Sunday, November 1, 2009
Erle Cox, Out of the Silence
Monday, September 21, 2009
Wormwood Afternoon
Mark
Friday, September 11, 2009
A "Lost" Lost Race serial
Wednesday, September 2, 2009
Wormwood - Literary Afternoon
I'll be speaking about "Four Yorkshire Fantasists - E.R. Eddison, Oliver Onions, Wilfred Rowland Childe and Norman Boothroyd" and we expect to have other speakers as well. It will be an informal get-together for anyone who can make it - just drop me or Tartarus a line to let us know.
Mark V
Friday, August 28, 2009
"Classic Fantasists on Film": Lord Dunsany's Dean Spanley

It was a surprise for me to learn recently that a novel by Lord Dunsany had been newly filmed, and even more of a surprise to learn that of Dunsany’s dozen or so novels it was My Talks with Dean Spanley (1936) that had made it to the big screen. By no means Dunsany’s best novel, it is an enjoyable, minor work, in which a cleric, under the influence of a certain tokay, recollects his previous incarnation as a dog.
My Talks with Dean Spanley



The cover of the first edition of Lord Dunsany's My Talks with Dean Spanley (London: William Heinemann, 1936), left, has always seemed garish to me. Trying to translate the central conceit of the novel into an image for advertising purposes must be difficult, and this one succeeds only in appearing laughable. The cover to the American edition (New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1936), right, utilizes the frontispiece illustration drawn by Robert Ball. It's is not especially attractive, and only slightly better. S. H. Sime contributed the frontispiece to the London edition, his last illustration for a Dunsany book, top. While it is a delightful illustration that does indeed capture the spirit of the book, I'm not sure that it would have made a successful cover illustration. (Click on the illustrations for larger views.)
Tuesday, August 18, 2009
Arthur Conan Doyle Exhibit at the University of Michigan

Yesterday I was in