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Post by dem on Aug 25, 2011 14:45:17 GMT
Christopher Blayre (Edward Heron-Allen) - The Purple Sapphire and other Posthumous Papers (Philip Allan, 1921) The Purple Sapphire Aalila Pupura Lapillus The Thing that Smelt The Blue Cockroach The Demon The Book The Cosmic Dust The Cheetah GirlFirst Philip Allen book I've turned up in aeons - thank you Spitalfields market! - and an especially interesting one at that. Although nine stories are listed on the contents page, only eight make it into the book as when we reach the final novella; Seems that The Cheetah Girl - concerning a hybrid creature born of artificial insemination - was deemed too risqué for the day, and would likely never have seen print had not Heron-Allen resorted to vanity publishing a very limited edition (20 copies) two years later. An extended The Purple Sapphire, still lacking The Cheetah Girl, was published as The Strange Papers of Dr. Blayre, again by Philip Allan in 1932 as part of the Creeps series. George Hay got his mitts on a copy of the offending story in the sixties and Tartarus have since resurrected it as a competitively priced (one spleen) limited edition, which currently changes hands at around the $550 mark, so we suggest Wordsworth counter with a budget 'Collected Blayre' just to spite them.
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Post by dem on Aug 26, 2011 12:33:35 GMT
couldn't resist a quick delve. not quite sure what to make of him yet.
The Thing That Smelt: Tulse Hill. Augustus Black ia a phony medium with a touch of the Madam Orloff's about him in that despite himself, he has recently developed genuine psychic abilities. This unnerves Black and he takes to holding proper seances once he's finished fleecing today's quota of wealthy gullibles. At the culmination of one such session Black is killed, slashed to ribbons by a malevolent feline entity, one of his cronies is committed to a lunatic asylum, and the other, Sheldon, is haunted to the brink of suicide by an ever present, abominable stench reminiscent of "the small cat house at the zoo."
The Demon: Dr. Erasmus Quayle is a charlatan with a mail order degree who plays on the terminally ill. Despite his quackery, he has an impressive success rate, improving the health and extending the life span of his patients way beyond expectation provided, of course, they've money enough to pay his extortionate fees. The effervescent Cynthia Carlton, dying of cancer, is the latest to benefit from his services after Quayle persuaded her to dispense with the services of proper Doctor Sir George Anboyne. Those closest to her notice an appalling change in her behaviour. It's almost as if she were demoniacally possessed!
He's rarely centre stage as it were, but Max Carlton, Cynthia's "blackguard" of a husband, is the star of this one, spending the entire story drunk out of his mind. A cursory browse reveals that both he and Sir George resurface in what looks to be a black magic story later in book.
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Post by humgoo on Dec 1, 2022 14:30:28 GMT
Edward Heron-Allen - The Complete Shorter Fiction (Snuggly Books, 2019) A Note on the Texts A Chronology of the Stories
KISSES OF FATE Dedication / In Memoriam Forward by Way of Explanation The Suicide of Sylvester Gray The Story of a Younger Son The Silence of Mrs. Chariton's Children
A FATAL FIDDLE A Fatal Fiddle The Lute Girl's Charm An Atlantic Tragedy An Eternal Expiation My First Love An Induced Dream (?) A Desperate Remedy My Breach of Trust The Heresy of Spencer Carlyon Autobiography of a Disembodied Spirit
THE STRANGE PAPERS OF DR. BLAYRE Antescript The Purple Sapphire The House on the Way to Hell Aalila The Mirror that Remembered Purpura Lapillus Mano Pantea The Thing that Smelt The Blue Cockroach The Man Who Killed the Jew The Demon The Book The Cosmic Dust
THE CHEETAH-GIRL Note of Explanation The Cheetah-Girl
SOME WOMEN OF THE UNIVERSITY "Zum Wilbad" The Boots Another Squaw? Passiflora Vindica A Few Words in Explanation of the "The Cheetah-Girl"Blurb: Presented here for the first time in a single volume, is the entire corpus of short fiction by Edward Heron-Allen, one of England's most intriguing, and unnecessarily obscure, authors. From "The Suicide of Sylvester Gray," the novella which was an inspiration for The Portrait of Dorian Gray, by Oscar Wilde, a friend of Heron-Allen's, to "The Cheetah Girl," an outrageous masterpiece of biological science fiction, the present collection is a tour de force of the elegant, the bizarre, and the unmentionable.
With a total of thirty tales, the five volumes contained herein, many of which have previously only been obtainable for exorbitant prices, are now finally available in a proper format for connoisseurs, and the unafraid.At 574 pages, this is quite a door-stopper.
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