Worse Things Waiting

by Manly Wade Wellman

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3 reviews
Originally published in 1973, Worse Things Waiting collects 28 of Manly Wade Wellman's colorful stories which first appeared in the early pulp magazines Strange Stories, Unknown, and Weird Tales. Wellman seems most comfortable spinning convincing yarns of local myths and legends with a certain backwoods Southern charm, with “Come Into My Parlor”, “Sin’s Doorway”, “The Pineys”, and “The Witch’s Cat” among the best of these. This anthology offers wonderfully creepy fantasy and horror tales of strange creatures and anthropomorphic or otherwise living abodes, werewolves and the undead, sinners and spells, and the supernatural plight of soldiers, warriors, and slaves. Much as Rudyard Kipling used the exotic setting of show more India to infuse some of his strange stories with an added layer of mystery, Wellman similarly uses the lost worlds of Native American myths and legends as the underpinning of some stories; "For Fear of Little Men", "Young-Man-With-a-Skull-at His Ear", and "Dhoh" are the most effective of these. The collection ends with a quartet of excellent Civil War stories infused with witchcraft: (1) A witch promises Rebel soldier Clay Harned safe passage through the bloody war in return for his hand in marriage in “His Name on a Bullet”; (2) Confederate scout Joseph Paradine encounters the effects of a mysterious spell placed on Union soldiers in “The Valley Was Still”; (3) Dueling spells of Good and Evil clash in “Fearful Rock”; and (4) The purity of young Confederate prisoner Cole Wickett propels him into the service of Union Army Sergeant Jaeger against vampires and the forces of Evil in “Coven”. Lee Brown Coye's playfully macabre illustrations add a nice ghoulish touch. Kudos to Shadowridge Press for bringing back this impressive anthology. show less
½
A sort of "Best of Wellman" except you don't get any two-fisted John Thunstone supernatural tales, barely a scent of a Shonokin, and no John the Balladeer, so it's the best of everything except those things. You do get some great [a:Lee Brown Coye|2917002|Lee Brown Coye|https://s.gr-assets.com/assets/nophoto/user/u_50x66-632230dc9882b4352d753eedf9396530.png] creepy illustrations.

Wellman's forte is American folkloric supernatural fiction, particularly of the South. Setting is important in a Wellman tale. This is an oversimplification and doesn't do justice to the breadth of these tales. All the usual tropes are here but Wellman is adept at using them in ways that don't make them seem hackneyed. He is a great tale teller in the pulp show more tradition, but don't expect deep philosophizing or anything experimental, just good tales well told. show less

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Genres
Fiction and Literature, Horror, Fantasy
DDC/MDS
813.5Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-1999
LCC
PS3545 .E52858 .W6Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1900-1960

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English
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