THE FAVORITE WEIRD TALES OF
AUGUST W. DERLETH

(Courtesy of H. Koenig)

The Willows A. Blackwood
The Inhabitant of Carcosa A. Bierce
The Yellow Sign R. W. Chambers
The Upper Berth F. Marion Crawford
The Monkey's Paw W. W. Jacobs
A View from a Hill M. R. James
Seaton's Aunt W. de la Mare
The House of Sounds M. P. Shiel
Dream of Armageddon H. G. Wells
Shadows on the Wall Mary E. Wilkins Freeman

YOUR VIEWS

[Readers are invited to make free use of this department. However, we must ask you to be brief, due to the limited space available.]

"If the devil suddenly materialized, horns, tail, hooves, brimstone and all, sneaking in at the midnight hour and sat down beside one of us ordinary disbelieving mortals—well, that's my own idea of a good weird story! Most stories react upon one rather distantly. They communicate merely a distant mental fear, and not a physical fear. If I were to choose the most entertaining book I have ever read, I would unquestionably name 'Seven Footprints to Satan' by A. Merritt. Just as unhesitatingly I would name him as the insuperable weird writer, since I have never experienced the physical fleshly cowardice of the preternatural, either in actual life or in imaginative reconstruction of fiction, more vividly than when I contacted Lucifer in person in that book. What is the best weird fiction narrative ever penned? Vote one from yours truly goes to 'Seven Footprints to Satan'."—J. Harvey Haggard

"Seabury Quinn is my favorite author for his clever little brain-child, Jules de Grandin. Bless his li'l heart—the monsieur can combine humor with work before one can bat an eyelash. Pouff!—the mystery is solved. The very manner the author uses in his writings suits me best of all—one is held in suspense until almost the end when a few brief explanations solve the whole riddle."—Gertrude Hemken.


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