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The Phantom Coach

A Connoisseur's Collection of Victorian Ghost Stories

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Ghost stories date back centuries, but those written in the Victorian era have a unique atmosphere and dark beauty. Michael Sims, whose previous Victorian collections have been widely praised, has gathered twelve of the best stories about humanity's oldest obsession.

The Phantom Coach includes tales by a surprising, often legendary cast, from Charles Dickens and Margaret Oliphant to Henry James, Rudyard Kipling and Arthur Conan Doyle, as well as lost gems by forgotten masters such as Mary E. Wilkins Freeman and W. F. Harvey. Amelia Edwards's chilling story gives the collection its title, while Ambrose Bierce, Elizabeth Gaskell and W. W. Jacobs will turn you white as a sheet. With a skilful introduction to the genre and notes on each story, The Phantom Coach is a spectacular collection of ghostly Victorian thrills.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      June 2, 2014
      The mournful, moralizing, and malevolent dead lurk in the gaslit streets, ancestral estates, and tortured psyches of this solid but unremarkable reprint anthology, which will appeal more to newcomers than to “connoisseurs.” Selections explore the genre’s varied stylistic approaches and major themes, including women’s rights, social injustice, and psychological realism. A spirit punishes familial abuse in Elizabeth Gaskell’s “The Old Nurse’s Story.” Spectral children haunt Rudyard Kipling’s bittersweet “They.” Amelia B. Edwards’s “The Phantom Coach” is a gritty, evocative tale of spectral reoccurrence, and Henry James’s “Sir Edmund Orme” elegantly renders psychological reaction to the otherworld. Cosmic terror reverberates from a forbidden text in Robert W. Chambers’s “The Yellow Sign,” and death knocks at home in W.W. Jacobs’s morally gripping “The Monkeys Paw.” Abstract notions of revolution and repression are given ghostly form, inviting historical introspection as well as literary enjoyment. Sims’s survey of the unquiet Victorian dead is a decent introduction to the period.

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  • English

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