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Horror Literature through History

Page 143

by Matt Cardin


  the English Romantic movement, 293

  exploration of the imagination, 78

  hallucinations, 293

  his “opus maximus,” 295

  influence of, 77

  on knowledge and the imagination, 714

  “Kubla Khan,” 293

  laudanum and, 293

  on The Monk (Lewis), 168, 614, 820

  The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, 77–78, 293–295

  The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, excerpt from, 294

  Southey, Robert, 293

  vampire fiction, 157

  Collier, John (1901–1980), 295–296

  “After the Ball,” 296

  “Another American Tragedy,” 295

  awards to, 296

  “Bird of Prey,” 296

  “The Bottle Party,” 295

  death of, 296

  “The Devil, George, and Rosie,” 296

  “Evening Primrose,” 295–296

  “Fallen Star,” 296

  Fancies and Goodnights, 296

  full name of, 295

  “Green Thoughts,” 295

  “Incident on a Lake,” 295–296

  “Over Insurance,” 296

  “Thus I Refute Beelzy,” 296

  Tom’s A-Cold, 295

  Collingwood, R. G., xxx

  Collins, Wilkie, 297–298

  After Dark, 297

  Armadale, 297

  “Brother Griffith’s Story of Mad Monkton,” 297–298

  “Brother Morgan’s Story of the Dead Hand,” 297

  “Brother Morgan’s Story of the Dream Woman,” 297

  death of, 298

  full name of, 297

  The Moonstone, 297, 298

  see also “The Colour out of Space” (Lovecraft). See also “The Colour out of Space” (Lovecraft)

  “The Siege of the Black Cottage,” 297

  “The Traveller’s Story of a Terribly Strange Bed,” 297

  The Woman in White, 297, 298

  The Color out of Time (Shea), 299

  Colossal Cave Adventure (Crowther, 1976), 122

  “The Colour out of Space” (Lovecraft), 298–300

  cinematic adaptations, 299

  The Color out of Time (Shea), 299

  the Cthulhu Mythos and, 299

  first publication of, 298

  Lovecraft’s opinion of, 299

  At the Mountains of Madness, 298

  plot summary, 298–299

  Comics Code Authority, 170

  Communion (Strieber), 300–302

  critical reception of, 301

  films of, 301

  full title of, 300

  idea and image of the “alien gray,” 300

  irony of, 301

  mysticism and, 301

  plot summary, 300

  popularity of, 301

  significance of, 300

  Strieber, Whitley, 300, 301

  subtitle of, 301

  UFO sightings and abduction, 300

  The Complaint: Or Night-Thoughts on Life, Death and Immortality (Young), 21

  Condé, Nicholas

  The Religion, 146

  Conjure Wife (Leiber), 34, 302–303

  cinematic adaptations, 303

  first publication of, 302

  gender solidarity, 302

  influence of, 303

  Leiber, Fritz, 302

  premise of, 302

  as profoundly frightening, 302

  success of, 303

  Connelly, Frances S., 405

  Conrad, Joseph

  Heart of Darkness, 338

  The Conspiracy against the Human Race (Ligotti), 45

  Cook, Robin

  Coma, 232

  Coppard, A. E. (1878–1957), 303–304

  “Adam & Eve & Pinch Me,” 303

  “Arabesque: The Mouse,” 303–304

  on belief in the supernatural, 304

  “Clorinda Walks in Heaven,” 304

  current status of, 304

  “Father Raven,” 304

  full name of, 303

  “The Green Drake,” 303

  “The Old Venerable,” 303

  physical horror, 303

  “Piffingcap,” 303

  copypasta, 114

  Corelli, Marie, 131, 254

  Cornell, Louis, 670

  cosmic indifferentism, 164

  Cottam, F. G.

  The House of Lost Souls, 134

  Council on Books in War Time, 89

  “courtly” culture, 12

  Cowdray Curse, 187

  Crawford, Anne, 160

  Crawford, F. Marion (1854–1908), 304–306

  “For the Blood Is the Life,” 344, 467

  “For Blood is the Life,” 306

  date and place of birth, 304

  “The Dead Smile,” 306

  death of, 306

  family of, 304–305

  full name of, 305

  Khaled, 305

  “The King’s Messenger,” 306

  “Man Overboard,” 306

  popularity of, 304

  “The Screaming Skull,” 306, 736–737

  “The Upper Berth,” 305, 306

  Crawford, William L., 87

  The Creature from the Black Lagoon (film), 288

  creature horror, 17

  Creed, Barbara

  “Horror and the Monstrous-Feminine,” 98

  The Creeps Omnibus, 87

  Creeps series, 87

  creepypasta, 114

  “Crew of Light” (Craft), 64

  Crocker, John Wilson, 604

  Cronenberg, David, 230

  Cronin, Justin

  The Passage, 44

  Crowley, Aleister, 132

  Diary of a Drug Fiend, 132

  fame of, 132

  Moonchild, 132

  the Crusades, 10

  Cthulhu Mythos, 306–308

  Arkham House Books, 307

  Bloch, Robert, 307

  “The Call of Cthulhu,” 264, 306

  The Case of Charles Dexter Ward, 280

  close-up of, 307

  codifying of, 308, 330

  “The Colour out of Space” (Lovecraft), 193, 299

  common elements of, 306

  current status of, 308

  Dagon (Chappell) and, 309

  definition of, 306

  Derleth, August, 307–308

  Great Old Ones, 306, 308

  heavy metal music and, 308

  horror movies and, 308

  horror video games, 123

  Howard, Robert E., 307, 454

  Long, Frank Belknap, 307

  Lovecraft Circle of horror writers, 307

  At the Mountains of Madness, 193

  The Mysteries of the Worm, 225

  Mythos concepts, 307

  Necronomicon, 306

  notable contributors to, 308

  origin of, 306

  “Pseudomythology,” 307

  “The Return of the Sorcerer” (Smith), 307

  role-playing games, board games, and computer games, 308

  Smith, Clark Ashton, 307

  Cumaean Sibyl, 53

  Dacre, Charlotte

  Zofloya the Moor: A Romance of the Fifteenth Century, 614, 682

  Daemonologie, In Forme of a Dialogue, Divided into three Books (King James I), 15

  Dagon, 309–310

  Cthulhu Mythos and, 309

  Dagon (Chappell) and, 309

  plot summary, 309

  Dali, Salvador, 786

  The Damnation Game (Barker), 310–311

  devils and demons, 335

  Faustian exchange theme, 310, 311

  plot summary, 310

  review of, 310–311

  significance of, 311

  The Damned, 311–312

  as autobiographical, 312

  Huysmans, J. K. (Joris-Karl), 311

  Là-Bas translation, 311

  plot summary, 311–312

  Danielewski, Mark Z.

  The
Familiar, 448

  horror and, 42

  House of Leaves, 112, 235, 447–449

  Daniels, Les, 35

  Dante Alighieri, 143–144

  Divine Comedy, 333, 334

  Dare You? 172–173

  Dark Ages, 9

  The Dark Domain, 313–314

  “The Area,” 313

  The Book of Fire, 313

  “In the Compartment,” 313

  élan vital, theory of, 313

  favorable notice of, 313

  The Grabinski Reader, 313

  influence of, 313

  Lipinski, Miroslaw, 313

  The Motion Demon, 313

  “Saturnin Sektor,” 313

  Darker Than You Think (Williamson), 34

  dark fantasy, 314–315

  antihero and, 315

  attitude of the writers of, 315

  definition of, 314–315

  dreamlike horror fiction and, 314

  Grendel (Gardner), 315

  otherworld of the Cenobites, 314

  Phantastes (MacDonald), 314

  setting and, 314–315

  Dark Forces (1980), 118

  Dark Gods (Klein), 315–318

  atmospheric tension, 316

  “Black Man with a Horn,” 317

  “Children of the Kingdom,” 316

  Klein, T. E. D., 315–316

  Lovecraft, H. P., and, 316

  “Nadelman’s God,” 317

  “Petey,” 316–317

  themes of, 315

  vagueness of horror, 316, 317

  writing style of Klein, 316

  Dark Harvest press, 153

  The Dark Knight Returns (Miller), 96

  “The Dark Music” (Beaumont), 37

  Dark of the Moon: Poems of Fantasy and the Macabre, 88

  Dark Regions, 153

  The Dark Side: Tales of Terror and the Supernatural (Kellett), 596

  The Dark Tower (King), 318–319

  “Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came,” 318

  a cult work, 318

  film adaptations, 319

  The Gunslinger, 318

  influence of, 318

  interconnectedness of, 318, 319

  King, Stephen, 318

  significance of, 319

  volumes comprising, 318

  Darwin, Charles, 145

  Das Petermännchen (Spiess), 23

  Datlow, Ellen (1949–), 319–323

  Alien Sex, 319

  awards and nominations for, 320

  Blood Is Not Enough, 319

  on contemporary horror, 323

  on defining horror, 321–322

  on dystopian and postapocalyptic fiction, 321

  on the field of horror publishing, 322

  interview with, 320–323

  recommended anthologies, 322–323

  significance of, 319

  Snow White, Blood Red anthology, 320

  themes of Datlow’s anthologies, 320

  A Whisper of Blood, 319

  Windling, Terri, and, 319

  The Year’s Best Fantasy, 319

  Davies, Andrew, 70

  Davies, Rosemary Reeve, 710

  de Bont, Jan, 422

  De Felitta, Frank

  The Entity, 467

  De la Mare, Walter (1873–1956), 323–326

  awards to, 325

  Collected Stories for Children, 325

  date and place of birth, 323

  Desert Islands and Robinson Crusoe, 326

  education of, 324

  first published work, 324

  full name of, 323

  “The Green Room,” 325

  “The Guardian,” 334

  horror and supernatural writings of, 324–325

  influence of, 326

  “The Listeners,” 323, 325, 560–562

  The Listeners and Other Poems, 324

  literary criticism, 325–326

  Memoirs of a Midget, 325

  “Out of the Deep,” 663–664

  The Return, 325, 704–705 “A Revenant,” 325

  “Seaton’s Aunt,” 324, 325

  Some Women Novelists of the Seventies, 325–326

  Songs of Childhood, 324

  spirit possession, 325

  De Quincey, Thomas

  “On Murder considered as one of the Fine Arts” (De Quincey), 78

  Deane, Hamilton, 341

  “The Death of Halpin Frayser” (Bierce), 326–328

  archetype of the zombie, 327

  creation of fictional “authorities,” 217–218

  as an early zombie, 327

  Encyclopedia of the Zombie (2014), 327

  first publication of, 326

  Lovecraft, H. P., on, 327–328

  notable features of, 327

  Oedipus complex, 327

  plot summary, 326

  death, theme of, 27–28

  Defoe, Daniel

  An Essay on the History and Reality of Apparitions (Defoe), 20

  The Political History of the Devil, As Well Ancient as Modern (Defoe), 20

  significance of, 20

  A System of Magic, or the History of the Black Art (Defoe), 20

  A True Relation of the Apparition of One Mrs. Veal, the Next Day After Her Death, to One

  Mrs. Bargrave at Canterbury, the 8th of September, 1705 (Defoe), 85

  Del Toro, Guillermo, 731

  Dell Abyss line of horror paperbacks, 120–121

  demonic possession, 359

  “The Demon Lover” (Bowen), 328–329

  Bowen, Elizabeth, 328, 329

  demon-lover ballads, 329

  plot summary, 328–329

  Dennis, John, 20

  Der Geisterseher (The Ghost-Seer), 23

  Derleth, August (1909–1971), 329–331

  Arkham House, 189, 190, 307, 330–331

  “Bat’s Belfry,” 329

  the Cthulhu Mythos and, 33, 330

  “The Dunwich Horror” and, 351–352

  influences on, 329

  The King in Yellow (Chambers), 509

  “The Lair of the Star Spawn,” 330

  Lovecraft, H. P., and, 329, 330

  The Mask of Cthulhu, 330

  Mythos contributions, 308

  outstanding weird tales of, 330

  posthumous collaborations with Lovecraft, 330

  proprietary influence over the Mythos, 308

  regional fiction of, 329–330

  Sleep No More, 88

  Someone in the Dark, 329

  Tales of the Cthulhu Mythos, 330

  The Trail of Cthulhu, 330

  Weird Tales and, 329

  desktop publishing, 90

  The Devil Rides Out (Wheatley), 331–332

  Duke de Richleau, 331–332

  excerpt from, 332

  film adaptations, 332

  legacy of the investment in occult knowledge, 332

  lowbrow anthologies and, 31

  plot summary, 332

  Wheatley, Dennis, and, 331

  devils and demons, 333–335

  Barker, Clive, and, 334

  The Book of the Law (Crowley), 333

  children, linking of demons to, 334

  in contemporary works of horror fiction, 334

  the Cthulhu Mythos, 334

  The Damnation Game (Barker), 335

  The Deathbird Stories (Ellison), 334–335

  demon defined, 333

  demonic queerness, 334

  demon lover motif, 334

  demons, imaginative depictions of depictions, 333

  demons, origin of, 333

  demon summoning, 333

  Dictionnaire Infernal (de Plancy), 333

  Divine Comedy (Dante), 333, 334

  The Exorcist (Blatty), 334

  Faust, legend of, 333

  The Fifth Child (Lessing), 334

  The Golden Bough (Frazer), 333

  “The Great God Pan” (Machen), 334

  grimoires, purposes of, 333

 
grimoires defined, 333

  “The Guardian” (de la Mare), 334

  and the iconic representation of urban horror in stories, 334

  interest in demonology and grimoires, 333

  King, Stephen, 334, 335

  King, Stephen, and, 334

  The Magus (Barrett), 333

  The Master and Margarita (Bulgakov), 334

  The Monk (Lewis), 334, 820

  The Mysterious Stranger (Twain), 334

  Needful Things (King), 335

  Paradise Lost (Milton), 334

  representations of devils and demons, 333

  Rosemary’s Baby (Levin), 334

  Satan, 334

  Satan (Leven), 334

  satanic ambiguous traits, 334

  That Hellbound Train (Bloch), 334

  use of demons in horror literature, 333–334

  Dick, Philip K. (1928–1982), 335–337

  alternate history, use of, 336

  attempted suicide, 335

  awards to, 335

  Blade Runner film, 336

  central themes in his fiction, 335

  death of, 336

  education of, 335

  The Exegesis of Philip K. Dick, 336

  fear of losing identity, 335

  film adaptations, 336

  journal of, 336

  The Man in the High Castle, 336

  popularity of his work, 335, 336

  productivity of, 335

  settings for his protagonists, 335

  Total Recall film, 336

  VALIS (Vast Active Living Intelligence System), 336

  Dickens, Charles

  Barnaby Rudge, 81

  Bleak House, 188

  A Christmas Carol, 70

  “The Signalman,” 70–71, 387

  Dictionnaire Infernal (de Plancy), 333

  didacticism, 109

  Dikty, T. E., 223

  Discoverie of Witchcraft (Scot), 15

  Divine Comedy (Dante), 333, 334

  Doctor Faustus (Marlowe), 15

  the Doomsday play, 52–53

  Dostoevsky, Fyodor, 389

  doubles, doppelgängers, and split selves, 337–339

  Caleb Williams (Godwin), 337

  The Devil’s Elixirs (Hoffmann), 337

  dissociation or multiple personality, 337

  “The Double” (Rank), 337

  “double personality,” 337

  doubles, 337–338

  Frankenstein (Shelley), 337

  Freud, Sigmund, 337

  German romanticism and, 337

  Heart of Darkness (Conrad), 338

  “The Horla” (Maupassant), 338

  King, Stephen, 338

  Lynch, David, 338

  “multiplex personality,” 338

  overtones of sexual panic, 338

  The Picture of Dorian Gray (Wilde), 338

  post-traumatic stress, dissociative disorders, 338

  Richter, Jean Paul, 337

  “The Sand-man” (Hoffmann), 337

  The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (Stevenson), 338

  trauma theory and, 337

  the Uncanny,” 337

  Doyle, Arthur Conan, 443–444

  Collins, Wilkie, and, 297

  The Hound of the Baskervilles, 30, 188, 444–446

  “Lot No. 249” (1892), 138, 564–565, 627

 

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