Picture of author.

Alexander Laing (1903–1976)

Author of The Haunted Omnibus

17+ Works 428 Members 6 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Image credit: Uncredited image found at Guggenheim Foundation website

Works by Alexander Laing

Associated Works

The Life & Adventures of John Nicol Mariner (1822) — Foreword, some editions — 164 copies, 8 reviews

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Laing, Alexander Kinnan
Birthdate
1903-08-07
Date of death
1976-04-23
Gender
male
Relationships
Laing, Dilys Bennett (wife)
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Great Neck, New York, USA
Place of death
Hanover, New Hampshire, USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

6 reviews
Interesting and somewhat unique novel marred by uneven writing, several interesting threads that go nowhere or are abandoned, and a weak ending. The threads about teratology and psychic transference (or is it demonology?) that lend so much to the weirdness of the novel are abandoned (or ignored) or treated as irrelevant in the end much to the disappointment of the reader and leaves the finish somewhat more mundane than all the buildup promises.

A grudging four stars for just plain weirdness show more through most of the book.

Typically overrated by Karl Edward Wagner.
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I bought this book after it was suggested by a friend, who I think got it as a suggestion from a book of suggestions. That was probably 10-15 years ago. I was worried that it might be really cheesy considering it was written in 1934, but it turned out to be a lot of fun and it was definitely filled with some pretty twisted ideas. I loved the language and the mystery and the footnotes (which are left out of more modern printings).

It's really more of a mystery than a horror story, but there's show more some creepy events and possible "supernatural" occurrences that bring it into the horror genre. show less
A pretty grim little mystery novel with a fistful of unethical medical experiments and a whole host of interesting characters thrown in for good measure. Unfortunately, there is an absurd amount of redundancy in the writing and the book drags mercilessly during middle 200 pages. I have come to understand that Laing re-edited the work for the book's second edition, removing almost 100 pages of extraneous material. I read his original version and suspect I'd have found the book far more show more enjoyable with tighter pacing.

Fascinating for its gritty approach and its unique position in the early days of noir fiction, the book is worth reading in spite of its flaws, but I would have a difficult time recommending it to anyone not already a fan of the genre. This is 'deep cut' material indeed. Plenty to enjoy, but with a very steep curve due to some of the technical challenges.
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Do not read the 228 page edition of this book! If you did, well you haven't read it. Read the 376 page or longer editions.

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Associated Authors

Thomas Painter Joint author
Armstrong Sperry Illustrator
Lynd Ward Illustrator

Statistics

Works
17
Also by
1
Members
428
Popularity
#57,055
Rating
3.8
Reviews
6
ISBNs
24
Favorited
1

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