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Classic Horror Lovers discussion

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Must Read Classic Horror Lists > The Definitive List: Authors of Classic Horror

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message 1: by Simon (last edited Nov 27, 2015 03:42AM) (new)

Simon (friedegg) | 133 comments I am interested in compiling a list (alphabetic) of the great authors of classic horror. I will maintain the list in this post and update it whenever someone else cares to nominate an author. I shall limit this list to include authors who started writing horror prior to the 1960's.

I will also include with each author a suggested definitive work(s). I hope this list will prove useful to both existing fans of the genre in finding new authors and to newbies who are just discovering the genre.

Aickman, Robert - (Cold Hand in Mine)
Andreyev, Leonid - (Lazarus)
Beckford, William - (Vathek)
Benson E. F. - (The Collected Ghost Stories of E.F. Benson)
Bierce, Ambrose - (An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge)
Blackwood, Algernon - (Ancient Sorceries and Other Weird Stories)
Bloch, Robert - (Psycho)
Bradbury, Ray - (The October Country)
Brontë, Emily - (Wuthering Heights)
Brown, Charles Brockden - (Wieland)
Buchan, John - (The Watcher By The Threshold And Other Tales)
Chambers, Robert W. - (The King in Yellow and Other Horror Stories)
Crawford, Marion - (The Upper Berth)
Doyle, Arthur Conan - (Tales of Terror and Mystery)
Ewers, Hanns Heinz - (Alraune)
Gaskell, Elizabeth - (The Old Nurse's Story)
Gilman, Charlotte Perkins - (The Yellow Wallpaper and Other Stories)
Hartley, L.P. - (Feet Foremost)
Hawthorne, Nathaniel - (The House of Seven Gables)
Hodgson, William Hope - (The House on the Borderland, Voice in the Night)
Hogg, James - (The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner)
Howard, Elizabeth Jane - (Three Miles Up)
Howard, Robert E. - (The Horror Stories of Robert E. Howard)
Irving, Washington - (The Legend of Sleepy Hollow)
Jackson, Shirley - (The Haunting of Hill House, The Lottery)
James, Henry - (The Turn of the Screw)
James, Montague Rhodes - (Count Magnus & Other Ghost Stories)
Kafka, Franz - (The Metamorphosis)
Le Fanu, Joseph Sheridan - (In a Glass Darkly)
Lee, Vernon - (Hauntings and Other Fantastic Tales)
Leiber, Fritz - (Conjure Wife)
Lewis Matthew Gregory - (The Monk)
Lovecraft, H.P. - (The Call of Cthulhu and Other Weird Stories)
Machen, Arthur - (The House of Souls)
Marryat, Frederick - (The Phantom Ship)
Marsh, Richard - (The Beetle)
Matheson, Richard - (I Am Legend)
Maturin Charles - (Melmoth the Wanderer)
Maupassant, Guy de - (Tales Of Supernatural Terror)
Maurier, Daphne du - (The Birds, Rebecca)
Meyrink, Gustav - (The Golem)
O'Donnell, Elliott - (Bounding Figure)
Onions Oliver - (The Beckoning Fair One)
Poe Edgar Allan - (Tales of Mystery and Imagination)
Radcliffe, Ann - (The Mysteries of Udolpho)
Shelley, Mary - (Frankenstein)
Smith, Clark Ashton - (The Dark Eidolon)
Stevenson, Robert Louis - (The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde: And Other Tales of Terror)
Stoker, Bram - (Dracula)
Villiers de L'Isle-Adam, Auguste de - (Contes Cruels)
Wakefield, H. Russell - (Strayers from Sheol)
Walpole, Horace - (The Castle of Otranto)
Wellman, Manly Wade - (Who Fears the Devil)
Wheatley, Dennis - (The Devil Rides Out)


message 2: by [deleted user] (new)

King: The Shining (Did King complete his major work before 1980? or is his post-1980 work as significant?)
Bradbury: The October Country
Robert Bloch: Collected Stories
Clark Ashton Smith: there are so many various collections it's hard to determine a single title.
Ramsey Campbell: Alone with the Horrors
Henry James: Turn of the Screw


message 3: by Simon (new)

Simon (friedegg) | 133 comments Thanks for the suggestions.

I suppose King can just about count...

I added Bloch but couldn't find anything by him called "Collected Stories" (on GoodReads) so I added "Psycho" instead since that is probably his most famous work?


message 4: by Martha (new)

Martha (hellocthulhu) | 325 comments Mod
I have a bit of an issue with King being included in this group, and possibly Bloch as well. I think they may be too modern. Campbell may just sneak by, IMO. I'm interested to see what Danielle thinks.


message 5: by Simon (new)

Simon (friedegg) | 133 comments Well, didn't Bloch write most of his work before 1980?

As for King, I think you may be right. While the suggested novel ("The Shining") was written prior to 1980, it's probably not true to say that the main body of his work was prior to 1980. Perhaps I shall remove him...


message 6: by Danielle The Book Huntress , Jamesian Enthusiast (last edited Jun 03, 2011 08:14AM) (new)

 Danielle The Book Huntress  (gatadelafuente) | 1347 comments Mod
I think we came up with prior to 1960 as the cutoff for "Classic Horror" designation for this group. We don't want to step on any toes since there is a very active and very good Modern Horror group on GRs already. For that reason, I don't think we can count King.

I believe that Robert Bloch started writing in the 1920s, so I would definitely count him as Classic Horror.

Thanks for starting the thread, Simon. Good idea.


message 7: by [deleted user] (new)

We probably have to determine what "classic" means; does it refer to a certain time period or to the influence/reputation of the authors and works. Are "modern" and "classic" incompatible?


message 8: by Danielle The Book Huntress , Jamesian Enthusiast (new)

 Danielle The Book Huntress  (gatadelafuente) | 1347 comments Mod
For the purposes of this group, Classic Horror is horror published prior to 1960s. The goal of this group is to discuss and rediscover some of the old gems of horror literature that are known and some that were fairly obscure.

Classic Horror Vein is modern work that has the sensibilities and the style of older horror stories/writers. We do discuss the modern but classic-styled horror, but really this group is for the oldies.


message 9: by Martha (new)

Martha (hellocthulhu) | 325 comments Mod
We will have to stick to a certain time period. Certainly I don't want to have too much overlap with the major horror group on GR. I think many modern authors get enough discussions there.


message 10: by Simon (new)

Simon (friedegg) | 133 comments Danielle, if the "official" designation of classic horror for this group is prior to 1960, I update the first post accordingly. It will mean dropping a few off the list above including Robert Aickman, Richard Matheson, Ramsey Campbell, etc.


message 11: by Danielle The Book Huntress , Jamesian Enthusiast (new)

 Danielle The Book Huntress  (gatadelafuente) | 1347 comments Mod
Richard Matheson is definitely on the edge. He has work he wrote in the 1950s, correct? If so, I think we're okay with including him. Same for Shirley Jackson. What do you think, Martha?


message 12: by Danielle The Book Huntress , Jamesian Enthusiast (new)

 Danielle The Book Huntress  (gatadelafuente) | 1347 comments Mod
If you want to have a list for authors from the Modern Period who write Classic Horror, feel free to start one, Simon.


message 13: by Simon (new)

Simon (friedegg) | 133 comments Martha wrote: "We will have to stick to a certain time period. Certainly I don't want to have too much overlap with the major horror group on GR. I think many modern authors get enough discussions there."

Yes, I know what you mean. But I think that some horror authors are almost falling in between the gaps a bit here. The likes of Aickman and Campbell for instance who wrote a lot in the 60's and 70's get largely ignored by the modern horror crowd and yet are deemed too recent for "classic" status.


message 14: by Martha (new)

Martha (hellocthulhu) | 325 comments Mod
I Am Legend was originally published in 1954, and Stir of Echoes in 1958, so I think we can count Matheson, even though some of his more famous work like Hell House were written later.


message 15: by Danielle The Book Huntress , Jamesian Enthusiast (new)

 Danielle The Book Huntress  (gatadelafuente) | 1347 comments Mod
Then you should include Aickman and Campbell. I'm fine with that.


message 16: by Simon (new)

Simon (friedegg) | 133 comments I've changed the criteria in the opening post to: "...include authors who started writing horror prior to the 1960's."

Therefore, I've kept Aickman (who published his first stories in the 50's) and dropped Campbell (who didn't start publishing until 1964).


message 17: by [deleted user] (new)

1960 seems like a good cutting-off point, since it allows the inclusion of the "golden age" of the pulps but excludes the rise of modern horror again the 1970s (King, Levin, etc.). Unfortunately,too, it does exclude someone like Campbell, whose writing owes a great deal to the earlier golden age (Lovecraft) as well as to earlier writers (like M.R. James).


message 18: by Kurt (new)

Kurt Reichenbaugh (kurtreichenbaugh) | 54 comments Sheridan Le Fanu - Best Ghost Stories or another collection named In a Glass Darkly.


message 19: by Kurt (new)

Kurt Reichenbaugh (kurtreichenbaugh) | 54 comments Also some other classics:

The Monk by Matthew Gregory Lewis
The Mysteries of Udolpho by Anne Radcliffe
The Beetle by Richard Marsh
Vathek by William Beckford

Probably only read by English majors anymore, but still worth reading.


message 20: by Simon (new)

Simon (friedegg) | 133 comments Thanks for those suggestions. The list has been updated. Keep them coming!


message 21: by Shawn (new)

Shawn | 333 comments Gustav Meyrink - The Golem


message 22: by Danielle The Book Huntress , Jamesian Enthusiast (new)

 Danielle The Book Huntress  (gatadelafuente) | 1347 comments Mod
I'd suggest Manly Wade Wellman. He started writing in the mid 1900s. He's well known for his Silver John stories: Who Fears the Devil

Here is a link to a page in his honor:




message 23: by Simon (new)

Simon (friedegg) | 133 comments Thanks.

I'm away for a couple of weeks so I won't be able to update the list for a while.


message 25: by Simon (new)

Simon (friedegg) | 133 comments James wrote: "Surely:

Robert Lois Stevenson - The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde: And Other Tales of Terror"


Noted.


message 26: by Karen (new)

Karen (kazzakrisanna) | 34 comments E F Benson - How Fear Departed the Long Gallery
L P Hartley - Feet Foremost
Elliott O'Donnell - The Bounding Figure


message 27: by Martha (new)

Martha (hellocthulhu) | 325 comments Mod
Thanks Karen, I will look for those when we start up group story reads again.


message 28: by Simon (new)

Simon (friedegg) | 133 comments Thanks Karen, list updated (although I couldn't find the books/stories you suggested on goodreads, hence no links).


message 29: by Karen (last edited Jan 16, 2012 07:30AM) (new)

Karen (kazzakrisanna) | 34 comments Simon wrote: "Thanks Karen, list updated (although I couldn't find the books/stories you suggested on goodreads, hence no links)."

'How Fear Departed the Long Gallery' is in a collection called 'Hauntings & Horrors: The Collected Ghost Stories of E F Benson' £1.40 from Amazon uk; both that & 'The Bounding Figure' by Elliott O'Donell are available to read online at Horrormasters.com; 'Feet Foremost' by L P Hartley is difficult to find (as are all L P Hartley's stories), but is available to read online at donaldcorrell.com. Hope that helps. (I don't know how to provide links, I'm not very computer literate lol)


message 30: by Simon (new)

Simon (friedegg) | 133 comments Thanks Keith. I've no idea how William Hope Hodgson got missed from the list.


message 32: by Simon (new)

Simon (friedegg) | 133 comments Updated.


message 33: by Ron (new)

Ron | 24 comments Charlotte Perkins Gilman: The Yellow Wallpaper
Robert Chambers: The King in Yellow
Anyone recall the story about the 'Vivisectionist'? It was based on a real person who bound some books in human skin, can't recall his name or the author of the story due to current...circumstances. Great story...oh well, let's see...
Algernon Blackwood: I can't choose a fave
Lord Dunsany: The Two Bottles of Relish
Robert E. Howard: Pigeons From Hell
Clark Ashton Smith probably deserves a spot in there, also


message 34: by Dfordoom (new)

Dfordoom | 9 comments Auguste Villiers de l'Isle-Adam should be on the list.

Also Charles Brockden Brown whose Wieland from 1798 marks the beginning of American gothic.

John Buchan is best remembered for his spy novels but he wrote some excellent horror, such as The Watcher by the Threshold.

Vernon Lee could be included on the basis of her Hauntings (1890).


message 35: by Dfordoom (new)

Dfordoom | 9 comments I'd also be inclined to include Nathaniel Hawthorne. As well as House of the Seven Gables he wrote some fine gothic short stories.


message 36: by Simon (new)

Simon (friedegg) | 133 comments Okay, thanks for those suggestions. I've added most of them. Algernon Blackwood, Robert Howard and Clark Ashton Smith were already on the list.


message 37: by Char (new)

Char Ron, nice list! I loved The Yellow Wallpaper.


message 38: by Simon (new)

Simon (friedegg) | 133 comments Added H.R. Wakefield.


message 39: by Shawn (new)

Shawn | 333 comments Fans of E.F. Benson may want to check out...

This week on Pseudopod.....
300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!300!.... Episode 300!

A very bad man can't shake the feeling that some...one? is following him...

It's by E.F. Benson, read for you by Frank Key!


message 40: by Mark (new)

Mark McLaughlin (mark_mclaughlin) | 35 comments Just yesterday, I put on Amazon.com's Listmania my list of classic single-author fiction collections. It includes folks like Robert Aickman, Ramsey Campbell, H.R. Wakefield, Clark Ashton Smith, August Derleth, Basil Copper, and of course, H.P. Lovecraft...




message 41: by Martha (new)

Martha (hellocthulhu) | 325 comments Mod
That's a really great list, Mark! There's some authors on there I still need to check out.


message 42: by David (new)

David Elkin | 124 comments A summation by Drake Morgan:




message 43: by Robert (new)

Robert Dunbar | 18 comments Amazing list, Simon. And thanks, everyone who added titles. I am SO stealing these to add to my bookshelf. AND a "summation" by Drake Morgan! I am such a fan.


message 44: by Ron (last edited Oct 08, 2013 10:00AM) (new)

Ron | 24 comments Hanns Heinz Ewers - My personal fave is the novel 'Alraune' (my fave horror of all time, actually), but his most read and discussed is his short story 'The Spider'.

Not certain if you'd class M.P. Shiel's 'The Purple Cloud' as horror or Sci-fi, but Lovecraft dug it. (and Cormac McCarthy was the latest to rip the plot for 'the Road')

Miss Bronte (with them there dots above the 'e') should prolly get a mention for Wuthering Heights.

Cpt. Fredrick Marryatt - The Phantom Ship

And how about some credit to a fella named Hugo for his truly depressing epic 'Hunchback of Notre Dame'?

Edit: Oh, and if its not too recent, John Farris 'Wildwood'.


message 45: by Ron (last edited Oct 08, 2013 10:16AM) (new)

Ron | 24 comments oh....and Hugh B. Cave - the early stuff was shaky, but he turned into a real Pro. Its hard for me to name just one, but I suppose his collection Murgunstrumm and Others would work (although I never really cared for the title story - bad pastiche).

Leonid Andreyev - Lazarus (killer story)

Erckman-Chartrain - The Wolf-Man and Other Stories (well, they're actually two writers...)

Fritz Leiber - Conjure Wife, maybe?

...How about some version of Faust(us)? Goethe is great, but the revision ended it on a happy note. If plays are in, Marlowe would be the natural - the only wholly supernatural Elizabethan play in Joshi's estimation (and who amongst us shall question THE S.T.??? ;) )


message 46: by Simon (new)

Simon (friedegg) | 133 comments Thanks for those suggestions Ron, most of which have been added.


message 47: by Holly (new)

Holly (goldikova) Personally, I have to say what a huge relief it is to know that Stephen King books are not included in our discussions. There are plenty of other groups out there for the discussion of his work.......and this is a great place for those of use who really don't care to discuss it anymore!


message 48: by Rick (new)

Rick Bachman | 26 comments Glad to see E.F. Benson on your list. "The Room in the Tower", is one of my all time favorites.


message 49: by Elisa (new)

Elisa | 1 comments Very good list. Some other books I'd suggest are:

Kafka, Franz - The Metamorphosis (1915)
Irving, Washington - The Legend of Sleepy Hollow (1820)


message 50: by Simon (new)

Simon (friedegg) | 133 comments Added.


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