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Book Review: Ladies of Gothic Horror: A Collection of Classic Stories edited by Mitzi Szereto

Ladies of Gothic Horror: A Collection of Classic Stories edited by Mitzi Szereto

Midnight Rain Publishing, 2019

ISBN-13: 978-1794556317

Available: Paperback, Kindle edition

 

Next time someone says that women can’t write horror fiction, point them to this book. In Ladies of Gothic Horror,  Mitzi Szereto has collected 17 stories by women writers of the 19th and early 20th centuries that will creep you out, chill your bones, and check the locks on your doors.  While some names may be more familiar to readers of supernatural fiction, such as Mary Shelley, Mary E. Wilkins Freeman, and Charlotte Perkins Gilman, many of the stories are by women writers better known for other works: Edith Nesbit is chiefly known for her children’s books, Elizabeth Gaskell for her social realist novels, Edith Wharton for her novels about the American upper class, Virginia Woolf for her modernist and feminist writings, Helena Blavatsky for her theosophical and occult work. Szereto follows each of the stories with a detailed biographical note about the author, when that information is available (very little is available on Eleanor F. Lewis, who evidently wrote only two stories– it’s too bad she didn’t write more).

Many of these women were supporting their families by writing for magazines, and their writing can be dramatic, depending on stereotypical characters, but they also skillfully build suspense and atmosphere, administer retribution, and illuminate tragedy.  Standout stories include Gertrude Atherton’s “Death and the Woman”, which manages to create dread and suspense without ever having the main character leave her husband’s bedside;  Edith Nesbit’s “Man-Size in Marble”, in which a newlywed husband discovers why you should pay attention to your housekeeper; Mary Elizabeth Braddon’s “The Cold Embrace”, in which a young man learns that having your fiancee return from the grave is not actually romantic; Edith Wharton’s “Afterward”, in which an American couple discover that an English haunting is no joking matter; and Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s famous “The Yellow Wallpaper”. Elia W. Peattie’s “The Room of the Evil Thought” and Eleanor F. Lewis’ “The Vengeance of a Tree” are brief, terrifying stories of strange hauntings. Helena Blavatsky’s “The Ensouled Violin” is positively gruesome. The collection ends with Virginia Woolf’s “A Haunted House”, a much lighter piece than the rest, that provides a satisfying conclusion.

Ladies of Gothic Horror does a valuable service by spotlighting supernatural and gothic works by women writers better known for other work and by introducing some of the 19th and early 20th centry women writers of supernatural fiction that can still be found in print (some, like Mary E. Wilkins Freeman’s The Wind in the Rose-bush, are even available free on Kindle).  While there are a few writers, like Eleanor F. Lewis, who may have been previously unknown, this book makes a good starting place for further investigating works by women writers of supernatural and gothic horror from the time period. There are few other anthologies similar to it that are still in print, although I expect we will see more now that people are discovering women writers of horror through the just-released Monster, She Wrote by Lisa Kroger and Melanie Anderson, which we recently reviewed.  Ladies of Gothic Horror is a great opportunity for widening your horizons and experiencing the chills, suspense, and terrors, that can be found in these women’s works. Highly recommended.

 

 

Women in Horror Month: Return of the Magazinists

Today I went back to a post I wrote some time ago on women writers of supernatural and Gothic fiction. I am sad to say that, as awesome a source of information as the Internet can be, some of the resources I linked to there now lead to “error–404” pages.A nicely done partial bibliography of Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s work has disappeared (although her papers are now available through Harvard and Radcliffe, so that’s a pretty neat development), and at this time I am not able to find a single portrait or photo of Georgia Wood Pangborn. The draft introduction to a limited edition of Pangborn’s work published by Violet Ivy Press is no longer online.Even Wikipedia has little to say about her.  I did my best to update the entry and the links. While Perkins Gilman really needs no introduction, as her work has entered the canon of American literature, l’d like to reintroduce you to some women authors who haven’t received the same kind of attention– the magazinists. 

Click here to meet these talented, often-forgotten women writers of the Gothic and macabre.

Shelley’s Daughters: The Magazinists

One of the interesting things about the women who have historically written supernatural fiction, especially in America, is how little of their writing is available to those who want to read it. And one of the reasons so little of it is available is because most of them did not publish books. They wrote for newspapers and magazines– and, in fact, are sometimes referred to as “magazinists”. Newspapers and magazines are ephemeral in nature– here today and gone tomorrow– so a great deal of the work of women writers has simply vanished. In introducing her partial bibliography of Charlotte Perkins Gilman (unfortunately, no longer available online), who is widely known for penning the terrifying story “The Yellow Wallpaper”, Kim Wells noted that, as of 1998, just forty-three of her 186 stories had been published in book form. All of these appeared in magazines, and many of them appeared in The Forerunner, which she published herself.  According to Wells, Gilman also wrote over a thousand pieces of nonfiction on a variety of topics, which were mostly published in magazines and newspapers  (Oxford Online confirms this) and many of these have been inaccessible to researchers (although Radcliffe College reports that Harvard and Radcliffe now both have searchable collections of her papers in the process of digitization). And yet, most people know of this prolific writer and passionate social reformer primarily for one short story, “The Yellow Wallpaper” .

Even less is available on other women writers (particularly those who wrote between 1850 and 1930) whose works were published mainly in newspapers and magazines, and whose names we may not even know well enough to find. Unfortunately for most reader’s advisory librarians, even compilations in which the editor has gone to outstanding lengths to seek out works from women magazinists (and there are a limited number of these), are now out of print.

 

Georgia Wood Pangborn (1872-1958) is oThe Wind at Midnight by Georgia Wood Pangbornne of these women, well-known for her supernatural fiction during the time that she wrote, but now almost completely faded away. In a draft of an introduction to The Wind at Midnight, a limited edition collection of Pangborn’s short stories that was published in 1999, editor Jessica Amanda Salmonson wrote that “she was possibly the best American supernaturalist of her day. Yet she fell so far into obscurity after she withdrew from literary life in the middle of the 1920s, she has been totally unknown to modern anthologists of supernatural fiction.” Some of her works can be found online in PDF format, and a few reproductions of her books Roman Biznet and Interventions are now available through Amazon (although they are quite expensive and I don’t have any idea as to the content or quality at this time. If you would like to sample her work, one of her stories appears in What Did Miss Darrington See? An Anthology of Feminist Supernatural Fiction, edited by Jessica Amanda Salmonson, which is still in print.

Sarah Wilkinson (1779-1831), also known as Sarah Scudgell Wilkinson or Sarah Scadgell, is primarily known for her blue books, or chapbooks, and in fact, her first short works were published in a literary magazine called The Tell-Tale Magazine, which published them simultaneously as chapbooks.

In a blog entry at The Gothic Imagination, Franz Potter gives some description of what exactly a chapbook or blue book was. These were heavily illustrated 36 to 72 page booklets, much shorter than the average Gothic novel. Potter writes that while Ann Radcliffe and her imitators moderated their use of terror, chapbook authors “filled their pages with continual scenes of horror”. Click here to see PDF images of the pages from one of the blue books Wilkinson wrote, The Castle Spectre (which was based on a play by Matthew Lewis), so you can see exactly what they look like.

This is what Sarah Wilkinson was best known for. Her writing wasn’t limited to chapbooks, however: in 1806, she published a subscription novel titled The Thatched Cottage; or, Sorrows of Eugenia, which had such eminent subscribers as the Duchess of Gloucester. From 1812-1819, she worked as a teacher and wrote primarily children’s stories and books, but returned to the Gothic after poor health forced her to resign her teaching position, publishing A Bandit of Florence (1819) and Lanmere Abbey (1820). Over the next decade, as her health continued to fail and her financial situation became desperate, she continued to write short pieces for periodicals and blue books. Potter has written about her in detail here.

1875 Elliott & Fry photograph,courtesy Jennifer Carnell, Sensation Press

Charlotte Riddell (1832-1906), also known as Mrs. J.H. Riddell and F.G. Trafford, was also a well-known writer of supernatural fiction.  In an essay on her life, S.M. Ellis  called her “a born story-teller”. In addition to producing numerous novels, she wrote a tremendous number of short stories and tales for a wide variety of publications. Ellis wrote that she had written so many that  “she lost all count of her works, possessed very few copies of them herself, and often forgot where certain stories had appeared or what had happened to her rights in them.”She was born Charlotte Elizabeth Lawson Cowan. She grew up in Ireland, and many of her works are set there. Married in 1857 to Mr. Joseph Henry Riddell, she wrote primarily under the name Mrs. J.H. Riddell after that time. At her time, she was compared with Sheridan Le Fanu and her work was praised by M.R. James, a master of supernatural fiction himself. Peter Beresford Ellis quotes  the critic James L. Campbell who wrote: “Next to Le Fanu, Riddell is the best writer of supernatural tales in the Victorian era” (note: if you click on the link above, you will have to scroll way down to find the artile on Riddell, but it is there). In addition to being a writer of popular supernatural fiction, Riddell also was part owner of the literary journal St. James’ Magazine. While Riddell has occasionally had stories appear in anthologies of supernatural fiction, her work has been out of print and often difficult to find in the past. There are some recent collections of her work that have been published, however, that include some of her better-known novels, novelettes, and short stories. These include The Collected Supernatural and Weird Fiction of Mrs. J. H. Riddell: Volume 1-Including Two Novels “The Haunted River, ” and “The Haunted House at Latchford; The Collected Supernatural and Weird Fiction of Mrs. J. H. Riddell: Volume 2-Including One Novel “The Nun’s Curse, ” and Two Short Stories;  The Collected Supernatural and Weird Fiction of Mrs. J. H. Riddell: Volume 3-Including Two Novels “The Disappearance of Jeremiah Redworth, ” and “The Uninhabited House

Or, perhaps if you don’t require an expensive three volume set, you might take a look at these smaller collections that look much more like something readers in search of a good ghost story might appreciate. Click on the cover images to find out more about the below titles:

Weird Stories was first published in 1882, to great acclaim. Here’s a reasonably priced annotated version, currently in print.
 Fourteen of Mrs. Riddell’s supernatural tales.

These three women are just a few of those writing at the same time, struggling to make a living with their pens. All three of these women, writing as print culture exploded, made significant contributions to the writing of supernatural and Gothic fiction, the evolution of the ghost story, and the use of not just genteel terror, but of true creepiness and horror. Yet, while male authors of the same time are often well known, these women, as talented as they may have been, have been passed over by time. The scribbling women of the Romantic and Victorian eras, and well into the 20th century have a great deal to say, and it’s time to uncover it.