Showing posts with label folk horror. Show all posts
Showing posts with label folk horror. Show all posts

Saturday, 28 March 2026

MONUMENTAL by Adam LG Nevill


A novel of pagan terror from the author of The Ritual and The Reddening.

Disaster strikes quickly and without warning. What should have been a glorious weekend of kayaking and camping, in a secluded beauty spot, is transformed by a scream. The first crisis, initiating a deadly momentum that accelerates as the valley reveals itself to Marcus and his five companions.

They're trespassing on strictly private land. There's only one way out. An escape route closed until the next high tide fills the estuary. In twelve hours' time. 

Recreation becomes survival.

Marooned, unable to summon help, harassed by dire and worsening circumstances, the ties that bind the expedition are stretched taut. If they snap, vital cooperation will unravel and the group members' damning secrets will be revealed. 

Only the most courageous and committed have any chance against the area's inhabitants. But is any mind strong enough to endure a confrontation with the most hideous revelation of all? An ancient evil that coils beneath the valley's sinister folklore. 

A story of life and death in the wilderness.


Monumental is the thirteenth novel from Adam LG Nevill, unlucky for some? Well, thankfully for us readers, here we have another belting tale of dread and horror told with all the flair and imagination we have come to expect from Adam Nevill. But as for the motley band of kayakers in the novel, well, they are going to have a bloody terrible night… And I do mean literally bloody terrible… But I’m getting ahead of myself. 

As the fifth book Nevill has published under his own Ritual Limited imprint, we have another fantastic cover from Sam Araya, and once again he has managed to crystallise the novel into a single striking image. The haunting non-human visage that stares balefully back at you from the cover immediately makes you want to pick up the book and find out what the hell you are looking at. However once you get into the novel and discover what exactly is adorning the cover, you realise what a beautiful rendition of the descriptions in the book it is. And indeed after you learn what is masterfully depicted on the cover, you may well find that inhuman face haunting your nightmares. 

After ending the world in his previous novel All the Fiends from Hell - a visionary tale of an apocalypse that made Breughel’s paintings of the End Times look like a quaint picnic - you might think that perhaps Adam is getting a bit soft in his old age with a tale of jolly nice folks off for a camp in the picturesque countryside of Devon. However do not be fooled, for while the events recounted in Monumental are on a smaller scale than his preceding novel, there’s no shortage of gruelling horror and dread-inducing imagery here. 

The basic plot line is elegantly straightforward, and in many ways, it has the simplicity of an old folk tale. Indeed Monumental is perhaps at its heart a cautionary tale of wandering off into the wilds, for our group of kayakers camping in the Devon countryside will soon discover there’s a good reason why Wyrm Valley is strictly private land, and why the owners don’t want random visitors blundering in. As it is, the trip begins in an inauspicious start - the paddle across the sea to get to the river mouth proves to be highly perilous. But by the time our not-so happy campers realise that they may have made a huge mistake in coming to this particular eerie valley, time and tide are conspiring against them. For as they entered the valley by kayaking in from the sea, they are stranded until the tides change and they can safely paddle out again. However, that means surviving the night in Wyrm Valley… And unforgiving terrain and capricious waterways just being the beginning of the troubles for the party. 

And this tidal factor gives the novel a solid structure, with each chapter bearing not a title but a time stamp, ticking down through the dim watches of the night. It is an excellent narrative  device, at first charting the timeline of the expedition as the party enters the valley and begins to explore, but it is not long before those chapter timestamps have become grim and terse reminders of just how much longer the characters have to survive. A task that becomes increasingly daunting as their situation takes turn after excruciating turn for the worse, and night seems like it will never end.

Indeed, the natural landscape of the wilds of Devon is very much a character in its own right. At first, the fictional Divilmouth region on the South West coast is beguiling and beautiful, but as we head into Wyrm Valley the countryside becomes increasingly eerie and strange, and ultimately otherworldly and threatening. Much like the old master Algernon Blackwood, Nevill uses the landscape itself to convey a powerful growing sense of uncanny menace. Now here in England in particular, we have always tended to romanticise the countryside, seeing it as a place of green tranquillity, gentle weather and cuddly wildlife. Likewise we tend to view our pre-industrial past through rosy lenses, seeing our ancestors as inhabiting cosy rustic societies, where we lived off the land, and strange stones and crude temples created mystical spaces where they could commune in harmony with nurturing nature.

However as the ill-fated excursion in Monumental reveals, the great outdoors is a frequently unforgiving place, and nature is just green, it’s often red in tooth and claw.  Life in the past was similarly harsh and unforgiving, with survival being paid for in blood splashed on old stones. And more often than not, the land lived off our ancestors rather than the other way round. In Monumental, we find that some old practices are perhaps best left in that savage past, that some places are ruined and forgotten for a very good reason, and certain things which haunted and hunted in the ancient countryside should never ever be brought back. Romantic reconstructions and idealistic rewilding can lead to ancient visceral horrors hungrily biting bloody chunks out of the present day. 

As I have mentioned in previous reviews, there is often a delicious swerve in a Nevill novel. Now these swerves are not so much surprise plot twists, but more events or revelations that dynamically and thrillingly change your perception of the story. And I am delighted to report that there is a great Nevillian swerve in Monumental. However this time it isn’t rooted in one specific instance - rather I suspect it will come at different points for different readers - very much slowly creeping up on you much like some of the horrors in this book - but a point will come you realise that there are some very subtle connections between the unearthly horrors of Wyrm Valley and certain old legends.

Monumental presents us with a terrifying vision of what cruel terrors lie behind the cosy facade of our old folk tales. And while the theme of let sleeping gods lie certainly signals the influence of HP Lovecraft, there is an older influence here too, the works of Arthur Machen, whose stories frequently reveal a horrifyingly monstrous truth lurking behind the cosy veneer of fable and legend. And should you think that all sounds a tad too cosmic or mystical, do be warned that these old horrors require plenty of blood, and our unfortunate campers intend to go down swinging... It’s not an accident that the opening quote for this novel comes from the great Robert E. Howard, whose weird tales often fused eldritch terrors with a hefty dose of visceral violence.

Furthermore in Monumental, Nevill is very much weaving his very own terrifying mythos. And I was delighted to discover several scattered allusions to his earlier works, references that confirm that this tale is unfolding in the same world in which the events of The Vessel (2022), Cunning Folk (2021), The Reddening (2019), and Under A Watchful Eye (2017) all occurred. And the weird powers and unsettling places of those other novels are part of a wider universe. How far this Divilmouth mythos will be developed remains to be seen, but it is very entertaining for long-time fans to spot these little Easter eggs and to know that there is a Devonian Nevill County infested with a pantheon of ancient thrones and powers, a bedevilled area like Lovecraft’s New England or Ramsey Campbell’s Severn Valley. 

In conjuring new terrors that resonate with ancient stories and legends, Monumental sees Adam Nevill once more proving there is more potential in folk horror than just another rehash of The Wicker Man. Much like his previous novels he conjures from the landscape new strange sorceries and malign beings rather than merely sticking a fright wig on the over familiar green man. The horrors of Monumental have a lore of their own, a history that the characters only retrieve glimpses of. And while this bloody new lore clearly echoes aspects of our own folklore it feels unsettling unfamiliar and enigmatically ancient. These new terrors spawned from the ancient landscapes hint of the real reasons we wove tales to scare ourselves away from the dark woods, the blighted moors and the lonely hilltops, and tap into the primal fears of our ancestors that fell powers lurked in these wild spaces, hungering to feast upon us. 

  
As he details in this book’s afterword, Nevill himself is a keen kayaker and the novel was very much inspired by his own excursions in and around Devon. And that shines through in this novel. The descriptions of the journey into Wyrm Valley richly capture the wild beauty of the Devon landscape, firmly giving the novel an authentic sense of place, rooted in real geography rather than some dreamed up version of an idealised countryside. Likewise his knowledge of the practicalities and hazards of kayaking and wild camping similarly ground the unfolding events. As in his earlier works, Nevill has always shown a deft touch at providing details and events that always ground the narrative no matter how far into the supernatural and horrific the story goes. There is always a relatable, recognizable reality governing his stories, where, as in this book, a twisted ankle or a bit of kit failing is as much of a problem as the pale shapes advancing through the dead trees. 

Similarly Nevill treats his characters with the same level of reality. While this story may have some wonderful and monstrous otherworldly elements, the party of this most unfortunate expedition are all very real recognisable people. Our lead character Marcus, may well be the main protagonist for the tale, with us mostly seeing events unfold through his eyes, but he is no cookie cutter hero. Rather he is an ordinary guy, with the same physical limits as us, with the same failings and flaws, and harbouring the same doubts, fears and insecurities as we all do. His companions on this paddle to Wyrm Valley equally all have stories of their own, with the novel switching every now and then to see the action from another perspective. 

Nevill does not traffic is simple stereotypes, and likewise this group is depicted in a very realistic fashion, with Nevill deft weaving in the kind of rivalries and petty tensions that will emerge in any group of people over time. It’s marvellously well observed; for example we have all met a Nigel at some point, the kind of person who always wants to take charge in a group despite not really being up to the job. Likewise we’ve all met a Julian too, the sort of nebbish that is always around to enable a Nigel. However Nevill’s masterstroke here is how he slowly reveals the causes of all these little tensions in the group, and how despite the party being in increasing dire straits, personal agendas and petty grievances still bubble up to the fore. In the early scenes the group’s interactions did remind me of early Mike Leigh plays, where ostensibly folks are politely getting along, but there’s a prickle tension signalling there is much bubbling under the surface pleasantries. And there is delicious irony in the fact that as the novel progresses you realise that this paddle was always going to end up as the camp from Hell, even if they hadn’t stumbled on the horrors centred on a strange monument in this wild and purposefully private valley.

There is often the idea that in horror fiction one either goes for subtle chills or graphic mayhem. And fear and gore are seen as opposite ends of the horror spectrum, and never the twain shall meet. However one of the joys of an Adam Nevill novel is that he effortlessly delivers both moments of icy creeping dread and red explosions of visceral horror. However In Monumental he is delivering terrors to cover all points in between. We shift smoothly through eerie mystery and psychological suspense, to folk terrors and bloody kinetic body horror, and even reaches transcendent moments of cosmic fright where the landscape morphs into a hellish otherworld that lies just beneath the leaves and soil of this one.

I feel that these oscillations through the spectrum of terror that Nevill orchestrates beautifully in this novel could be termed “Endurance horror”. For Monumental doesn't just deliver a mere physical fight for survival with never-ending numbers of monsters and limited resources, rather this is a series of terrors that drench the characters with unearthly dread, but also plunge them into vivid violence that will test them to their utmost limits. The ancient forces unleashed in Monumental will take them to the edge not only physically, but mentally, emotionally, even spiritually. These endurance horrors are a profound assault on every possible level, redefining a fight for survival as more than a basic physical challenge; it is a battle to continue to exist with a scrap of humanity left and a scramble to retain a tattered shred of sanity. 

Monumental is another excellent novel, one that not only has some subtle links to his earlier works, but sees Nevill very much building and solidifying his own personal vision for horror fiction. On one hand Monumental is a great companion to an earlier endurance horror classic from him, The Ritual, but here the gruelling confrontation with dark and bloody paganism is melding with the creeping ethereal terrors found in earlier books such as Under a Watchful Eye. It's a book that has deep connections to the old masters of weird tales, while very definitely taking horror fiction confidently into the 21st century. And I for one, I cannot wait to see what new nests of nightmare Nevill will unearth next!

Monumental is released on the 2nd April from Ritual Limited in hardback, paperback, ebook and audiobook too! Book an excursion to your new nightmares now!



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Friday, 31 October 2025

FROM THE GREAT LIBRARY OF DREAMS 154 - Once Upon a Halloween Night by Jim Moon


It's All Hallows Eve and we are visiting the little village of Meadowsend where the locals grow nervous around the end of October. For here there are many whispered stories of old ghosts and folklore horrors, strange things are seen in the shadows, and voices call out of the night...

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Sunday, 31 August 2025

FROM THE GREAT LIBRARY OF DREAMS 148 - The Sumach by Ulric Daubeny

At the height of summer, as something deep in the soil stirs, one old tree's leaves are already turning red - find out why in this seminal tale of folk horror from Ulric Daubeny! 

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Sunday, 27 July 2025

FROM THE GREAT LIBRARY OF DREAMS 146 - The Gate of the Dead by Jim Moon


The second part of a strange tale unearthed from the mysterious vaults of the Great Library of Dreams - a memoir of boyhood summer in a very different 1970s... one where the dead walk!

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Sunday, 20 July 2025

FROM THE GREAT LIBRARY OF DREAMS 145 - Beating The Bounds by Jim Moon


In this episode, we begin a two part tale unearthed from the mysterious vaults of the Great Library of Dreams - a memoir of boyhood summer in a very different 1970s...

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Sunday, 30 March 2025

FROM THE GREAT LIBRARY OF DREAMS 135 - Nice Weather For Ducks by Jim Moon


This week a folk horror tale from Mr Moon himself - some Youtubers explore a ruined tower on a remote island in Northumbria, and discover that it is not as deserted as it first appears... 
  
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Monday, 14 October 2024

FROM THE GREAT LIBRARY OF DREAMS 119 - Lisheen by Frederick Cowles


A vintage tale of folk horror by Mr Frederick Cowles, in which a clergyman in rural Cornwall discovers secret rites held in ancient ruins on Hallowe'en night. 

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Monday, 23 September 2024

MICROGORIA 124 - Eight for Silver


A quick spoiler-free review of the 2021 movie Eight for Silver AKA The Cursed which leaves Netflix next week. Hear why you should catch this fantastically autumnal folk horror tale while you can! 

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Sunday, 22 September 2024

FROM THE GREAT LIBRARY OF DREAMS 117 - Dickon the Devil by Sheridan le Fanu


A tale by the man considered by none other than MR James to be the master of the ghost story - Sheridan le Fanu. In this autumnal story, we discover a rural Lancashire yarn that is more than a legend... 

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Sunday, 25 August 2024

FROM THE GREAT LIBRARY OF DREAMS 115 - An Evening's Entertainment by MR James


While we often associate the ghost stories of MR James with winter and old colleges, he did write a wide variety of tales, and tonight we have one that may be considered early folk horror,  taking place in the heart of the countryside in the summertime...





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Tuesday, 24 October 2023

Hypnogoria Halloween Advent Calendar - Door 24 - The Old Grandmother's Warning


Door 24 - The Old Grandmother's Warning

Take care my child when walking home alone, 
When the sun is catched in gnarled boughs of trees, 
And red beams bleed through scratchy twigs and leaves 

Take care my child and always come straight home, 
Never stray or stop to play in the park, 
For there are hungry shadows in the dark 

Take care my child and hurry quickly home, 
When copses chew on the last bites of light, 
Crooked shadows will reach out to bar your flight 

Take care my child and run, run swift for home, 
For that shadowy shape flitting in the woods 
Is a raggedy horror in a blood-stained hood... 

Extract from Songs of the Red Vale: A Treasury ed. Robert Bowen (Haining Press 1863)


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Sunday, 15 October 2023

Hypnogoria Halloween Advent Calendar - Door 15 - Down in the Woods


Down in the woods where the witch ran free, 
In the middle of a glade stands a biting tree. 
Evil twists its very form, 
Lost souls scream in a haunted swarm, 
For the tree likes blood in a thunderstorm. 

No! No! The frightening tree, 
I don't like it 
And it doesn't like me! 
Go! Go! From the biting tree, 
The dead don't rest easily. 

Down in the woods where the witch sleeps tight, 
The old tree bites the middle of the night. 
Flesh ripped raw in the thunder's roar 
A biting tree has a hungry maw. 

Go! Go! From the frightening tree, 
I don't like it 
And it doesn't like me! 
No! No! This blighting tree, 
The dead won't die easily. 


Lyrics from the single Down in the Woods by Hollyfoot, released on 12th October 1968 on Fring Records, from the album Songs of the Chapel Hill Tomb-Folk released 31st October 1968 





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Sunday, 16 July 2023

FROM THE GREAT LIBRARY OF DREAMS 086 - Wood Magic by Frederick Cowles


Tonight we have another tale of terror set in the heart of the English countryside. In this story from Mr Frederick Cowles - a vintage serving of folk horror - we visit a country house near a small wood, home to an old tree known as the Devil's Oak...

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Sunday, 6 November 2022

HYPNOGORIA 227 - Rituals Unlimited Part VII - The Vessel


In this episode we take a deep delve into the latest novel from Adam LG Nevill - The Vessel, a contemporary, cutting-edge tale of haunting folk horror!

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Plus for more coverage of the works of Adam LG Nevill check out my podcast series on his books

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Tuesday, 1 November 2022

THE VESSEL by Adam LG Nevill



'A watcher may remark that after sleeping for so long, the building appears to have been roused.'

Once again, as is now becoming traditional, Halloween has brought us a brand new book from Adam LG Nevill. The Vessel is his eleventh novel and once again has been published by his own imprint Ritual Limited as a limited edition hardback, paperback and electronic editions, and there will be an audiobook coming very soon.

Like its predecessors - The Reddening, Wyrd and Other Derelictions, and Cunning Folk - The Vessel features another strikingly eerie cover from the brilliant Samuel Araya. Now sad to say we have been living through something of a dark age in book cover design, with lazy photoshopping and big fonts replacing the glorious painted covers of yesteryear. However this run of covers for Nevill’s recent works have been a fabulous return to truly evocative art, and Araya’s cover The Vessel is something of a masterpiece. It’s a textbook example of what good art should do for a book - it provides a visual first tantalising taste of the story, a single image to beguile your imagination, to set you wondering what intriguing tale the pages hold. 

Of course the joy of a new Adam Nevill book is that you are never entirely certain what courses will be served up in this latest banquet for the damned. He has never been content to plough the same furrow, something amply demonstrated by his latest three novels, which all can be described “folk horror” and yet are very different tales of terror. The Reddening gave us a gruelling epic with multiple narrators falling into the shadow of a very ancient and bloody menace, while last year’s Cunning Folk, drew on different aspects of old English magic and witchery. And where The Reddening gave us a tense tale of survival horror, Cunning Folk was a more intimate story of creeping dread and  liberally laced with some potent black humour. 

And now we have The Vessel, which can also be described as contemporary folk horror, but gives us something very different again. As is deftly suggested by Sam Araya’s cover, this is a more spectral sort of tale. Young single mother Jess is having a hard time, stuck in a grotty area, struggling to make ends meet, her ex Tony being more of a hindrance than a help, and her daughter Izzy is being bullied in school. However a new job as a residential carer promises to be the long sought solution - steady work and enough money to move to a better area, send Izzy to a better school, and to put the troubles of the last few years behind them. The job in question is doing shifts caring for an elderly lady, Flo who lives alone in a once grand vicarage, Nerthus House. Flo is wheelchair-bound and seemingly lost in a world of her own. However as Jess will discover, Nerthus House holds many secrets and its past is not going to lie quiet…

Naturally this being a Nevill novel, this is no straight-forward tale of spooks and spectres. For while there are seemingly paranormal happenings and even apparitions, this is as much a story about the spirits of a place as it is the lost souls of the dead. Without giving about any spoilers, a good point of reference would be the eerie tales of Algernon Blackwood where the essence of landscape and location loom large, becoming potent and sentient, spectral and ethereal. Likewise there are touches of Arthur Machen here, where what is manifesting is not so much a returning spirit but a survival of something from an ancient pagan past. 

However The Vessel is no modern pastiche of either Blackwood or Machen, and as in his previous forays into folk horror, Nevill very much brings his own distinctive and imaginative vision to the tale. Refreshingly this is not the usual story of a city dweller venturing into the countryside and coming face to face with chanting pagans re-enacting The Wicker Man. Rather when Jess takes the job caring for Flo at Nerthus House, what follows is a carefully constructed series of odd incidents creating an atmosphere of encroaching weirdness, and slowly weave together a story of some strange and troubling survivals. 

And survival is a key theme in The Vessel. Obviously there is the central menace, which I won’t reveal, but suffice to say it is something from an ancient time of forgotten rites and primitive worship, that has lingered into the modern age.  However there are also other survivals too, the strange figures and images conjured up the gloom in Nerthus House, what MR James’ Mr Abney would term “the psychic portion of the subjects”. Likewise Nerthus House and the sleepy village of Eadric still endure too, despite new developments and modern estates getting ever nearer, and the halcyon days of the village seemingly being long past now.  

On another level, it is also the story of more personal survivals. We have Flo’s situation, infirm, nearly immobile, and perhaps lost to dementia, yet still surviving all these indignities that time can inflict upon us. In contrast this old lady at the end of the days, we have young Izzy who is just beginning hers, but she has trials and tribulations too - she's a child still learning about the world but also having to come to terms with separated parents and facing bullying at her school. 

And then of course there are various survival challenges for Jess. For as ever in an Adam Nevill excursion into dread, the weirdness and supernaturalism are firmly wedded to the real world. For despite being troubled by the strange events that begin to escalate around her, she can’t afford to quit this job. As it is she is struggling to get through the aftermath of her relationship with Tony collapsing. But then as she starts her new job, there are odd incidents, and haunting dreams, and a client who is apparently active in a most unusual fashion. All of this is indeed very disconcerting and increasingly troubling, but also looming over her is the threat of being unable to provide for her family, to pay the bills, to keep her daughter safe; things that may prove to be larger and more immediate perils. The twin spectres of poverty and failure can more than give the horrors haunting Nerthus House a run for their money. 

However as I have mentioned nothing is to be taken for granted in an Adam Nevill novel. For, as is often the case, this tale has one particular moment, when we get what I have in the past called the Nevill swerve. This is a scene that will radically alter the expected shape of the tale he is telling. For time and time again, he deftly manages to anticipate where the reader thinks the story is going, and then, at just the right moment, will throw in something that changes the course of the narrative. And the swerve in The Vessel is a belter, a scene that is genuinely shocking and seems to come out of the blue, although on reflection you will realise the path to getting to this stunning moment was carefully laid out right from the beginning, and you have been expertly guided to this pivotal moment. 

But what follows this particular scene is equally surprising, building logically to the story’s memorable conclusion. Now in many ways The Vessel is a very compact tale but it is also a masterclass in storytelling. For while the storyline might seem simple at first, there are subtle complexities here, connections that only become apparent after a little reflection. Certainly it is a novel that will reveal deeper secrets on a second reading. And while the tale concludes in a very satisfying final scene, with various plot threads all neatly coming together in ways one may not have anticipated, there is a kind of transcendence in the finale, with awe joining the horror. 

And there are ambiguities here about the nature of the powers lingering around Nerthus House, for like the ancient mysteries called up in the works of Blackwood and Machen, what may seem terrifying and otherworldly may not be not necessarily evil, and indeed where and how we draw lines of morality when assessing the haunting events of The Vessel are questions that will linger with many readers. The Vessel is a tale of surviving practices and powers that reveals far more than the usual elderly gods and monsters stalking the fields and furrows. Rather it is a story concerning how, and indeed why, some things are not forgotten. It’s a tale that embodies some truly ancient pagan ideas, that events fall in patterns, often becoming cyclical, coming around again and again like the seasons. And the turn of this wheel shapes both the present and the future. This is folk horror with imagination, intelligence and heart, and highly recommended.




Plus for more coverage of the works of Adam LG Nevill check out my podcast series on his books


Thursday, 25 August 2022

FROM THE GREAT LIBRARY OF DREAMS 059 - Ancient Lights by Algernon Blackwood


In this visit to the Great Library we have a sunlit tale of folk horror from Mr Algernon Blackwood, where  a walk in the woods is no picnic... 

DIRECT DOWNLOAD - Ancient Lights by Algernon Blackwood




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Saturday, 19 February 2022

FROM THE GREAT LIBRARY OF DREAMS 051 - Out of the Earth by Flavia Richardson


A classic tale of ghostly terror and proto-folk horror by Flavia Richardson AKA Christine Campbell Thomson, the pioneering editor of the legendary Not At Night horror anthology series.

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