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Herbert A. Wise (1892–1961)

Author of Great Tales of Terror and the Supernatural

1 Work 733 Members 12 Reviews

About the Author

Works by Herbert A. Wise

Great Tales of Terror and the Supernatural (1944) — Editor — 733 copies, 12 reviews

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Wise, Herbert A.
Legal name
Wise, Herbert Alvin
Birthdate
1892-12-06
Date of death
1961-10-03
Gender
male
Education
Columbia University
Occupations
editor
author
philanthropist
art patron
financier
Relationships
Cerf, Bennett (nephew)
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
New York, New York, USA
Places of residence
New York, New York, USA
Place of death
New York, New York, USA
Associated Place (for map)
New York, New York, USA

Members

Reviews

13 reviews
My 2011 'review' of this read, in its entirety "This is the single finest collection of tales of the supernatural I have ever encountered. Wall to wall classics of their kind."

I don't violently disagree with this ten years later; however, because I just completed my first complete read of the book, I would like to say a little more.

First: I think it was silly of me to declare this as the 'finest' of its kind when I haven't read that many of its kind. Ahem. It's a wide-ranging anthology that show more contains stuff from roughly the early 19th (Balzac, et al) to the early 20th centuries. It ends with a pair of Lovecraft stories, & he died in 1937.

The editors' split of the material into tales of 'terror' (alarming but explicable, even if you have to stretch) and 'the supernatural' (inexplicable without allowing the existence of realms or powers beyond the known) is *somewhat* artificial. Poe's "The Facts in the Case of M. Valdemar" for example, fits better for me under "supernatural." Plus this means if you are a completist reader like me, and you are really far more interested in the "supernatural," you have to wade through the tales of "terror" that come first. This isn't that big a burden, however, since many of them are excellent and exciting.

What else to say? of the major "supernatural" writers, their choices are for the most part solid. The slight exception, I'd say, is Algernon Blackwood. His "Ancient Sorceries," included here, is far better than I remember it being on first reading, but "Confession," while not bad, should have made way for either "The Willows" or "The Wendigo," in my opinion. The editors say neither of these were included because of how often they're anthologized, but that didn't stop them from including "Green Tea" for Le Fanu.

But these are quibbles. This is a great anthology, full of old chestnuts AND neat surprises, and is still a fine introduction to the genre. NB: all the writers are male. I just called this to mind. Hmm.
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This anthology was my favorite book of all time from the age of 10 until the age of 12. I spent the weekend re-reading it. There are many favorite stories here that almost everyone has heard of and read: The Most Dangerous Game, Leiningen Versus the Ants, Shredni Vashtar, The Open Window, The Monkey's Paw.. Many here are still widely read because they were anthologized here first.

For the most part the stories still thrilled me. Even so I could not get over how many of them used the framing show more device of a bunch of white Englishmen at the club who are just lighting their cigars and settling down to hear one man's hair-raising yarn...or something very close to it. A few are culturally offensive, relying on witch-doctor tropes and colonial points of view that jar, but mostly their frame of reference is stiff-upper-lippish, rather than unreadably inappropriate. I still love them all albeit nostalgically at times rather than for their currency. show less
One hardly expects to be transfixed by an innocent looking Modern Library horror collection--one expects a rather dry "representative historical collection." This one though has an atmosphere about it, though . . . the lines of influence run fairly strongly through the stories of this collection. While the authors, styles and approaches to creating a sense of the uncanny are distinct, there is also something mutually reinforcing in these stories. A really great collection.
If you never read another horror anthology, if you even hate horror, you should read this one anthology just to make sure you round out your literary background. The one essential classic anthology that has NEVER been bettered since it was first published. Cannot really be compared to anything else.

If you are a horror buff, then you owe it to yourself to read this to find out where it all came from and what the best can be.

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Associated Authors

Charles Dickens Contributor
A. E. Coppard Contributor
Walter de la Mare Contributor
F. Marion Crawford Contributor
Geoffrey Household Contributor
Conrad Aiken Contributor
W. W. Jacobs Contributor
Oliver Onions Contributor
Carl Stephenson Contributor
Algernon Blackwood Contributor
Richard Middleton Contributor
Michael Arlen Contributor
Fitz James O'Brien Contributor
Charles Collins Contributor
Richard Connell Contributor
John Collier Contributor
M. R. James Contributor
Ernest Hemingway Contributor
Edgar Allan Poe Contributor
William Faulkner Contributor
Thomas Hardy Contributor
Henry James Contributor
Dorothy L. Sayers Contributor
H. G. Wells Contributor
Edith Wharton Contributor
E. M. Forster Contributor
Rudyard Kipling Contributor
Arthur Machen Contributor
H. P. Lovecraft Contributor
Wilkie Collins Contributor
Ambrose Bierce Contributor
Isak Dinesen Contributor
Guy de Maupassant Contributor
O. Henry Contributor
E. F. Benson Contributor
Saki Contributor
Edward Lucas White Contributor

Statistics

Works
1
Members
733
Popularity
#34,654
Rating
½ 4.3
Reviews
12
ISBNs
5

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