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Mary Danby

Author of 65 Great Spine Chillers

81+ Works 855 Members 18 Reviews

About the Author

Series

Works by Mary Danby

65 Great Spine Chillers (1982) — Editor — 98 copies, 2 reviews
65 Great Tales of the Supernatural (1979) — Editor; Contributor — 68 copies, 4 reviews
65 Great Tales of Horror (1981) — Editor — 66 copies
Realms of Darkness (1985) — Editor — 49 copies, 1 review
The 6th Fontana Book of Great Horror Stories (1971) — Editor — 28 copies
65 Great Murder Mysteries (1983) — Editor — 24 copies
Great Murder Mysteries (1985) — Editor — 23 copies
The Famous Five and You Underground! (1989) — Author — 18 copies
8th Armada Ghost Book (1976) 15 copies, 1 review
6th Armada Ghost Book (1974) 15 copies
4th Armada Ghost Book (1972) 14 copies, 1 review
The Famous Five and You Take Off! (1989) 12 copies, 1 review
The Awful Joke Book (1979) 12 copies
5th Armada Ghost Book (1980) 12 copies, 2 reviews
11th Armada Ghost Book (1979) 12 copies
Frighteners (1974) 11 copies
3rd Armada Ghost Book (1970) 11 copies, 1 review
The 7th Fontana Book of Great Horror Stories (1972) — Editor — 10 copies
Frighteners 2 (1976) 8 copies
7th Armada Ghost Book (1975) 8 copies
Famous Five Diary (1988) 8 copies
15th Armada Ghost Book (1984) 7 copies
The 11th Fontana Book of Great Horror Stories (1978) — Editor — 7 copies
9th Armada Ghost Book (1977) 6 copies
The Batty Book Book (1985) 6 copies
A Single Girl (1972) 5 copies
How Trivial Can You Get? (1986) 5 copies
The Armada book of fun (1971) 5 copies
Spooky Tales (1984) — Editor — 5 copies
Armada Book of Cartoons (1972) 3 copies
Nightmares (1983) 3 copies
12th Armada Ghost Book (1980) 3 copies
10th Armada Ghost Book (1978) 3 copies
Fun on Wheels (Armada) (1973) 2 copies
Fun for 5 Year Olds (1989) 2 copies
13th Armada Ghost Book (1981) 2 copies
Nightmares 2 (1984) 1 copy
CHRISTMAS FUN BOOK (1975) 1 copy
The Godsend 1 copy, 1 review
Let's Cook (1990) 1 copy

Associated Works

Haunting Women (1988) — Contributor — 41 copies, 1 review
Fear in the Blood (2024) — Contributor — 33 copies
Horrors, Horrors, Horrors (1978) — Contributor — 11 copies
The Haunted Dolls: An Anthology (1980) — Contributor — 9 copies, 1 review
Brighton Shock (2010) — Contributor — 9 copies
Creepies, Creepies, Creepies (1977) — Contributor — 6 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Members

Reviews

18 reviews
 I'm a lover of stories about evil children- I can't help myself. I'm happy to report that I loved this story too.
 
Alan and Kate have four children already when they meet a mysterious pregnant woman in the park. In a strange series of events, the woman ends up birthing her child in Alan and Kate's house and the story begins.
 
From there the atmosphere and tension continuously builds, always leaving the reader guessing. Always leaving the reader wondering at the truth. This story was show more skillfully told-you can feel the emotions of the parents as incidents continue to occur-and at times you want to hug them and at others you just want to shake some sense into them!
 

Then came that one sentence: "And Bonnie knew that I knew." A chilling shot of adrenaline went through me as I read it-I actually trembled a little bit.
It was delicious! 
 
To summarize, this book was a roaring good time, especially for those of you that grew up with movies and books like The Omen or The Bad Seed. If you like that type of story, you should pick up this novel. It's fast paced, atmospheric, suspenseful and just plain fun!
 
Highly recommended!
show less
A good collection of largely out of print short stories. There are no novellas here but some are longer than others. Notable for its inclusion of such authors as Winston Churchill and HP Lovecraft, it has some very good stories about fear, suspense and the supernatural. This is much better Han many modern anthologies in its variety and quality of its contents. I thought that this was very good and well worth sourcing out if you like short stories.
½
Another collection of stories that I've read - but ages ago and October is a good time for a reread. Another great purchase from a used bookstore. Most of these stories are often used in other anthologies, but there are only a few I'll skip or skim. (Like The Monkey's Paw - I really think I've read that enough in my lifetime at this point. But ones like The Upper Berth I can always read again.) No introduction - just the contents and the stories. (I always wonder how they were chosen if show more there's no information about that. Because I'm one of those people that always has to read introductions in hope of some fun bit of trivia or personal story.) Here and there you can tell that there's been a lack of editing - a wrong letter or wrong word used, nothing horrific, but it does happen at least every other story a time or two.

Still, there are lots of great story choices. For the amount of stories and their quality this is a great buy if you can hunt down a copy. Mine was about $5, and I really can't quibble with that.

You really can't say much about short stories - too risky for spoilers.

[*** is for myself, so I remember a particular one]

Contents:

Robert Aickman - Ringing the Changes
[Extremely creepy, don't know how I forgot about this one.]

A. J. Alan - My Adventure in Norfolk
[Ah ha, I wondered where this one was hiding. Has the car breakdown scenario I once had a conversation/questions about - the "do not add snow to empty radiator" issue.]***

S. Baring-Gould - The Leaden Ring
[Really need to read the Baring-Gould that are free on internet, I do like what I've read so far]

E. F. Benson - The Bus Conductor
[Very familiar to a "real life" story that wasn't really, I think I once blogged about it, urban legend, must research later. ...Here we go, see this review, under How He Left the Hotel by Louisa Baldwin - not the same story exactly, but similarities.]

Ambrose Bierce - The Middle Toe of the Right Foot
[Memorable, had to reread even though I remembered it. And it was better than I remembered.]

Charles Birkin - Little Boy Blue
[Sad, but then child ghosts do that to me]

Algernon Blackwood - Keeping His Promise
[Another one in many anthologies, for a reason]

Marjorie Bowen - Kecksies
[Very creepy, high marks, look up more by author]

D. K. Broster - Couching at the Door
[Another one I'd give high marks, intended to look up more by author]

John Burke - Don't You Dare
[Evil wife, a nasty piece of work. But then not just her...]

Thomas Burke - The Hollow Man

A. M. Burrage - Browdean Farm
[Haunted rental house]

R. Chetwynd-Hayes - A Vindictive Woman
[Grim, very creepy, high marks]

Hugh Crawford - The Ghoul
[Didn't remember this one. Annoying scientist alert.]

Adrian Cole - The Horror Under Penmire
[Had many Lovecraft was here" moments for me]

F. Marion Crawford - The Upper Berth
[Haunting on a ship. Still excellent.]

Mary Danby - The Engelmayer Puppets
[It's always satisfying when you hate the victim - deserving/evil victim!]

Charles Dickens - The Signal-Man
[Haunting at the railway.]

William Croft Dickinson - The House of Balfother
[Didn't remember this one. Tapers off unsatisfying way at end]

Arthur Conan Doyle - The Brown Hand
[Facepalm over "wrong hand" part.]

Amelia B. Edwards - The Phantom Coach
[Much anthologized, and worth it. Good old fashioned tale]

Celia Fremlin - Don't Tell Cissie
[Everyone knows a Cissy.]

Davis Grubb - The Horsehair Trunk
[Another ominous trunk in ghost story! Oddly trunk isn't as vital as ones in other stories like Hand in Glove (Elizabeth Bowen) or The Romance of Certain Old Clothes (Henry James)]

John Halkin - Bobby
[Car accident, more modern feel than most, very creepy]

Pamela Hansford-Johnson - Ghost of Honour

L. P. Hartley - Monkshood Manor
[House party weekend with ghost]

W. F. Harvey - The Ankardyne Pew
[Didn't remember this one. Nice vagueness in what was going on.]

Dorothy K. Haynes - Those Lights and Violins
[Very good, creepy description of hotel on the rock. Must check out more by author]

O. Henry - The Furnished Room
[Search for missing loved one ends in disappointment. Sort of.]

William Hope Hodgson - The Whistling Room
[Ghost detective. Slooooow to end itself.]

Robert Holdstock - Magic Man
[Here's a different setting - cave painter and tribe.]

Tom Hood - The Shadow of a Shade
[A woman's fiance travels to the North Pole on expedition, with a shipmate who is a bit too fond of the man's intended.]

Richard Hughes - A Night at a Cottage
[Insanely short, like just over a page]

Hammond Innes - South Sea Bubble
[Why it's a bad idea to buy really, oddly inexpensive boats.]

Washington Irving - The Spectre Bridegroom
[Melodrama, mildly amusing]

W. W. Jacobs - The Monkey's Paw
[In many anthologies]

M. R. James - Lost Hearts
[One of James' more bloody ones, but it's James so the gore is plot important.]

Gerald Kersh - Carnival on the Downs
[I am so slow, I completely didn't see the ghosts - well, where they ended up coming into the story. ...And can't really say more than that.]

Rudyard Kipling - The Mark of the Beast
[Much anthologized]

Nigel Kneale - Minuke
[I should make a list of "reluctant real estate agent" stories. This one is particularly good. ...Ah ha! This is the Kneale who wrote the Quatermass books that I've been meaning to read! Explains why this story reads very cinematic - unless there actually has been a movie made of it and I can't place it.] ***

J. Sheridan LeFanu - An Account of Some Strange Disturbances in Aungier Street
[More people should chat with their housekeeper/cleaning lady before deciding which room to sleep in. This seems to happen often, so just making a note of that.]

Key Leith - For the Love of Pamela
[Another house that has it in for the tenants - especially female tenants.]

H. P. Lovecraft - The Moon-Bog
[I do have a soft spot for Lovecraft and his male narrators who faint.]

Roger Malisson - A Fair Lady
[Not so innocent country town. Was a movie made of this? Feels so familiar.]

Joyce Marsh - The Master of Blas Gwynedd
[Dog story, but well told - I do like a conversational narrator]

Guy de Maupassant - Who Knows?
[Note to self - this is the de Maupassant story you could never remember the name of, and possibly didn't recognize in the collected stories because of a different translator. For everyone else - this story of...mental issues shall we say, is even more disturbing when you read the author's biography. There, now it's even creepier, isn't it?!] ***

Daphne du Maurier - The Apple Tree
[Older, unhappy couple, neither of them very nice]

E. Nesbit - John Charrington's Wedding
[Much anthologized, always find that the story seems particularly unfair for the bride.]

Alfred Noyles - Midnight Express
[Circular story, about an odd book. Book stories usually interest me - this one, somehow not so much.]

Roger B. Pile - Mary
[Parents and child story - sad]

Edgar Allen Poe - The Facts in the Case of M. Valdemar
[Another highly anthologized, mesmerism and the dead]

V. S. Pritchett - A Story of Don Juan
[Much anthologized. Oddly have never looked up more by author, should check on that]

Saki - The Open Window
[Read back in high school English lit. Insanely short and for the amount of text, a lot is described.]

William Samsom - A Woman Seldom Found

Robert Louis Stevenson - The Body-Snatcher
[Another highly anthologized, but still really damn creepy]

Bernard Taylor - Travelling Light

Rosemary Timperley - The Deathly Silence

Mark Twain - A Ghost Story
[Famous ghost story with the Twain humor. Helps to know this history. Now wondering where I first heard of that history, I know I have some sort of history and hoaxes book somewhere, maybe on P. T. Barnum?]

Tim Vicary - Guest Room
[So damn sad, and outside of setting that claims it for particular time period. Dammit book, you're supposed to creep me out not make me cry.]

H. Russell Wakefield - The Triumph of Death
[Excellent and can't remember reading it before. Also sad, in a way, but high level of creep.]

Hugh Walpole - Mrs. Lunt
[Creepy, and about bookish sorts of folk, for which I give it extra points.]

Elizabeth Walter - The Hollies and the Ivy
[More things to consider if renovating an old house.]

H. G. Wells - The Red Room
[A ghost story, yet not a ghost story.]

Edith Wharton - All Souls
[Very good up until the end, when there's a little bit too much explanation. Which doesn't really explain it, but still. Not the best end Wharton has done.]

Dennis Wheatley - The Case of the Long-Dead Lord
[Psychic Holmes and Watson]
show less
Obviously written for tween readers, these "ghost" stories are rather tepid and guaranteed not to cause nightmares. Nice cover art though.
½

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Associated Authors

Edgar Allan Poe Contributor
Arthur Conan Doyle Contributor
Dennis Wheatley Contributor
Robert Bloch Contributor
Roald Dahl Contributor
Bram Stoker Contributor
Guy de Maupassant Contributor
H. G. Wells Contributor
E. F. Benson Contributor
R. Chetwynd-Hayes Contributor
Enid Blyton Contributor, Creator, Author
W. W. Jacobs Contributor
Agatha Christie Contributor
Thomas Burke Contributor
H. P. Lovecraft Contributor
Hugh Walpole Contributor
L. P. Hartley Contributor
Kay Leith Contributor
Ambrose Bierce Contributor
M. R. James Contributor
Terry Tapp Contributor
E. Nesbit Contributor
Celia Fremlin Contributor
C. S. Forester Contributor
Winston Graham Contributor
Catherine Gleason Contributor
Ramsey Campbell Contributor
Gerald Kersh Contributor
Stephen Grendon Contributor
Patricia Highsmith Contributor
Robert Arthur Contributor
Marjorie Bowen Contributor
Charles Dickens Contributor
Rudyard Kipling Contributor
Saki Contributor
Algernon Blackwood Contributor
F. Marion Crawford Contributor
Nigel Kneale Contributor
Henry Kuttner Contributor
Richard Matheson Contributor
Elizabeth Fancett Contributor
Evelyn Waugh Contributor
Elizabeth Bowen Contributor
Tony Richards Contributor
Flavia Richardson Contributor
Stephen King Contributor
Bernard Taylor Contributor
Roger Malisson Contributor
Charles Birkin Contributor
Davis Grubb Contributor
Dorothy K. Haynes Contributor
Washington Irving Contributor
Elizabeth Walter Contributor
Adrian Cole Contributor
Rosemary Timperley Contributor
Amelia B. Edwards Contributor
L. A. Lewis Contributor
Joyce Marsh Contributor
Kate Rogers Illustrator
David Dixon Contributor
Enid Bagnold Contributor
Joan Aiken Contributor
Mary Williams Contributor
John Wyndham Contributor
Roy Harrison Contributor
Theo Gift Contributor
Cynthia Asquith Contributor
Glyn Jones Contributor
William Charlton Contributor
Gerald Bullett Contributor
Mark Channing Contributor
Denys Val Baker Contributor
David H. Keller Contributor
May Sinclair Contributor
Lennox Robinson Contributor
Michael Cornish Contributor
Anthony Gittins Contributor
Winston Churchill Contributor
Ogden Nash Contributor
Rick  Ferreira Contributor
A E D Smith Contributor
Norman Matson Contributor
Basil Tozer Contributor
Lady Eleanor Smith Contributor
Clark Ashton Smith Contributor
P.C. Wren Contributor
Perceval Landon Contributor
Jerome K. Jerome Contributor
Trevor Parkin Illustrator
Rupert Croft-Cooke Contributor
Phyllis Bentley Contributor
Nancy Spain Contributor
Jack London Contributor
John Steinbeck Contributor
Barry Perowne Contributor
Pauline C Smith Contributor
Dorothy L. Sayers Contributor
Sidney Carroll Contributor
Eric Ambler Contributor
Sapper Contributor
Marc Connelly Contributor
Francis Iles Contributor
Roger F. Dunkley Contributor
G. K. Chesterton Contributor
Anthony Wynne Contributor
Dick Donovan Contributor
Robert Graves Contributor
W. F. Harvey Contributor
P. D. James Contributor
Michael Kent Contributor
Lord Dunsany Contributor
John Keir Cross Contributor
Anthony Berkeley Contributor
Edgar Wallace Contributor
Peter Fleming Contributor
Maurice Leblanc Contributor
Margery Allingham Contributor
Georges Simenon Contributor
Julian Symons Contributor
William Trevor Contributor
Margot Arnold Contributor
Andrea Newman Contributor
John D. MacDonald Contributor
Muriel Spark Contributor
Arnold Bennett Contributor
Margery Sharp Contributor
Tom Hood Contributor
Daphne Du Maurier Contributor
J. Sheridan LeFanu Contributor
A. J. Alan Contributor
V. S. Pritchett Contributor
A. M. Burrage Contributor
Tim Vicary Contributor
Robert Aickman Contributor
John Halkin Contributor
Hugh Clifford Contributor
D. K. Broster Contributor
O. Henry Contributor
Roger B. Pile Contributor
Edith Wharton Contributor
William Sansom Contributor
Alfred Noyes Contributor
Hammond Innes Contributor
Robert Holdstock Contributor
Mark Twain Contributor
Seabury Quinn Contributor
Frederick Marryat Contributor
William Faulkner Contributor
R. E. Vernede Contributor
Jane Gaskell Contributor
A. E. Ellis Contributor
John Collier Contributor
Ray Bradbury Contributor
Harry E Turner Contributor
Angus Wilson Contributor
David Langford Contributor
Henry James Contributor
Frances Stephens Contributor
Clive Pemberton Contributor
Edward Lucas White Contributor
R C Cook Contributor
Monica Dickens Contributor
Theodore Sturgeon Contributor
Hal Pink Contributor
Anthony Burgess Contributor
Truman Capote Contributor
Robert Silverberg Contributor
Henry S. Whitehead Contributor
T. H. White Contributor
Jane Rice Contributor
Sydney J. Bounds Contributor
William F. Temple Contributor
Hanns Heinz Ewers Contributor
Fannie Hurst Contributor
Philip MacDonald Contributor
Hortense Calisher Contributor
Stanley Ellin Contributor
Denys Val Baker Contributor
Henry Slesar Contributor
Sterling E. Lanier Contributor
Paul Theroux Contributor
John Dickson Carr Contributor
Michael Joseph Contributor
Anthony Boucher Contributor
Margaret Irwin Contributor
Martin Amis Contributor
August Derleth Contributor
F. G. Loring Contributor
J. B. Priestley Contributor
Willis Hall Contributor
John Galt Contributor
Edmund Mitchell Contributor
Frank Belknap Long Contributor
Arthur Morrison Contributor
Barnard Stacey Contributor
Frederick Cowles Contributor
Christopher Lee Introduction
C.D. Heriot Contributor
A. Erskine Ellis Contributor
Christianna Brand Contributor
Agnes Short Contributor
Roger Clarke Contributor
Geoffrey Household Contributor
George Hitchcock Contributor
Bill Pronzini Contributor
Agnes Macleod Contributor
Alan Temperley Contributor
Frederic Brown Contributor
Elizabeth Gaskell Contributor
Michael Gilbert Contributor
Mrs. Gaskell Contributor
Palma Harcourt Contributor
Elizabeth Ferrars Contributor
Fredric Brown Contributor
Antonia Fraser Contributor
Mor Jokai Contributor
Baroness Orczy Contributor
Peter Lovesey Contributor
M McD Bodkin Contributor
Jacques Futrelle Contributor
John Rhode Contributor
Ivor Drummond Contributor
Peter Archer Illustrator
Gavin Rowe Illustrator
Sax Rohmer Contributor
Dylan Thomas Contributor
M. R. James Contributor
Thomas Hood Contributor
Eric Kincaid Illustrator
David Campton Contributor
Philippa Pearce Contributor
Lance Salway Contributor
Roger Smith Illustrator
Pamela Vincent Contributor
Walter R. Brooks Contributor
Kenneth Ireland Contributor
Dave Eastbury Cover artist
Ruth Ainsworth Contributor
Jean Stubbs Contributor
Les Edwards Cover artist

Statistics

Works
81
Also by
7
Members
855
Popularity
#29,931
Rating
½ 3.8
Reviews
18
ISBNs
123
Languages
6

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