From the Publisher
Shivers and spirits... the mystical and macabre... our darkest fears and sweetest fantasies... the fun and frivolity of tricks, treats, festivities, and masquerades. Halloween is a holiday filled with both delight and dread, beloved by youngsters and adults alike. Celebrate the most magical season of the year with this sensational treasury of seasonal tales - spooky, suspenseful, terrifying, or teasing - harvested from a multitude of master storytellers.
About the Author
Howard Phillips Lovecraft, 1890 - 1937 H. P. Lovecraft was born on
August 20, 1890 in Providence, Rhode Island. His mother was Sarah
Susan Phillips Lovecraft and his father was Winfield Scott
Lovecraft, a traveling salesman for Gorham & Co. Silversmtihs.
Lovecraft was reciting poetry at the age of two and when he was
three years old, his father suffered a mental breakdown and was
admitted to Butler Hospital. He spent five years there before dying
on July 19, 1898 of paresis, a form of neurosyphillis. During those
five years, Lovecraft was told that his father was paralyzed and in
a coma, which was not the case. His mother, two aunts and
grandfather were now bringing up Lovecraft. He suffered from
frequent illnesses as a boy, many of which were psychological. He
began writing between the ages of six and seven and, at about the
age of eight, he discovered science. He began to produce the
hectographed journals, "The Scientific Gazette" (1899-1907) and
"The Rhode Island Journal of Astronomy" (1903-07). His first
appearance in print happened, in 1906, when he wrote a letter on an
astronomical matter to The Providence Sunday Journal. A short time
later, he began writing a monthly astronomy column for The Pawtuxet
Valley Gleaner - a rural paper. He also wrote columns for The
Providence Tribune (1906-08), The Providence Evening News
(1914-18), The Asheville (N.C.) Gazette-News (1915). In 1904, his
grandfather died and the family suffered severe financial
difficulties, which forced him and his mother to move out of their
Victorian home. Devastated by this, he apparently contemplated
suicide. In 1908, before graduating from high school, he suffered a
nervous breakdown. He didn't receive a diploma and failed to get
into Brown University, both of which caused him great shame.
Lovecraft was not heard from for five years, reemerging because of
a letter he wrote in protest to Fred Jackson's love story in The
Argosy. His letter was published in 1913 and caused great
controversy, which was noted by Edward F. Daas, President of the
United Amateur Press Association (UAPA). Daas invited Lovecraft to
join the UAPA, which he did in early 1914. He eventually became
President and Official Editor of the UAPA and served briefly as
President of the rival National Amateur Press Association (NAPA).
He published thirteen issues of his own paper, The Conservative
(1915-23) and contributed poetry and essays to other journals. He
also wrote some fiction which titles include "The Beast in the
Cave" (1905), "The Alchemist" (1908), "The Tomb" and "Dagon"
(1917). In 1919, Lovecraft's mother was deteriorating, mentally and
physically, and was admitted to Butler Hospital. On May 24, 1921,
his mother died from a gall bladder operation. While attending an
amateur journalism convention in Boston, Lovecraft met his future
wife Sonia Haft Greene, a Russian Jew. They were married on March
3, 1924 and Lovecraft moved to her apartment in Brooklyn. Sonia had
a shop on Fifth Avenue that went bankrupt. In 1925, Sonia went to
Cleveland for a job and Lovecraft moved to a smaller apartment in
the Red Hook district of Brooklyn. In 1926, he decided to move back
to Providence. Lovecraft had his aunts bar his wife, Sonia, from
going to Providence to start a business because he couldn't have
the stigma of a tradeswoman wife. They were divorced in 1929. After
his return to Providence, he wrote his greatest fiction, which
included the titles "The Call of Cthulhu" (1926), "At the Mountains
of Madness" (1931), and "The Shadow Out of Time" (1934-35). In
1932, his aunt, Mrs. Clark, died; and he moved in with his other
aunt, Mrs. Gamwell, in 1933. Suffering from cancer of the
intestine, Lovecraft was admitted to Jane Brown Memorial Hospital
and on March 15, 1937 he died.
Al Sarrantonio has written 28 novels and has had his short stories
appear in publications such as, "Heavy Metal," Twilight
Zone,""Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine" and "Realms of
Fantasy." He has also had his work appear in such anthologies as
"The Year's Best Horror Stories," Visions of Fantasies: Tales from
the Masters,""Great Ghost Stories" and "The Best of Shadows."
Sarrantonio writes a host of genres, including, science fiction,
fantasy, horror and western. His novels include,
"Exile,""Moonbane,""October,""West Texas" and "Campbell Wood." He
was nominated for the Bram Stoker Award of the Horror Writer's
Association and the Private Eye Writer's of America's Shamus Award.
Sarrantonio has edited three volumes of humor as well as co-edited
"100 Hair Raising Little Horror Stories."
Author F. Paul Wilson was born in Jersey City, New Jersey on May
17, 1946. He has written over forty books and short story
collections. He is best known for the Repairman Jack series and the
Sims series. He won the Prometheus Award in 1979 for Wheels Within
Wheels and in 2004 for Sims. He also won a 1984 Progie Award from
the West Coast Review of Books for The Tomb, the Hall of Fame Award
from the Libertarian Futurist Society in 1990 for Healer and in
1991 for An Enemy of the State, and the 1999 Bram Stoker Award for
short fiction for Aftershock. His book The Keep was made into a
film in 1983. Wilson lives in Wall Township, NJ.