In December of 2024, my husband discovered Swan River Press, which describes itself as "an independent press based in Dublin, Ireland dedicated exclusively to the literature of the fantastic."
Following are three of the books he purchased. The descriptions are from the Swan River Press website.
Not to Be Taken at Bed-Time and Other Strange Stories by Rosa Mulholland
In the late-nineteenth century Rosa Mulholland (1841-1921) achieved great popularity and acclaim for her many novels, written for both an adult audience and younger readers. Several of these novels chronicled the lives of the poor, often incorporating rural Irish settings and folklore. Earlier in her career, Mulholland became one of the select band of authors employed by Charles Dickens to write stories for his popular magazine All the Year Round, together with Wilkie Collins, Elizabeth Gaskell, Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu, and Amelia B. Edwards. Mulholland’s best supernatural and weird short stories have been gathered together in the present collection, edited and introduced by Richard Dalby, to celebrate this gifted late Victorian “Mistress of the Macabre”.
Bending to Earth: Strange Stories by Irish Women, edited by Maria Giakaniki and Brian J. Showers
Irish women have long produced literature of the gothic, uncanny, and supernatural. Bending to Earth draws together twelve such tales. While none of the authors herein were considered primarily writers of fantastical fiction during their lifetimes, they each wandered at some point in their careers into more speculative realms—some only briefly, others for lengthier stays.
Names such as Charlotte Riddell and Rosa Mulholland will already be familiar to aficionados of the eerie, while Katharine Tynan and Clotilde Graves are sure to gain new admirers. From a ghost story in the Swiss Alps to a premonition of death in the West of Ireland to strange rites in a South Pacific jungle, Bending to Earth showcases a diverse range of imaginative writing which spans the better part of a century.
Ghosts of the Chit-Chat, edited by Robert Lloyd Parry
On the evening of Saturday, 28 October 1893, Cambridge University’s Chit-Chat Club convened its 601st meeting. Ten members and one guest gathered in the rooms of Montague Rhodes James, the Junior Dean of King’s College, and listened—with increasing absorption one suspects—as their host read “Two Ghost Stories”.
Ghosts of the Chit-Chat celebrates this momentous event in the history of supernatural literature, the earliest dated record we have of M. R. James reading his ghost stories out loud. And it revives the contributions that other members made to the genre; men of imagination who invoked the ghostly in their work, and who are now themselves shades. In a series of essays, stories, and poems Robert Lloyd Parry looks at the history and culture of the Club.
In addition to tales and poems never before reprinted, Ghosts of the Chit-Chat features earlier, slightly different versions of two of M. R. James’s best-known ghost stories; Robert Lloyd Parry’s profiles and commentaries on each featured Chit-Chat member sheds new light on this supernatural tradition, making Ghosts of the Chit-Chat a valuable resource for casual readers and long-time Jamesians alike.
12 comments:
All new to me. Amazing the depth of writing we are unaware of.
I don't usually go for that sort of spec fic, Tracy, but those stories do sound interesting! And I give a lot of credit to authors who add in the paranormal, the magic realism, and so on, into their stories. I think that takes such a lot of imagination!
I have a book of "weird Irish tales" somewhere on my shelf. I wonder if it has any of the same stories in it?
I try to support small presses, too. I've not heard of any of these books but I will seek them out!
George, Swan River Press seems to concentrate on Irish writers, but the books are not limited to that. The covers are all very nice.
Patti, I confess I only occasionally read ghost stories or strange tales, but I should sample some from all of these books. Glen has three more books Swan River Press, so I have plenty to choose from.
Margot, these stories are not my usual reading either. But I always say the author and how they write makes a huge difference, and I hope to sample more of those types of stories in the future.
Kelly, I would not be at all surprised if some of the stories or at least the authors in your book overlap. Glen has several books of weird short stories from the British Library Tales of the Weird. One of them is edited by Mick Ashley, the other two that he has read are edited by Tania Kirk, and he may have other on the Kindle.
I love 19th century Victorian literature with a gothic tone and I think for me Bending to Earth would be my choice because you get a sampling of different Irish writers.
Kathy, I also am attracted to that one the most because of the variety of authors and stories in the book.
Are you planning to read these? thx for the intro on Rosa Mulholland - I didn't know of her. I don't read much with supernatural but a spooky story is good every once in awhile.
Susan, I would like to sample some stories from most of the books from Swan River Press (he has a total of six). And definitely some from the book by Mulholland, and a few from Bending to Earth.
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