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I like stuff like Edgar Allan Poe (Pit and the Pendulum,The Raven)and MR James, but are there many modern authors now writing this kind of horror,or is it 'too last century?'
I like stuff like Edgar Allan Poe (Pit and the Pendulum,The Raven)and MR James, but are there many modern authors now writing this kind of horror,or is it 'too last century?'
j'd i just found this on bookmooch, is this what you mean?I'd suggest you check out a few of the anthologies of Gothic literature, myself, such as The Oxford Book of Gothic Tales, The Evil Image: Two Centuries of Gothic Short Fiction and Poetry (if you can find a copy... they're apparently fairly easy to find on the 'net), etc. This will give you an idea of how the form has changed over time.
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That would be the one (though the copy I have has different cover art: Death the Bride, by T. C. Gotch, 1854-1931 -- very much of the pre-Raphaelite school, so very fitting for an anthology of Gothic tales).
http://www.goodart.org/blog/ThomasCooperGotch-DeathTheBride.jpg
It takes you from some of the earliest (including some of the old chapbooks) through the 19th century and into the modern use of the Gothic approach...
I'd also highly recommend Walter de la Mare, whose "Seaton's Aunt" and "The Beckoning Fair One"