Cloth slightly faded at head of spine; jacket chipped (and possibly crudely price-clipped) with some loss.
Jacket artwork by Edward Frederic.
Reginald, Science fiction and fantasy literature.
£195
New York, Bobbs Merrill, 1911..
First edition. 8vo. Original red cloth blocked in white. Dust-jacket.
Scarce, Reginald-listed weird & supernatural title.
Out of stock
Cloth slightly faded at head of spine; jacket chipped (and possibly crudely price-clipped) with some loss.
Jacket artwork by Edward Frederic.
Reginald, Science fiction and fantasy literature.
Weird & Supernatural
First edition.
London. Dent, 1910
The author’s first short story collection containing some fine examples of ghost and horror stories including the much anthologised tale, ‘August Heat’ (Shadows in the Attic p.247).
Weird & Supernatural
Second edition. First published in 1924, a Scottish historical novel involving witchcraft. Uncommon.
London, George Harrap, 1931
Weird & Supernatural
1st printing contained within Volume 3 of Hogg’s Weekly Instructor (pages 184-189).
London, Hogg's Weekly Instructor, 1846
The volume contains many articles, stories and poems as was the nature of the periodical but primarily it is the inclusion of the important first printing of Catherine Crowe's 'The Story of a Weir-Wolf' that makes this desirable. It is a 'Witch Trial' story of the sufferings of a maiden who is wrongly accused of Lycanthropy.
This story is arguably wrote the first werewolf short story by a female. It was reprinted in The Best Werewolf Short Stories 1800-1849: A Classic Werewolf Anthology but its first appearance was in this volume.
Two years after “A Story of a Weir-Wolf” was published Crowe published a collection she titled “The Night-Side of Nature, or Ghosts and Ghost-seers.”
An attractive addition to any collection of gothic and/or supernatural fiction.