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Supernatural Sherlocks
Supernatural Sherlocks: Stories from The Golden Age of the Occult Detective | Nick Rennison
2 posts | 2 read | 1 to read
The ghost of a poor Afghan returns to haunt the doctor who once amputated his hand. A mysterious and malignant force inhabits a room in an ancestral home and attacks all who sleep in it. A man who desecrates an Indian temple is transformed into a ravening beast. A castle in the Tyrol is the setting for an aristocratic murderer's apparent resurrection. In the stories in this collection, horrors from beyond the grave and other dimensions visit the everyday world and demand to be investigated. The Sherlocks of the supernatural—from William Hope Hodgson's "Thomas Carnacki, the Ghost Finder," to Alice and Claude Askew's "Aylmer Vance"—are those courageous souls who risk their lives and their sanity to pursue the truth about ghosts, ghouls, and things that go bump in the night. The period between 1890 and 1930 was a Golden Age for the occult detective. Famous authors like Kipling and Conan Doyle wrote stories about them, as did less familiar writers such as the occultist and magician Dion Fortune and Henry S. Whitehead, a friend of H. P. Lovecraft and fellow-contributor to the pulp magazines of the period. Nick Rennison has chosen 15 tales from that era to raise the hair and chill the spines of modern readers.
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Anna from Gustine
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A pleasant collection of short stories mostly by little-known authors who wrote supernatural mysteries in the vein of Carnacki the Ghost Finder. The stories are interspersed with names like Doyle, Hodgson and Kipling. If you like ghost stories with occult detectives, it's a mellow way to spend the time. Best story? The Shunned House by HP Lovecraft. Worst? Definitely Dion Fortune's The Death Hound, a rip-off of The Hound of the Baskervilles. 😱

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JosieG

In the first story, "Mark of the Beast", one of the characters starts craving "underdone chops." I looked it up, and the most common types of chops are pork and lamb... both of which I would imagine should not be consumed "underdone." ? I'm feeling fairly grossed out here.

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