It is perhaps fitting that a writer of mystery and the uncanny should present a mystery himself in his own final act, Ambrose Bierce a witness and chronicler
The ongoing Tales of the Weird collection of the British Library now numbering over thirty volumes, it is inevitable that not only will certain authors and themes recur
The Moon and Mars having been explored at length in his previous collections Moonrise and Lost Mars, editor Mike Ashley presents a more generalised view of the children
There can be no denying that Edward Frederic Benson was born into a respectable and well-connected family; by the year of his tenth birthday, his father Edward White
Having considered the possibilities and occasional hazards of time travel, artificial intelligence and monsters both from within and beyond in his earlier anthologies for the Science Fiction Classics
The clock turns back as Mike Ashley once again scours the archives of the British Library to compile another anthology in their ongoing Science Fiction Classics range, this
“Classic tales of creatures from beyond” is the promise made by editor Mike Ashley in the latest collection in the Science Fiction Classics range of the British Library,
The latest volume in the Science Fiction Classics range of the British Library edited by Mike Ashley, Menace of the Machine gathers fourteen stories originally published between 1894
Published alongside their retrospective consideration or our nearest celestial body, Moonrise – The Golden Age of Lunar Adventures, the British Library also look further afield to our next