: Arthur B. Reeve
: The Best Ghost Stories
: neobooks Self-Publishing
: 9783756575992
: 1
: CHF 0.90
:
: Erzählende Literatur
: German
: 340
: Wasserzeichen
: PC/MAC/eReader/Tablet
: ePUB
Who does not feel a suppressed start at the creaking of furniture in the dark of night? Who has not felt a shiver of goose flesh, controlled only by an effort of will? Who, in the dark, has not had the feeling of something behind him-and, in spite of his conscious reasoning, turned to look? This collection of ghost stories has some of the best stories ever written. This book will leave you chilled to the bone and looking over your shoulder.

He is known best for creating the series character Professor Craig Kennedy, sometimes called 'The American Sherlock Holmes', and Kennedy's Dr. Watson-like sidekick Walter Jameson, a newspaper reporter, for 18 detective novels. Reeve is famous mostly for the 82 Craig Kennedy stories, published in Cosmopolitan magazine between 1910 and 1918. These were collected in book form; with the third collection, the short stories were published grouped together as episodic novels.

THE FASCINATION OF THE GHOST STORY


THE BEST GHOST STORIES



INTRODUCTION BYARTHUR B. REEVE



INTRODUCTION

ARTHURB. REEVE

What is the fascination we feel for the mystery of the ghost story?

Is it of the same nature as the fascination which we feel for the mystery of the detective story?

Of the latter fascination, the late Paul Armstrong used to say that it was because we are all as full of crime as Sing Sing—only we don't dare.

Thus, may I ask, are we not fascinated by the ghost story because, no matter what may be the scientific or skeptical bent of our minds, in our inmost souls, secretly perhaps, we are as full of superstition as an obeah man—only we don't let it loose?

Who shall say that he is able to fling off lightly the inheritance of countless ages of superstition? Is there not a streak of superstition in us all? We laugh at the voodoo worshiper—then create our own hoodooes, our pet obsessions.

It has been said that man is incurably religious, that if all religions were blotted out, man would create a new religion.

Man is incurably fascinated by the mysterious. If all the ghost stories of the ages were blotted out, man would invent new ones.

For, do we not all stand in awe of that which we cannot explain, of that which, if it be not in our own experience, is certainly recorded in the experience of others, of that of which we know and can know nothing?

Skeptical though one may be of the occult, he must needs be interested in things that others believe to be objective—that certainly are subjectively very real to them.

The ghost story is not born of science, nor even of super-sci