Edited, with an Introduction, by Jessica Amanda Salmonson
Jacket art is by Deborah McMillion-Nering.
Mary Heaton Vorse (1874–1966) was, in the first decades of the last century, an important voice arguing for the rights of women and the workers of America. She was fearless in her beliefs, and risked her life in order to gain first-hand knowledge of the conditions in which people lived and worked, so that she might accurately present their plight to a largely uncaring world. Born in America and raised in Europe, she was as at home mingling with New York literary society as she was in Russia, discussing Communism with Lenin.
Vorse was also a respected and admired writer of short fiction. Between 1918 and 1921 she was thrice selected for the annual Best Short Stories collection, and was selected for Prize Stories and the O. Henry Memorial Award in 1922 and 1926. Among her stories are a handful of supernatural works, which are now gathered together for the first time by Jessica Amanda Salmonson. They are not tales meant to chill the blood; as Jane Yolen writes in her preface, Vorse's hauntings tell of 'the quiet horrors of the heart', and are written with 'an elegant cadenced prose' that captures the torture of loving souls who are forced to confront the dark secrets within themselves and those around them. Whether she is writing of a puzzled child encountering his mother's ghost, or of the implacable hatred that exists between a captain's wife and her husband's ship, Vorse shows a remarkable understanding of the passions, jealousies, loves, and hates which haunt us all.
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Limited to 500 copies
Publisher | Ash Tree Press |
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