Tag: Ghost Stories

  • October Reads: Ghosts, Ghouls & Literary Classics

    October Reads: Ghosts, Ghouls & Literary Classics

    I’m still determined to finish rereading Michael Chabon’s “The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay” before seeing Mason Bates’ operatic adaptation at the Met next week – which won’t be hard to do honestly, though it’s seriously going to cut into my Halloween reading. (I’ve still got 250 pages to go.) But Halloween can run into November, as far as I’m concerned. And winter is made for ghost stories. With that in mind, this is what I’m planning to have on my bedside table for the month of October.

    Somehow, I missed the fact that in 2014, Penguin put out a series of paperback reissues of once-popular novels that became classic movies. I’m not really slavering over Edna Ferber or Fannie Hurst, but I was poking around a used bookstore last week and stumbled across a copy of R.A. Dick’s “The Ghost and Mrs. Muir.” I’ve never read it, but having seen the film many times and watched the TV series when I was a kid, I am familiar with the story: a widow moves into a seaside cottage once owned by a salty sea captain who never really moved out. It’s not going to have a lot in it to really make the skin crawl, so it’s the kind of book I could put off reading until winter or even Valentine’s Day, but I’m moving it up to the top of the list because the Princeton Garden Theatre happens to be showing the movie next Wednesday. Anyway, at 192 pages, it looks like it’s going to be a swift read. Blood and Swash!

    (Parenthetically, if you’re interested, here are the other novels in the series: https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/series/VMO/a-vintage-movie-classic/.)

    A while ago, I was up in Tarrytown, NY, where I visited Washington Irving’s house (on my way to see Percy Grainger Home & Studio in White Plains), and also Sleepy Hollow, which is not so sleepy anymore. But it does have some decent cemeteries, and I paid my respects at Washington Irving’s grave. There’s also a bridge there on what is alleged to have been the site that inspired “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow.” I’ve read the story a few times over the years (“Rip Van Winkle” too), starting all the way back in seventh grade, but it’s been a while. In recent Octobers, I reacquainted myself with the stories of Edgar Allan Poe (2023) and Nathaniel Hawthorne (2021), so I figured this year I could go back to Irving and cherry-pick some of his supernatural tales, which are often interleaved in his story collections with material that has nothing whatsoever to do with ghosts. I know it’s been a long, long time since I read “The Adventure of the German Student” (though I remember it well) and “The Devil and Tom Walker,” but I find he’s written a great deal else of a supernatural bent beside.

    Posting yesterday about Walter Huston reminded me of his scenery-devouring performance as Mr. Scratch in “The Devil and Daniel Webster.” I mentioned in a comment that when I first saw the film, I didn’t love it, despite Huston’s performance and the fact that it looks like an Orson Welles movie. The reason was that the indelible short story by Stephen Vincent Benét (born in Fountain Hill, outside Bethlehem, PA) was still fresh in my head. I have since grown to love the film, but it occurs to me that I have not read the story for many, many years. So I’m adding it to the list.

    Another recent, happy discovery while used book-shopping is a work by Philadelphia-born Charles Brockden Brown, who has been called the Father of the American Novel, especially celebrated for his gothic tales. He’s probably best-known for “Wieland,” which is kind of an 18th century precursor to “The Shining,” in some respects, with the added ingredients of religious fanaticism, ventriloquism, and spontaneous combustion. A Brown novel that is new to me is “Edgar Huntly, or Memoirs of a Sleep-Walker.” I picked it up not really knowing anything about it, but after I got it home I learned it’s set where the Delaware and Lehigh Rivers meet – essentially in my hometown of Easton, PA (only in 1787)! Of course, there’s somnambulism, murder, and Lenni Lenape, so not much has really changed. Not sure if I’ll have time for this one before Halloween – maybe – but it’s definitely on the list for November or after Christmas.

    You may recall, last year I finally made the commitment to tackle “Varney the Vampyre,” attributed to James Malcolm Rymer. Rymer is also thought to have written “The String of Pearls,” which introduced the character of Sweeney Todd. One of the most notorious of the Victorian penny dreadfuls, “Varney” detailed the villain’s blasphemous rampages for 109 weekly installments from 1845 to 1847. Combined, they add up to 1166 pages in a Wordsworth Edition paperback I was delighted to acquire after decades of searching for a complete collection. In the early ‘70s, “Varney” had also been compiled by Dover, in two volumes, and last year I was able to get a hold of a reprint of that edition, as well. The reproduction of the text is not always of the finest quality, with parts of the individual letters murky or even missing, but it does have the original illustrations. As you can imagine, reading a 1100-page vampire serial in lurid, stodgy prose can be a bit like going back and binge-watching “Dark Shadows.” In time, you risk becoming one of the undead yourself. So at the end of Volume 1, for my own welfare, I decided I needed a rest. I’m hoping to sit down with Volume 2 and finish my descent to the nadir of this anti-Everest of vampire fiction.

    I admit, it sounds like a lot, but if I push “Edgar Huntly” to another month, I bet I could do it. It would be a lot easier if not for “Kavalier and Clay,” which I am loving, but am revisiting mostly because I want it fresh in my head for the opera.

    By all means, let me know what you’re reading, especially if it’s seasonal and horrible. Happy Halloween!

    BONUS! Today is Paul Dukas’ birthday. Maybe a good time to trot out Goethe’s ballad of “The Sorcerer’s Apprentice.” And to watch Mickey stir up a world of trouble here:

    https://video.disney.com/watch/sorcerer-s-apprentice-fantasia-4ea9ebc01a74ea59a5867853


    PAINTING: “The Devil and Tom Walker” (1843), by Charles Deas

  • Halloween Reads: Ghost Stories & Nostalgia

    Halloween Reads: Ghost Stories & Nostalgia

    Halloween is my favorite holiday. The weather, the movies, the music, the costumes, the treats, the decorations (except for those horrible inflatable ones), and once upon a time, the mischief. Also, the nostalgia. Seldom are the memories and sensations of childhood nearer than at this time of year.

    I’ve always been a great enthusiast of classic ghost stories. Every year, I try to cram October with as much Halloween reading as possible. I’m not a fast reader, and I mostly read in bed, which means the best I can hope for is to get through a chapter or two a night, and that with drooping eyes. But I really try to cover a lot of unhallowed ground at Halloween.

    In my library I have an extensive collection of supernatural fiction. I mostly gravitate toward the older stuff, from the Victorian period through the golden age of the pulps. This year, I finally took down my copy of “The Golem” (1907-14) by Gustav Meyrink. I thought it would make for an appropriate crossover with the Jewish High Holy Days (which concluded this year on October 5th). At 190 pages, I thought I could knock it out in a week.

    Unfortunately, it is not a good book to read when tired, and it turned out to be a bit of a slog. Also, I don’t think if I were Jewish, I would be particularly flattered by the depictions of the inhabitants of the Prague Ghetto. Which is interesting, because Meyrink’s mother was Jewish, technically making him Jewish. But as the story unfolds, there is a little more shading to the characters.

    In Jewish folklore, the Golem is an anthropomorphic being, fashioned out clay, that’s endowed with life. Depending on the tale, the Golem can be a helper, even a protector, or it can run amok, killing its creator or rampaging through the ghetto. The concept is said to have been, in part, an inspiration for “Frankenstein.”

    Certainly, it was the impetus for a trilogy of silent movies by Paul Wegener. I was familiar with stills from Wegener’s vision from my boyhood fascination with classic horror films. I didn’t actually get to see one of them until I was in my 20s. Wegener’s dusty Golem, with its medieval pageboy “haircut,” remains indelible.

    Unfortunately, Meyrink’s Golem is not the Golem of folklore. Rather, it serves as a murky symbol and at times doppelganger of the book’s protagonist. The tale is Kafkaesque (the two writers were contemporaries, though Meyrink was about 15 years Kafka’s senior), but I couldn’t help but think how much better it would have been had it been written by Kafka himself – or at least Arthur Machen. The overall impression is like “The Trial” meets “The Great God Pan.”

    I really wanted to like the book more than I did. But frankly, I found myself pushing to get to the end of certain chapters, and it took me two weeks to finish, bleeding into time that could have spent reading another ghost story. I’m especially sorry that this wound up being my assessment, since from everything I’ve read about him, the author seems like he was a really fascinating eccentric. Among other things, there was a scandal when it was revealed he was using spiritualism to guide his actions as a banker. He and Machen were both members of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. He also translated the complete novels of Charles Dickens into German. If only “The Golem” were as interesting as its author.

    Some may beg to disagree. I concede it is possible that I might have had a very different experience had I read it at a time of day when I could stay awake. H.P. Lovecraft called it “the most magnificent weird thing I’ve come across in aeons!”

    My copy sits on a shelf of Dover editions. You remember Dover, right? It was a publishing house devoted to inexpensive reprints of mostly hard-to-get, often out-of-print material. The covers are all monochromatic and employ designs, usually illustrations, from early editions of the texts. Public domain is key. I hasten to add, the paper is of good quality, and copies I picked up from 40 years ago still look brand new.

    “The Golem” is on the same shelf with cherished Dover editions of works by J. Sheridan LeFanu. LeFanu was a writer of Victorian ghost stories. One of the best, in fact. I read a lot of his stuff in my teens and 20s, when I was a nut for the Victorian novel. In fact, I wrote a paper on “Uncle Silas” at a time when this would have been viewed as radical. (Genre fiction was still looked upon with suspicion in academic circles back then.) It was a time before the internet, when one would have to pound the pavement and eagerly scour the inventory of bookstores in distant towns in the hopes of turning up something unusual.

    The volume I took down this year is titled, simply, “Best Ghost Stories of J.S. LeFanu.” The book incudes all the best-known stories from “In a Glass Darkly,” collected from the papers of fictional occult detective Dr. Hesselius, a prototype for Bram Stoker’s Van Helsing.

    Primarily, I was interested in revisiting “Carmilla” (1872), the most compelling vampire story – more like a novella – before Stoker’s “Dracula.” About 25 years before. “Carmilla,” the tale, still oozes with atmosphere, even as ultimately Carmilla, the character, drips with blood. The story is as fascinating for its subtexts, as the quintessential lesbian vampire story, as it is for its supernatural elements. A very compelling story, with strong female characters (monsters, of course) in a world of ineffectual patriarchs. I enjoyed rereading this quite a bit, and it went by very quickly.

    Nearly as much did another ghost story in the collection, which I recalled, titled “Green Tea” (also 1872), a cautionary tale of the supernatural perils of too much caffeine. How could I not love this?

    Right now, I’m in the middle of another Dover edition, of J. Meade Falkner’s “The Lost Stradivarius” (1895). For a time, Falkner was best known for his novel “Moonfleet,” which was made into a film with Stewart Granger (produced by John Houseman and directed by Fritz Lang). “The Lost Stradivarius” attracted me not only for its ghostly aspects, but for its obvious musical elements. I’m only a quarter of the way into it, but so far I’m enjoying the gloomy setting, mostly in a moonlit, oak-paneled room at Oxford, in which two students conjure a phantom through the performance of an obscure Baroque violin sonata. I just read the chapter in which the title instrument makes its appearance, wrapped in a cloth and covered in cobwebs, so we’ll see where it goes from here.

    The Dover edition is a slender volume of some 100 pages, so I am confident I will have it finished in enough time to take up Robert Burns’ “Tam O’Shanter” for Halloween. I just wrote about “Tam” in a post on October 21st, to coincide with Malcolm Arnold’s birthday (he composed a concert overture after the poem), so if you’re interested to learn more, you can scroll down my page. This is not a Dover edition, for once, but rather a nice, slender hardbound edition from Anro Communications. The text is presented in both Burns’ Lowland Scots and an English translation by May Kramer-Muirhead, and the amusing illustrations are by Chris Riker.

    With its climactic wild ride, “Tam” resembles a kind of a Scottish “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow.” But the tale is in the telling, and Burns’ wry yarn about a drunken rogue scared sober by his misadventures involving a witches’ sabbath and a bagpipe-playing devil is a Halloween classic.

    For me, it will be the last gasp for the ghost story until January, probably, as next month will be be occupied with my Thanksgiving reading and December will be taken up with Christmas. Alas, the winter is not long enough for all the gloomy books I would like to read.

  • Autumn Arrived! Finding Joy in the Season

    Autumn Arrived! Finding Joy in the Season

    Autumn arrived in the Northern Hemisphere this morning at 9:31 EDT. It is one of my favorite days of the year, when I can breathe a sigh of relief at the passing of summer and the diminishing power of my nemesis, the sun. For me, by February, everything begins to sour, since Spring, for as lovely as she is, is right around the corner.

    Of course, things will be a little different this year. I won’t be sipping coffee at outdoor cafes or raiding any book sales or taking any day trips to visit favorite niche museums and attractions. But I will be reading heaps of ghost stories and watching more monster movies and wearing cozy sweaters and hopefully consuming an abundance of pie.

    Naturally, I prefer an autumn without COVID, but walks in the woods will remain, as will twilit English symphonies, Brahms, and Charles Ives. Already we’ve been blessed with a week’s worth of crisp mornings, and the nights are clear. The green is slowly differentiating and, here and there, there are flashes of yellow and red.

    I’m not totally letting down my guard: Summer, though in decline, will push back, as she does every year. Tomorrow’s high for New Jersey is projected to be 80 degrees. But hopefully she’ll be in the ground for good by Hallowe’en.

    In the meantime, the wild kingdom gets down to the business of fattening up on nuts and seed. An apple I leave on the lawn mysteriously vanishes in the night. What imp or malevolent fairy I am sustaining, I do not know. But I hope it’s one of the foxes that’s been helping him or herself to the peanuts I’ve been tossing out for the squirrels (and by extension the jays). It won’t be long before a pumpkin, purchased with the aim of carving, will be gnawed by rodent teeth into a makeshift playhouse.

    Yes, Autumn will retain its joys. Nature cares not for COVID, and like my friends, the beasts, I shall have plenty of sustenance in my stores.

    Welcome, most glorious season!

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