In the early 1980s, I discovered to my liking a number of recently published stories bylined "Galad Elflandsson." I'm not sure which exact story I first encountered, but it seems likely to have been "Night Rider on a Pale Horse," published in The Phoenix Tree (1980), edited by Robert H. Boyer and Kenneth J. Zahorski. The blurb about the author told me of other stories to look for, in various (often Canadian) small press magazines, and also of the short novel The Black Wolf, published by Donald M. Grant in 1979, and illustrated by Randy Broecker. I picked up the stories as I could find them, exchanged several letters with the author (who kindly supplied more information and more stories), and I looked forward to more publications in the future. But around 1987 Elflandsson ceased writing and publishing.
One of his early projects had been a series of stories (and a few poems) based on Robert W. Chambers's The King in Yellow. He had submitted the collection to Donald M. Grant in 1978, and from it Grant asked him to rewrite and expand one longer story, "The Cave of the Hill Beast." Minus the Carcosa references, and adding some Lovecraftian ones, it became The Black Wolf. Some of the other Carcosa tales appeared in various magazines.
Late last year, Graeme Phillips with his Cyaegha Press resurrected most of the Carcosa tales in an elegant trade paperback volume, Tales of Carcosa, with a cover and interior illustrations by Steve Lines. It contains two poems and five stories (one a previously unpublished short, "An Augury") and a new "Afterword" by the author. The edition is small (four lettered and fifty numbered copies), so act quickly if you are interested. There is no web page specifically for Tales of Carcosa, but the Cyaegha magazine web page (hosted at Glynn Owen Barrass's Strange Aeons site), with contact email for Cyaegha in the short introductory paragraph, can be found here. Send Graeme an email for ordering details.
Update 6/28/19: Tales of Carcosa is now officially out of print.
I seem to remember Elflandsson also wrote an essay on Voyage to Arcturus, published in the mid-80s.
ReplyDeleteIndeed, Sean. It appeared first in a fanzine (Nightshade #5, April 1979), then in AB Bookman's Weekly (1 October 1984-- AB Bookman's Weekly was a used-booktrade magazine), and then as the Introduction to the 1985 Citadel Press reissue of Arcturus. It was thereafter reprinted by Darrell Schweitzer in Discovering Classic Fantasy (1996; 1999).
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