ClimbingSky

Why Baseball, Books, and the Grateful Dead matter


DAILY BLOG

  • My tendency here so far at ClimbingSky has been to review books, short stories, and poems that I like. But as an indiscriminate reader that is probably not practical. When you add in the fact that I am also a fan of anything to do with Bram Stokers’s Dracula (not necessarily vampires per se), it… Read more

  • The young people flocked out into the mysterious night. There was sound of laughter and voices, and a scent of coffee. The farm-buildings loomed dark in the background. Figures, pale and dark, flitted about, intermingling. The red fire glinted on a white or a silken skirt, the lanterns gleamed on the transient heads of the… Read more

  • “The Dead Children” is a short-story from Sabina Murray’s excellent collection of Gothic/Horror tales entitled Muckross Abbey and Other Stories. Murray really understands Gothic. The contemporary writer I would most compare her to Susan Hill. She is that good. At a quiet Vermont college Professor Judith is stopped by a woman she initially doesn’t recognize.… Read more

  • “Reconciliation Day” is a stand-alone short story, written by Christopher Fowler, that is part of a series called Bibliomysteries: Short Tales About Deadly Books. Obsessed with the legendary “blue edition” of Dracula, a rare and supposedly altered version of Stoker’s classic rumored to contain a different ending and a chapter set in Dracula’s library, leading… Read more

  • “If…the machine of government…is of such a nature that it requires you to be the agent of injustice to another, then, I say, break the law.” ~ Henry David Thoreau Read more

  • The story of the writing and publication of Bram Stoker’s masterpiece, Dracula, in many ways is as interesting as most fiction. Here is at the basic information of the publication of Dracula: In Stoker’s Manuscript writer Royce Prouty takes the history of Stoker’s manuscript and reimagines its history. The plot of Stoker’s Manuscript centers on… Read more

  • Ghost Stories of an Antiquary is a collection of Horror/Gothic stories first published in 1904 by British writer M.R. James. I have reviewed one other short story from the collection, “Canon Alberic’s Scrap-Book.” Here is a link to that review. James, who was a Medieval Scholar at Cambridge, began writing his “ghost stories” to share… Read more

  • Rosemary Timperley (1920-1988) wrote novels, screen plays, and short stories. She is probably best known for her ghost stories which are frequently anthologized. “Harry” is one of her best ghost stories. The story follows Mrs. James, who adopts a baby girl named Christine. At age five, Christine begins talking to an imaginary friend named Harry,… Read more

  • Supper was laid. He swung the curtain over the window. There was a bowl of freesias and scarlet anemones on the table. She bent to them. Still touching them with her finger-tips, she looked up at him, saying: “Aren’t they beautiful?” “Yes,” he said. “What will you drink — coffee?” “I should like it,” she… Read more

  • On my rereading of the novel Dracula this year (that I posted about yesterday) one of the details that caught my attention was that Jonathan Harker references having a Kodak. This was a detail I had not noticed before. Since I was listening to an audiobook recording of Stoker’s classic, I double-checked when I got… Read more