Lost worlds and ports of call

Tag: Donald M. Grant

Charles Grant’s horror trilogy

In the 1980s Charles L. Grant wrote three books set in the same fictional location. The first one dealt with vampires, the second with werewolves, and the third with mummies. All are tropes of horror fiction going back to the beginning of the genre, although stories featuring mummies are in much shorter supply than vampires or werewolves. These books were all published by the Donald. M. Grant, who published many horror writers in the 1980s and 1990s, ranging from Charles L. Grant (no relation, I think) to Stephen King, as well as a slew of other writers.

Charles L. Grant was a noted writer and editor from the 1970s through the 1990s (he died on September 15, 2006 at the all-too-young age of 64). My introduction to Grant’s fiction came in the form of Borderlands Press’s Little Books series — A Little Black Book of Quiet Horror (2019). For many years I’d owned the second edition on Dark Harvest’s Night Visions #2, which Grant edited (he also edited the long-running horror anthology, Shadows, but I never read any of those books). The Borderlands Press book opened my eyes to Grant’s own fiction. I then bought a copy of The Soft Whisper of the Dead (1982), the first book in his trilogy of books set in Oxnard Station. It dealt with vampires. This year I bought both The Dark Cry of the Moon (1985), set in the same location and centered around werewolves and The Long Night of the Grave (1986), the last of the trio, which incorporated mummies to that same location.

The publisher, Donald M. Grant, issued both trade and limited editions, and I went for the trade editions. According to online sources, Grant wrote several other novels, and his Shadows anthology appeared in multiple years, and yet I don’t have a single copy of those books. In the 1980s and 1990s I was more into science fiction. Now I’m more into the mystery genre, although I also try to pick up and read books published by various small press houses from the 1980s and early 1990s. There’s an overlap, somehow, and Grant slots right into that overlap. I wish I’d known more about him earlier, rather than twenty years after he died. But, that’s how it goes these days, as I start to discover fiction from a quarter century ago.

Book added: William Hope Hodgson short story collection

Recently I was in Houston, where among other things I visited a couple of bookstores. The first was in The Woodlands, a used bookstore in a converted house. This store is called Good Books in the Woods, https://www.goodbooksinthewoods.com – it appears to have been converted from an old residence into a bookstore with walls and walls of books. The SF section is small. Prices appeared to have no rhyme or reason; some paperbacks were cheap, others expensive. Some hardcovers were close to $100, others under $20.

Although I already had a couple of editions of Jack Vance’s The Eyes of the Overworld, I found a nice paperback edition that I didn’t have. The $8 cost made me hesitate, but these days finding any Vance book in decent shape is next to impossible.

As far as books that I didn’t already have, I came across a 1975 collection of short stories by William Hope Hodgson, Out of the Storm, published by Donald M. Grant. Grant would later publish three more Hodgson collections: The Dream of X, which I don’t have, plus The Haunted Pampero (1991) and Terrors of the Sea (1996) which I already owned.

Out of the Storm contains seven short stories, as well as quite a long biographical introduction from Sam Moskowitz, and is illustrated by Stephen Fabian. The price when published in 1975 was $10. I paid $25. I think was I surprised to see that book there, and not in the glass-enclosed “rare book” section, where books apparently cost $100 and more. Still, I was happy to find the book, as I like Hodgson’s sea stories.

Grant is perhaps better known as a publisher of Robert E. Howard and Stephen King’s Dark Tower series. They seem to have tapered off recently in the number of books published, so likely will become a defunct publisher at some point, if that hasn’t already happened.

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