, visit American poet Frank Coffman, by strange association, and then swing back for a legend of Holderness in Yorkshire. We unveil an exclusive folklore/folk horror ballad on the wicked redcap by Frank in the process, and even add in a short ballad by Paul St John Mackintosh.

hermitage castle

Some of you may already know of the redcap, or Robin Redcap. The folklorist William Henderson (1813-1891) described this malevolent, goblin-like being in detail:

“Redcap, Redcomb, or Bloody Cap, is a sprite of another sort from the friendly Brownie. He is cruel and malignant of mood, and resides in spots which were once the scene of tyranny — such as Border castles, towers, and peelhouses. He is depicted as a short thickset old man, with long prominent teeth, skinny fingers armed with talons like eagles, large eyes of a fiery-red colour, grisly hair streaming down his shoulders, iron boots, a pikestaff in his left hand, and a red cap on his head. When benighted or shelterless travellers take refuge in his haunts, he flings huge stones at them; nay, unless he is much maligned, he murders them outright, and catches their blood in his cap, which thus acquires its crimson hue.

“This ill-conditioned goblin may, however, be driven away by repeating Scripture words, or holding up the Cross ; he will then yell dismally, or vanish in a flame of fire, leaving behind him a large tooth on the spot where he was last seen.”

Notes on the Folk-lore of the Northern Counties of England and the Borders (1879)

And Sir Walter Scott mentions the creature in his Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border:

“Redcap is a popular appellation of that class of spirits which haunt old castles. Every ruined tower in the south of Scotland is supposed to have an inhabitant of this species.”


Perhaps the most famous citation of the redcap is in the ballad collected by John Leyden (1775 – 1811), a Scots folklorist and orientalist. ‘Lord Soulis’ was passed to Scott and included in Volume Three of Minstrelsy – it’s long, but we’ll give you a taste:

Lord Soulis

by J Leyden

Lord Soulis he sat in Hermitage castle,
And beside him Old Redcap sly;—
“Now, tell me, thou sprite, who art meikle of might,
“The death that I must die?”

“While thou shalt bear a charmed life,
“And hold that life of me,
“‘Gainst lance and arrow, sword and knife,
“I shall thy warrant be.

“Nor forged steel, nor hempen band,
“Shall e’er thy limbs confine,
“Till threefold ropes, of sifted sand,
“Around thy body twine.

“If danger press fast, knock thrice on the chest,
“With rusty padlocks bound;
“Turn away your eyes, when the lid shall rise,
“And listen to the sound.”

Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border (1806)

Historically, the real William de Soulis, Lord of Liddesdale, shifted sides between the English and the Scots, and the official record is that he was eventually imprisoned at Dumbarton at the order of King Robert of Scotland (Robert the Bruce), dying in or by 1321. A number of Border Ballads are a mixture of fact and fiction, and there’s a degree of confusion and myth-making when it comes to William.

redcap
Sir Walter Scott and his dog camp at Hermitage Castle 1808

Sir Walter Scott says, of this Lord Soulis:

“…he is represented as a cruel tyrant and sorcerer; constantly employed in oppressing his vassals, harassing his neighbours, and fortifying his castle of Hermitage against the king of Scotland; for which purpose he employed all means, human and infernal: invoking the fiends, by his incantations, and forcing his vassals to drag materials, like beasts of burden. Tradition proceeds to relate, that the Scottish king, irritated by reiterated complaints, peevishly exclaimed to the petitioners, “Boil him, if you please, but let me hear no more of him.”

“Satisfied with this answer, they proceeded with the utmost haste to execute the commission; which they accomplished, by boiling him alive on the Nine-stane Rig, in a cauldron, said to have been long preserved at Skelf-hill, a hamlet betwixt Hawick and the Hermitage. Messengers, it is said, were immediately dispatched by the king, to prevent the effects of such a hasty declaration; but they only arrived in time to witness the conclusion of the ceremony.

“The castle of Hermitage, unable to support the load of iniquity, which had been long accumulating within its walls, is supposed to have partly sunk beneath the ground; and its ruins are still regarded by the peasants with peculiar aversion and terror. The door of the chamber, where Lord Soulis is said to have held his conferences with the evil spirits, is supposed to be opened once in seven years, by that dæmon, to which, when he left the castle, never to return, he committed the keys, by throwing them over his left shoulder, and desiring it to keep them till his return. Into this chamber, which is really the dungeon of the castle, the peasant is afraid to look; for such is the active malignity of its inmate, that a willow, inserted at the chinks of the door, is found peeled, or stripped of its bark, when drawn back.”

ibid

Hermitage Castle, which is in Liddesdale, right on the border with England, still exists today. Some believe the true fate of William de Soulis was mixed up with another of the line (possibly Ranulf de Soulis) who was supposed to have been slain by his servants.

Whether Ranulf was boiled alive or not, we cannot say. Nor can we prove that either Ranulf or William were sorcerors, unfortunately. As is the way of these things, the whole de Soulis dark magicks story is compounded by connections with Michael Scott, the legendary scholar who was later immortalised as a powerful wizard by… Sir Walter Scott.


TRIVIA 1: Robert Bruce, an illegitimate son of Robert the Bruce, was later acclaimed as Lord of Liddesdale, the de Soulis (or de Soules) line having forfeited the title.


TRIVIA 2: None of the above should be confused with the 1964 TV series Redcap, starring John Thaw, who later became the incarnation of Inspector Morse. That was named after the red caps of the British military police, who were not supposed to steep them in blood. Really.



COFFMAN AND THE REDCAP

Our musings on the redcap in general were re-awakened by Frank Coffman, writer, prolific poet and crafter of weird verse, who sent us this rather neat piece in response to an on-line discussion. We’ll say something about Frank’s latest collection in a moment, but first of all here’s the ballad he supplied, for its first ever showing:

Redcap

A Ballad of the Border Country, by Frank Coffman

 

Along the Tweed, an ancient row
Of stony ruins runs.
Grey-grim and stark, they fell below
Two-hundred thousand suns.

The years swept over tall peel towers,
Castles, and cairns for bone.
With trials of Time and Nature’s powers—
Their rubble sleeps alone.

And yet, not quite alone are they
Across that country wide,
From Berwick to the Tower of Wrae
And down to Cardrona side.

For there are wights about at nights
Among those fallen stones.
Within the ruined towers, strange lights
Are seen. A cold wind moans.

Long gone the days when watch fires blazed
Along that row of forts.
But, Traveler, you would be amazed,
For still a light—of sorts—

Can be seen if you dare to come too near
To those abandoned places.
And you’ll have every cause for fear
When you behold their faces!

They are those of the Unseely Court,
Gnomes you must rightly dread.
Flee for your life’s your best resort,
Or you will sure be dead!

They are Redcaps, each stands his guard
At those old fallen towers
And your spilt blood is their reward
If you fall ‘neath their powers.

He’s short, thick-framed, with long grey hair,
With razor-sharp, long nails.
If, in the night, you dare his lair,
And Scripture chanting fails;

Sometimes a Cross will send him gone,
Those iron boots will clank.
If you survive until the dawn,
You’ve surely God to thank.

Far better to beware. Don’t dare
Those old stones ‘neath the moon.
For there is Death residing there,
And it will come full soon.

For holy signs and Bible verse
Are rarely safe. Instead,
A fool falls victim to the curse;
Hurled stone will crush his head.

Sometimes, old Redcap’s halberd chops
And takes the head clean off.
Or spear-point rips out guts. He stops
And then his cap he’ll doff.

His name is true; his cap is red.
Made scarlet in its hue
By soaking blood spilled from the dead!
Most horrible to view!

‘Tis stained, but decked with grim black gouts,
Dried from his many kills.
When his foul fun is done, he shouts
To echo from the hills.

So heed my tale. Do not go near—
If you would keep your breath—
Those piles of stone bring more than fear;
You’ll likely meet your death.

Leave Redcap and his ilk alone.
Stay home—and lock your doors.
Let the night wind keen and moan
Through ruins fraught with horrors.


Which brings us nicely to Frank’s latest publication, This Ae Nighte, Every Nighte and Alle, a chapbook of thirty three short poems. You can read more about the title in the book itself, but suffice to say that it once more comes back to Yorkshire, for it draws on the Lyke Wake Dirge of our homeland.

frank coffman

It’s a lovely little book, beautifully laid out and even includes a glossary of poetical forms for those who are serious versifiers.

“This slim volume is presented as a sampling of some of my efforts in the rapidly reviving and burgeoning realms of both Formalist and Speculative poetry… The theme, focus, genre, subject of the several poems you’ll find in these pages is of the weirdly horrific and supernatural.”

A retired professor of college English, creative writing, and journalism, Frank has published poetry and fiction across speculative genres in magazines, anthologies, and online.

“Poetry scholar Frank Coffman creates a relentless and obsessive poetic journey into the dark night of the soul. Poet Coffman utilizes classic poetic forms such as the sonnet and villanelle in a postmodern, so-old-it-is-new way to unleash a speculative world of supernatural terror. These poems are just the thing to read aloud on Halloween, or if you want to make every day Halloween. He brings a lifetime of experience with him to create a volume that is both rigorous and enchanted.” —JP Bloch, author of Identity Thief and Shadow Language

“…he’s an expert on folklore themes and an impressive master of formal verse.” —Marge Simon, from her column, Blood And Spades, in the HWA Newsletter.

We’re also looking forward to a further volume from the Master. His major collection The Coven’s Hornbook and Other Poems (around 270 pp with poems and glossary of exotic types, and foreword by Donald Sidney-Fryer, “Foreword” by Frederick J. Mayer, and illustrations by Yves Tourigny) will be out in early 2019.

(Incidentally, Frank has a very evocative story – not a poem! – in the forthcoming anthology Hell’s Empire from Ulthar Press.)

This Ae Nighte, Every Nighte and Alle can be obtained via this link:

frank coffmanhttp://www.lulu.com/shop/frank-coffman/this-ae-nighte-every-nighte-and-alle/paperback/product-23781908.html


By one of those odd coincidences which regularly bless greydogtales, we are pleased to have at hand a new short ballad on the redcap theme from writer/poet Paul St John Mackintosh, who occasionally graces out pages with reviews and opinion pieces. What better place to show this off as well?

“The Redcap”

In Border haunts, the Redcap lurks
with iron boots and pike
among black ruins’ blasted stones
to slay those he can take.

His tall cap glistens thirstily
a bright and bloody red,
for if it were to dry dull brown
the Redcap would fall dead.

But Border burns run thick with blood
where many brave men die
and Redcap never will be short
of colour for his dye.

Paul’s latest review for greydogtales can be found here:

http://greydogtales.com/blog/trains-terror-grabinski-returns-niveau-triumphs/


Homeward Bound

At last, down from the Borders, along the path of the Lyke Wake Walk and to the North Sea Coast of Yorkshire again. Henderson also mentions in his Notes on the Folk-lore of the Northern Counties

“There are Redcaps in Holland too, but they have little in common with the Scottish Redcap, except the name. They are nearer akin to the Brownie, whom they resemble in their attachment to certain homesteads, in the diligence with which they perform manual labour, and in their abrupt departure on receiving a guerdon in the form of clothing. The Dutch Redcaps light fires during the night, which are invisible save to themselves, but warm the house; and the few sticks they leave of the Hausfrau’s stock of brushwood serve her as long as a great bundle, and give double the warmth. They are clad in red from head to foot, and have green hands and faces.”

There has long been a Northern European influence on this part of the coast (we ourselves were called Danes by an old fellow when we moved to West Yorkshire, because of dialect and inflections). So here, to redcap or roundcap off the article, is a wry folk tale, from Holderness in East Yorkshire, where we run the lurchers often:

“The Hob Thrust, or Robin Round Cap, is a good natured fellow who assists servant maids by doing their work in the early morning. As he never wears clothes, it is told that one servant girl offered to make him a harden shirt (a shirt made of coarse, brown linen), but this gave him such offence that he instantly departed and never returned. Should he, however, have spite against any one, he annoys them terribly by breaking crockery, upsetting the milk, letting the beer run to waste, throwing down pans, rattling things together, and giving the place a reputation for being haunted.

“The Rev. W. H. Jones relates a story of a Holderness farmer who had his life made so miserable by one of these impish spirits that he determined to leave his farm. All was ready, and the carts, filled with furniture, moved away from the haunted house. As they went, a friend inquired ” Is tha flitting? ” and before the farmer could reply, a voice came from the churn, “Ay, we’re flitting!” and lo! there sat Robin Round Cap, who was also changing his residence. Seeing this, the farmer returned to his old home. By the aid of charms, Robin was enticed into a well, and there he is to this day, for the well is still called Robin Round Cap Well.”

John Nicolson’s Folk Lore of East Yorkshire (1890)

django on the holderness coast

A less bloody end than most Border Ballads.



We thank you. If you love lore and verse, and want to know if and when we cover it, why not sign up to greydogtales.com (all free) using the little box on the top left. Note: This also works if you hate either of those topics, and want to know when to avoid us…

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Trains of Terror – Grabinski Returns, Niveau Triumphs

Today, dear listener, we rush around like headless sausages to cover two bits of news – a forthcoming tribute anthology themed on the work of Stefan Grabinski, and an enthusiastic review of Thana Niveau’s recent collection of horror stories, Octoberland.

art for octoberland by daniele serra

The lurchers, and even poor old John Linwood Grant’s own work, will have to wait for another day. To proceed…


GRABBED BY GRABINSKI

Stefan Grabinski (1887-1936) was a Polish writer who produced some most striking tales of weird and supernatural fiction during the early Twentieth century. In latter days he’s been compared to Poe and Lovecraft, but to be honest, he’s in a class of his own – his story ‘The Wandering Train’ still disturbs us. China Mieville said of him, a while back:

“Sometimes (he) is known as “the Polish Poe”, but this is misleading. Where Poe’s horror is agonised, a kind of extended shriek, Grabinski’s is cerebral, investigative. His protagonists are tortured and aghast, but not because they suffer at the caprice of Lovecraftian blind idiot gods: Grabinski’s universe is strange and its principles are perhaps not those we expect, but they are principles – rules – and it is in their exploration that the mystery lies. This is horror as rigour.”

The Guardian (2003)

One of the problems has always been getting decent translations – the nuances of weird and surreal fiction don’t always translate well, because so much meaning can be in the precise words, their sound and ‘feel’, which the writers use. But that situation is ameliorated by the 2012 edition of the Mirosla Lipinski translation, which is a good introduction to Grabinski’s work.

http://amzn.eu/d/4qEc35a

Some of it’s dark stuff, so be warned. He has a thing for trains and the weaving of the weird and the (his) modern world which fascinates, giving many of the stories a quite different feel from some of his Western contemporaries. If this were not enough to endear his work to us, we might note one of Mieville’s other comments in the same article:

“Grabinski has several stylistic tics, and the only one that sometimes grates is his prediliction for ending paragraphs with ellipses…”

Well, gosh, do we love our ellipses here at greydogtales


IN STEFAN’S HOUSE

grabinski
art by mutartis boswell

So why do we mention this Grabinski fellow at the moment? Because Dunham Manor Press is putting together a tribute anthology. We’re keen to see this one come out so we can have a good flick through. Dunham have a very modest campaign going to raise enough money to give the contributors a penny or two, and we think it’s worth a look. It also has cover art by Paul (Mutartis) Boswell, an illustrator who has begun to make a name for himself on a number of excellent weird fiction projects.

“Jordan Krall here from DUNHAMS MANOR PRESS. I want to publish this excellent collection of stories that are inspired by Stefan Grabiński. Money raised will go to the authors and artists involved including Brian Evenson, Steve Rasnic Tem, Damian Murphy, Christian Wiessner, Michael Faun, C.M. Muller, Ron Wier, Michael R. Colangelo, Trevor Kroger, Liam Garriock, William Tea, and more.

“And yes, I know that Grabinski wasn’t ALL about trains… but personally, that’s what really attracted me to his work. My father (who is now on hospice care) worked for NJ Transit for over 40 years and so anything railroad related really hits home for me.

“The plan is to start this shipping in January 2019.”

The campaign details can be found here:

grabinski
art by mutartis boswell

in stefan’s house



OCTOBERLAND CONQUERS NOVEMBER

Thana Niveau is neither Polish (as far as we know) nor was she around to ride Grabinski’s trains. A contemporary, self-described ‘horror freak, SF geek, sister of dragons and occasional werewolf’, she had a novel, The House of Frozen Screams, released in October 2018 by Horrific Tales.

Thana now has a collection of her short fiction available from PS Publishing. The latter is described thus:

“Thana Niveau’s stories feature people on the edge – the edge of death, the edge of sanity, the edge of reality. In this diverse collection, two sisters leave a trail of bodies behind them as they go on the run, desperate to outrun the dark secrets of their past. A film fan is haunted by the actress whose brutal horror films he can’t stop watching. A child hears a ghostly voice through the radio reciting only numbers. And a young woman revisits the place she and her brother loved above all else—Octoberland—the strange amusement park that tore their world apart. Horror wears many faces here, from creeping dread to apocalyptic devastation, and no one escapes its dark touch.”

Here’s what one of our roving reviewers, Paul St John Mackintosh, has to say about this new collection…


A Review of Octoberland by Thana Niveau

by Paul St John Mackintosh

(PS Publishing, 358 pages)

First lines matter a lot in short stories. That’s a well-worn truth that many modern writers seem to forget. If you can’t hook the reader from the off, you might as well give up. If La Rochefoucauld can accomplish more in a single epigram than you can in an entire story, then you have a genuine problem. You can’t rely on your cultural kudos, artistic or intellectual aspirations, or reputation to keep eyes moving down the page: you have to snag them.

Fortunately, in Octoberland Thana Niveau crafts, dresses, barbs and baits her hooks so alluringly that the reader will be caught gasping and twitching until the tail end of the tale. “We buried the first body in the woods behind a bar called the ‘Nite Owl’.” (‘Going to the Sun Mountain’) “It was just after the funeral that the cities began to call to me.” (‘The Language of the City’) “SENSATIONAL! The WONDER of the Century! A DREAM of Figure Perfection!” (‘Tentacular Spectacular’) “You’re not supposed to go in there!” (‘Little Devils’) “Murderer!” (‘Wasps’) If those first lines don’t keep you reading, wanting to know what’s behind them and what happens next, I’d be very surprised.

It’s not just about semantic openness, and statements that demand an explication. It’s also about vividness, colour, tone, topic, suggestion. A collection with story titles like ‘The Call of the Dreaming Moon’, ‘No History of Violence’, ‘Death Walks en Pointe’ and ‘The Calling of Night’s Ocean’ is already off to a good start in that regard. The 25 stories in Thana Niveau’s collection are brief, condensed, strikingly imagined, vivid, relentless. The physical quality of the volume is up to PS Publishing’s usual excellent standard, and the cover art by Daniele Serra is a draw all in itself.

Let’s be clear: this is not New Weird, strange tales, dark fantasy, or occult detection. Most of the content is sheer, unapologetic horror. It’s not fey, teasing divagations from social and perceptual norms. It’s not gentle, almost imperceptible pickings at the fabric of consensus reality. It’s not slight intimations of unease born of absences and ambiguities. It’s full-on, full-blooded assaults on your acute stress response, executed with all the gusto of slasher fiction, but none of its cheap sensationalism. You want literally chilling juxtaposition of social media with ancient tradition? You got it. (‘The Face’) You want Mesoamerican apocalypse? You got it. (‘Xibalba’) You want snuff movie fans meeting their hideous consummation? You got it. (‘Guinea Pig Girl.’) You want harsh, acid social retribution? You got it. (‘No History of Violence’) Here and there there’s a hiss of steampunk, a flicker of faerie, but hardly anything to lift the dire, ferocious mood. The nearest this volume gets to a refusal to depict and craft its horrors is the things that aren’t there, in the tale of the same name, and their absences and void spaces are as frightful as most stories’ demons.

Do any of the stories under-deliver on their promise? At times that’s bound to occur, especially in such a voluminous and diverse collection, but it doesn’t happen often. Even when the narratives have to boil down the wonderful suggestiveness of their openings to concrete resolutions, Thana Niveau’s excellent prose is usually on hand to save the day, and finish the job with an appropriately resonant resolution. More than a few do the exact opposite, and end in a completely unexpected, disorienting denouement.

Out of all the horror books I’ve read this year, this is probably the one I’ll be returning to most often in future, thinking “How can I do something like that?” and just “Wow.” A striking showcase of some marvellous work in the genre, and a superb demonstration that horror, in its purest, strictest sense, is more imaginative, diverse, cruelly elegant and finely crafted than it’s ever been.


Octoberland also appears to be available from Amazon as an ebook in the UK, but only as a hardback in the US. Try the links and see what options you get:

UK http://amzn.eu/d/8ZPvgHV

US http://a.co/d/44emc6p



For listeners of a loyal disposition, you can find dear greydog‘s most recent stuff all over the place (as he usually is), including:

http://amzn.eu/d/8TGISXi

mary jane kellyhttp://a.co/d/9FbdP5Q

http://a.co/d/5XlGOPD

http://amzn.eu/d/ggRsgrL

http://amzn.eu/d/b7OFFXW



art for octoberland by daniele serra
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13 Miller’s Court – In Memoriam Mary Jane Kelly

Some eighteen months ago I wrote a paragraph which turned into a year long project:

“Sealed records from Scotland Yard, now opened, note that Chief Inspector Donald Swanson, the senior investigating officer on the Whitechapel murders, was provided with the sum of 1000 guineas in October 1888. Swanson’s instructions were apparently to put an end to the killings ‘by whatever means necessary’. What happened to the money is not known.”

As a result, writer and artist Alan M Clark asked me if I would be willing to write about what that implied, and in the process, work with him on a conclusion to his thoughtful and humane series of historical novels about the women who died during Whitechapel’s Autumn of Terror. Reconstructions, fictional but faithful, of the lives of the women themselves.

13 Miller's Court

I have a lot of respect for Alan’s approach, and in the end, the only way I could do his ideas justice was to explore a female protagonist of my own, Catherine Weatherhead. A young woman whose life ran alongside Mary Jane Kelly’s, but at a distance.

Being me, I also chose to include many aspects of period spiritualism alongside the historical setting and events, and to let in questions of the Aether and the nature of psychic powers. This brought my contribution in line with my longer series on murder and the supernatural, Tales of the Last Edwardian. So it’s almost a prequel to some of my other stories, in fact, and introduces characters also to be found in the early 1900s – especially the feared Deptford Assassin. Here,  you finally find out how he earned that title.

Not only did we construct our own takes on these Victorian lives in our individual books, but we worked closely together on the concept of an interwoven version, where readers could get the whole picture, as it were. This involved repeated cross-checking of the minutiae of dates and timing, character interactions across both books, and the pacing of the final outcome in November 1888. But we got there.

That book, 13 Miller’s Court, which contains both of our novels interleaved, is out today –  on the one hundred and thirtieth anniversary of Mary Jane Kelly’s death. We have tried to serve her with respect and honesty…



Announcing the Release of 13 MILLER’S COURT

Two young women walk the streets of London, barely aware of each other’s existence. Each pursues a course that puts her at risk, but whilst Catherine Weatherhead contemplates exposure and failure, Mary Jane Kelly must fear for her very life.

13 Miller’s Court brings their stories together in one volume, their struggles and hopes interwoven in a vista of 1880s London where no one person sees everything. Or do they?

The city has a killer at its heart, and both women know who he is. He moves in shadow, and he does whatever suits his purposes – nor does it seem that anyone can stop him. Is he the solution to their problems, or one more terror they must face?

The death of Martha Tabram, on 7th August 1888, changes everything. For Martha, born in Catherine’s Southwark and killed in Mary Jane’s Whitechapel, poses a new question.

Are there now two monsters in London Town?

Perspectives and secrets; revenge and rivalries. Bloody murder, and two women caught up in the storm. Read 13 Miller’s Court and learn about the human cost of the Autumn of Terror.


“I met yuir man once, after the end, aye – if man he was. I met him, and saw those eyes for myself. I would nae put that sight into yuir head, not if you filled my cap with sovereigns. When next I stand by St Peter’s Kirk, I’ll pray on those old stones and ask. Did I do the Lord’s work, or someone else’s?”

Chief Inspector Donald Swanson, Scotland Yard


13 Miller’s Court is comprised of two novels: The Assassin’s Coin, by John Linwood Grant (which is also an early, crucial story of his mysterious and deadly character Edwin Dry, the Deptford Assassin), and The Prostitute’s Price, by Alan M. Clark, about the life of Mary Jane Kelly, the fifth book in his Jack the Ripper Victims series. The authors wrote the novels as companion pieces. Both books are previously released by IFD Publishing.

mary jane kelly

Though the two stories are whole and appear separately in paperbacks and ebooks, they are larger still when read together, each with its own point-of-view protagonist. Here IFD Publishing presents the stories together in one book, their chapters alternating. They share the same timeline, some characters and scenes. Both tales lead the reader to 13 Miller’s Court itself, a room made infamous during the Autumn of Terror.

Watch the book trailer

13 Miller’s Court – Available now on Amazon in the States, and due any day in the UK

http://a.co/d/cjEZXTN



THE INDIVIDUAL NOVELS

The Prostitutes Price

A novel that beats back our assumptions about the time of Jack the Ripper. A tale of Mary Jane Kelly, a woman alive with all the emotional complexity of women today. Running from a man and her past, she must recover a valuable necklace and sell it to escape London. Driven by powerful, conflicting emotions, she tries to sneak past the deadly menace that bars her exit.

The Assassins Coin

She is Catherine Weatherhead, and she is Madame Rostov. She will lie. She will deceive. She will change the course of history, for she is haunted, and murder speaks to her. In Whitechapel, all talk is of the one they call Jack the Ripper, but there is another killer in play, and he most definitely has a name. Mr Edwin Dry, the Deptford Assassin. The truth is not what you believe. It is what Catherine and Mr Dry make it.



We’ll be back in a couple of days with all sorts of other weird news…

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Literature, lurchers and life