Edited, with an Introduction by John Pelan and Christopher Roden
Jacket art by Paul Lowe
Robert Murray Gilchrist (1868–1917) made just a single contribution to The Yellow Book, the highly regarded, unorthodox Victorian magazine of literature which flourished for three short years between 1894 and 1897—the little known vampire story 'The Crimson Weaver'. Gilchrist's name, when it is mentioned at all today, is much better known for his highly regarded collection of short fiction, The Stone Dragon (1894), a rarity which is highly sought by genre collectors.
Tradition has had it that following this single collection, Gilchrist turned away from the weird tale to devote his attention to his stories of the Peak District and his topographical studies; but this is not entirely true.
In 1903, Hurst & Blackett published Gilchrist's Lords and Ladies, which included an additional six weird tales; and the June 1905 issue of The London Magazine saw the appearance of a further vampire tale, 'The Lover's Ordeal'.
By 1926, however, when Gilchrist's good friend Eden Phillpotts championed the posthumous collection A Peakland Faggot, it seems that any contribution to the weird tale had been forgotten: Phillpotts makes no mention of these unique stories, nor does Hugh Walpole, who included a short memoir of Gilchrist in The Apple Trees: Four Reminiscences, published in 1932.
The Basilisk and Other Tales of Dread brings together for the first time all of the known weird stories from the pen of R. Murray Gilchrist. Themes of madness and doomed love predominate—and on the rare occasions when Gilchrist's protagonists survive the trials with which they are beset, it seems certain that they will be forever burdened with memories of their tragic experiences.
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Limited to 500 copies
Publisher | Ash Tree Press |
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