Detailed view for the Book: Tales of Men and Ghosts

Title:

Tales of Men and Ghosts
 

Authors:

Genres:

Classic
Short Stories

Editions:

# Date Publisher Binding Cover
1 1910-00-00 IndyPublish.com  

Buy this book from Amazon (US)

Blurb: 
Edith Wharton was one of the most remarkable women of her time, and her immense commercial and critical success - most notably with her novel The Age of Innocence, which won a Pulitzer Prize - have long overshadowed her small but distinguished body of supernatural fiction. Some of her finest fantastic and detective work (which oft times overlap) was first collected in 1909 in Tales of Men and Ghosts. The psychological horror is as important as the literal one here, and subtle ambiguities characterized by the best of Henry James"s work (such as The Turn of the Screw) are also present in Wharton"s character studies, such as "The Bolted Door." Is the protagonist a murderer, or is he mad? In the end it may not matter, for it is his descent into madness and obsession that gives the story its chilling frisson. Other tales present men (or ghosts, or what men believe to be ghosts) in a variety of lights, from misunderstood monsters to vengeful spirits to insecure artists.