Sargeant_Fox
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Feb 3, 2009
- Messages
- 254
I'm posting this here and not in the Horror section because I think it's pertinent.
I recently finished reading T. E. D. Klein's Dark Gods, with a 2021 "Author's Note". In it Klein makes the provocative statement that "[supernatural horror] enjoys a unique longevity. In support of this, I would bring up writers like Robert Hichens, Robert W. Chambers, W. W. Jacobs, A. E. Coppard, Clemence Dane, Marjorie Bowen, Richard Marsh, even L. P. Hartley, popular and prolific authors in their day, whose only stories remaining in print and still anthologized, or at least that are still read, tend to be their supernatural tales.”
Do you agree with this?
If it's true that some writers, once known predominantly for their realist fiction, are now only remembered for their horror tales, why do you think that's the case?
I recently finished reading T. E. D. Klein's Dark Gods, with a 2021 "Author's Note". In it Klein makes the provocative statement that "[supernatural horror] enjoys a unique longevity. In support of this, I would bring up writers like Robert Hichens, Robert W. Chambers, W. W. Jacobs, A. E. Coppard, Clemence Dane, Marjorie Bowen, Richard Marsh, even L. P. Hartley, popular and prolific authors in their day, whose only stories remaining in print and still anthologized, or at least that are still read, tend to be their supernatural tales.”
Do you agree with this?
If it's true that some writers, once known predominantly for their realist fiction, are now only remembered for their horror tales, why do you think that's the case?