Product Details
Adrift on The Haunted Seas: The Best Short Stories of William Hope Hodgson

Adrift on The Haunted Seas: The Best Short Stories of William Hope Hodgson
By William Hope Hodgson

List Price: $11.00
Price: $9.90 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com

33 new or used available from $6.00

Average customer review:

Product Description

William Hope Hodgson (1877-1918) is acknowledged as one of the undisputed masters of the sea story. There has never been a collection of his very best short stories offered to the trade. Hodgson's sea stories have unusual authenticity owing to his having spent a lot of time on merchant's ships-he left his family in 1890 at the age of thirteen to spend eight years at sea, where the experience of mistreatment, poor pay, and worse food was contrasted by Hodgson's immeasurable fascination with the sea. His obsession for the sea fills his writings. This volume collects the very best of Hodgson's sea stories-which has not been done before-with some of the most exciting and dramatic creatures of fantasy on the written page, exhibiting the sea in all her moods: wonder, mystery, beauty, and terror.

"This collection brings together the very best of his short stories, together with a sampling of his poetry. It includes a variety of his sea horrors along with two non-fantastic pieces: "On the Bridge," a journalistic story written immediately after the sinking of the Titanic which attempts to show some of the various factors which contributed to the tragedy, and the suspenseful nonfiction story "Through the Vortex of a Cyclone," which is based on Hodgson's own experiences at sea." – From the Introduction by Douglas A. Anderson

"Among connoisseurs of fantasy fiction William Hope Hodgson deserves a high and permanent rank . . . Few can equal him in adumbrating the nearness of nameless forces and monstrous besieging entities through casual hints and significant details, or in conveying feelings of the spectral and abnormal." – H. P. Lovecraft

"Among those fiction writers who have elected to deal with the shadowlands

and borderlands of human existence, William Hope Hodgson surely merits a place with the very few that inform their treatment of such themes with a sense of authenticity." – Clark Ashton Smith


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #96033 in Books
  • Published on: 2005-10-18
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 288 pages

Features


Editorial Reviews

About the Author
William Hope Hodgson (1877-1918) is remembered today for his four novels, two of which are unquestioned classics (The House on the Borderland and The Night Land), with a third (The Ghost Pirates) acknowledged as one of the finest sea horror stories.


Customer Reviews

Adrift on the Haunted Seas.5
_Adrift on the Haunted Seas: The Best Short Stories of William Hope Hodgson_ is an excellent collection of the various eerie sea stories of William Hope Hodgson (1877-1918). Praised as an expert story-teller by H. P. Lovecraft, Hodgson was British born and became a cabin boy on a ship defying his father's wishes. Hodgson was obsessed with physical training and developed his body as he traveled on the seas, but during his spare time he engaged in reading and taking photographs. Later, Hodgson was to become a writer who wrote stories about the seafaring life and incorporated uncanny elements in them revealing the mysteries of the open sea. Hodgson's stories are unique in his ability for "conveying feelings of the spectral and abnormal" as H. P. Lovecraft put it. These stories are filled with strange sea creatures, such as deadly molds and fungi, gigantic crabs, sea serpents, octopi (the dreaded "devil-fish"), and sea caterpillars, and haunted direlects. The stories also feature the natural atmospheric occurrences of the sea, including deadly lightning and cyclones, as well as earthquakes. One of the stories in this collection also includes the element of magical rites in it and another features a sea-ghoul. In addition, a great number of Hodgson's stories reveal his fascination with the Sargasso Sea, a snare of weed-patched sea in the mid-Atlantic that became legendary to sailors. Indeed, frequently ships appear caught in the weed of the Sargasso Sea and nefarious sea creatures lurk beneath it in the stories. This collection also features some poetry of Hodgson as well. Hodgson was later to enlist during the First World War and was killed in battle.

This collection includes the following stories and poems of Hodgson:

"On the Bridge"

"The Voice in the Night"

"Grey Seas are Dreaming of My Death" (verse)

"Out of the Storm"

"The Voice in the Dawn"

"The Haunted Jarvee"

"From the Tideless Sea (First Part and Second Part)"

"The Derelict"

"The Wild Man of the Sea"

"The Place of Storms" (verse)

"The Haunted Pampero"

"An Adventure of the Deep Waters"

"Demons of the Sea"

"Through the Vortex of a Cyclone"

"The Finding of the Graiken"

"A Tropical Horror"

"Thou Living Sea" (verse)

"The Mystery of the Derelict"

"The Stone Ship"

"The Shamraken Homeward-Bounder"

"Farewell" (verse).

These stories are very well written and interesting and will appeal to all those who enjoy the weird element and eerie description of the strange and supernatural and sea-faring lore.

WONDERFUL5
A found the name "William Hope Hodgson" by watching the japanese commentary with english subtitles to the 1960's rubber monster flick, "Matango"

That film (though quite fun and creepy in a wonderful way) DOES NOT COMPARE with the amazing short story it was based on. But I couldn't find the story anywhere. I read it online and decided that I had to have it. This book not only contains that one, truly great but unfortunately hard to find story, but many others that I've found to be absolutely fantastic.
If you like creepy short stories that weave a cloud of atmosphere and apprehension and drop it on your head like a flash flood, You'll love Hodgson's short stories. For the small price you pay, you'll find these stories stick with you right into your dreams and nightmares.
Absolutely wonderful.

Hodgson scores with haunted sea stories5
William Hope Hodgson, whose life was tragically cut short in WWI, spent years at sea while a teenager and young man, and his experience with that life allowed him a familiarity and ease in telling sea yarns. The stories do have a theme that crops up regularly, namely, the device of the Sargasso Sea, the seaweed 'island' that inhabits the mid-Atlantic. All of the stories are entertaining, and a couple are classics. You will recognize one of them as an old television episode. Some stories are more engrossing than others, but on the whole, this is a book you will have trouble putting down, if you like sea yarns and weird tales. The poems, while not great poetry, also pack an emotional punch, and I'm glad they were included.