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With Algernon Blackwood, Arthur Machen is one of the spiritual fathers of both Lovecraft and CAS. His work is a combination of horror and mysticism. His prose is 19th century with a taste of victorian gothic. His ideas are bizzare and twisted like an opium induced dream or a hashish eaters nightmare. I personally found some of his work boring but other stories were fantastic. The Hill of Dreams, The House of Souls, The Great God Pan, should be on every weird tales to read list.
Eleusinia (1881) poem
The Anatomy of Tobacco (1884) non-fiction (as " Leolinus Siluriensis" )
Chronicles of Clemendy (1888) " a volume of tales in the medieval pattern"
The Great God Pan and The Inmost Light (1894) supernatural stories
The Three Imposters (1895) episode novel; picaresque romance, terror
Hieroglyphics (1902) about literature
Dr. Stiggins (1906) about theology
The House of Souls (1906) supernatural stories (The White People, The
Great God Pan, and The Inmost Light
The Hill of Dreams (1907) mystical novel (written 1895-97)
The Bowmen, and Other Legends of the War (1915) short stories
(includes "The Angel of Mons" )
The Great Return (1915) the return to Wales of the Holy Grail
The Terror (1917) novella -- animals revolt against humans
The Secret Glory (1922) attacked British public education
Far Off Things (1922) autobiography
Things Near and Far (1923) autobiography
Strange Roads (1923) nonfiction
The London Adventure (1924) autobiography
Dog and Duck (1924) miscellany
The Shining Pyramid (1924) supernatural stories
Ornaments in Jade (1924) short prose pieces bordering on fantasy or horror
The Canning Wonder (1925) about the Elizabeth Canning case
Notes and Queries (1926) nonfiction
Dreads and Drolls (1926) nonfiction
Translation, Casanova's Memoirs (1930, 12 vol.)
Children of the Pool (1936) supernatural stories
The Cosy Room (1936) supernatural stories
The Green Round (1936) supernatural novel
Tales of Horror and the Supernatural (1948)
Eleusinia and Beneath the Barley (Necronomicon Press, 1988) poem and essay
Last edited by JasonZavoda (3/05/2014 12:12 pm)
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Yes. Arthur Machen's work is awesome. Recommended reading for the weird tales aficionado. Definitely.
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Thanks, Jason, that is a great post. I suppose everyone--even the likes of HPL and CAS--stand on the shoulders of some previous giant. ;)
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Picked up 'The Three Imposters' at HPB and reading it now. I like his writing style.