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Black Spirits and
White
-
- by Ralph Adams Cram
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- With an Introduction to Black Spirits
& White by Stefan Dziemianowicz, and an
Introduction to the Uncollected Stories by Douglas A.
Anderson
-
- Black
Spirits and White, a collection of six stories originally
published in 1895, is regarded as a landmark of the
nineteenth-century weird tale. H.P. Lovecraft singled out
the story 'The Dead Valley' as one of the small
percentage of American works deserving of high praise in
his seminal essay 'Supernatural Horror in Literature'. In
the decades since Cram's death in 1942, the book's
reputation has only improved. The stories, researched
during Cram's travels through Europe as a young man, are
sublime renderings of the Gothic tradition.
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- By 1900
Cram's career as one of America's leading architects had
taken off, and he gave up writing fiction. What is less
well known is that, amongst poetry and drama, he had also
written and published two further stories:
The Decadent; or, the Gospel of
Inaction (1893), about an æsthete's retreat
from the world into art, ripe with the influence of Oscar
Wilde and a Decadent spirit that provoked public
controversy, and 'How Jamie Rode for the King' (1897), an
historical adventure set in the Scotland of the Jacobite
rebellion. These two tales have never before been
collected, and 'How Jamie Rode for the King' is reprinted
here for the first time since its original magazine
publication.
-
- In his
new Introduction, Stefan Dziemianowicz provides a
comprehensive summary of Cram's life and architectural
career, and a critical appreciation of the stories of
Black Spirits and White. Douglas A.
Anderson explores the uncollected stories within the
context of Cram's other literary work.
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- Black
Spirits and White will be a sewn hardback of 145+xxi pages.
Limited to 300 copies. Price £30/$55 inc. p&p.
ISBN 1872621880. Publication 30th November 2004.
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- Reviews:
- ". . . beautifully produed, a pleasure to
read and handle . . . Quite apart from it's
intrinsic literary value, this book is a reminder to us
British that the aesthetic movement in America did not
begin and end with Oscar wilde declaring his genius to a
New York customs official." - Reggie Oliver,
All Hallows
- "All
in all the volume -- gorgeously produced as it's always
the case with Tartarus -- offers some superb supernatural
stories . . . " - William Simmons, Infinity
Plus
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Page updated 8th November 2005
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