'Tis the Season = M.R. James

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+don't know how much of this stuff was as ... familiar? not predictable exactly ... at the head of the last century
+like the one with the ward of the guy who's an expert on sacrificial rituals and whose previous wards have vanished
+and he explains that afterwards!! in case you didn't figure it out!!

apparently i have a long history of hating on 'lost hearts'

weird note: i have a strong memory of reading that particular copy of 'ghost stories of an antiquary' in the house i grew up in ... which on the evidence of this thread never happened, as my parents had left long before the date i say i'm reading it for the first time ~

the ghost of tom, choad (thomp), Wednesday, 3 January 2018 01:20 (eight years ago)

There are collected stories freely downloadable

MRJ might be the only author where I have a sudden luddite desire to claim that there's no substitute for reading him on paper. There is or was a cheapo wordsworth classics edition of the complete ghost stories, which has all but three.

Here comes the phantom menace (ledge), Wednesday, 3 January 2018 09:14 (eight years ago)

There's a run of stories towards the end that up till now have never left any impression on my memory - An Episode of Cathedral History, The Story of a Disappearance and an Appearance, Two Doctors, The Haunted Dolls' House, The Uncommon Prayer-Book. Just reread them all and I would need some convincing that this isn't the weakest set of the bunch.

Here comes the phantom menace (ledge), Wednesday, 3 January 2018 09:19 (eight years ago)

An Episode of Cathedral History: this is good and important (= i have a *theory* abt it which i am waiting to deploy on freaky trigger).

All the others have one perfectly formed memorably nasty element but are otherwise slight (two doctors, which is largely period pastiche), formally a repeat (dolls house, as he admits), erm not un-racist (prayerbook), or technically flawed (disappearance, which i remain fond of for the punch-and-judy stuff).

mark s, Wednesday, 3 January 2018 10:08 (eight years ago)

caveat: i am the biggest MRJ-stan on the board and basically he did NOTHING BAD and EVERYTHING IS GOOD shut up

also ledge is clearly setting djh up for some kind of sacristan-style business with his "read it in an actual book"

mark s, Wednesday, 3 January 2018 10:14 (eight years ago)

one reason i like the copy i've downloaded is it collects everything and has James's introductions to the original published volumes.

you shoulda killfiled me last year (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 3 January 2018 10:23 (eight years ago)

There is or was a cheapo wordsworth classics edition of the complete ghost stories, which has all but three.

that's collected not complete, which sounds less oxymoronish. it has this cover, which is a perfect evocation of the jamesian atmosphere, if not quite enough to inspire the terror of the sacristan:

http://www.fineartprintsondemand.com/artists/grimshaw/moonlight_walk-400.jpg

Here comes the phantom menace (ledge), Wednesday, 3 January 2018 13:35 (eight years ago)

i have a *theory* abt it which i am waiting to deploy on freaky trigger

only five others to go first eh

Here comes the phantom menace (ledge), Wednesday, 3 January 2018 13:36 (eight years ago)

ghost story anthologists love a john atkinson grimshaw - quite a few examples iirc.

Fizzles, Wednesday, 3 January 2018 13:45 (eight years ago)

oxymoronish oxymoranic obv, xp to self.

Here comes the phantom menace (ledge), Wednesday, 3 January 2018 13:48 (eight years ago)

haha i have a social history of the london context of jack the ripper with a john atkinson grimshaw, called -- with a degree of bathos -- after the shower

only five others: actually it's the next one to go up (but the writer -- not me -- hasn't finished it)

mark s, Wednesday, 3 January 2018 14:06 (eight years ago)

good to hear the series is being exhumed yet again.

All the others have one perfectly formed memorably nasty element

i am willing to forgive a lot in james if there is one perfectly formed memorably nasty element but to me that is just where these are lacking. two doctors is also exceedingly obscure, googling 'bedstaff' does not help much.

Here comes the phantom menace (ledge), Wednesday, 3 January 2018 14:18 (eight years ago)

This reminds me that I started jumping around in my various Penguin collections of a similar vintage (Machen, Dunsany, Clark Ashton Smith) and never returned to James. I shall have to do that.

Bobby Buttrock (Old Lunch), Wednesday, 3 January 2018 14:33 (eight years ago)

the chrysalis! the chrysalis!

i have no idea what a bedstaff is, tbh i picture a big stick with a bedsheet nailed to it and move on

i could list the moments i mean (w/o looking them up) but it's a bit spoilery and unfair to djh

mark s, Wednesday, 3 January 2018 14:34 (eight years ago)

I have a collection of his stuff but never really got far into it. What's a really great one to start?

FREEZE! FYI! (dog latin), Wednesday, 3 January 2018 14:39 (eight years ago)

despite the various opinions here, including that he gets deeper and richer as he goes on, which is right i think, i'm not sure it really matters? If I remember rightly I picked up his stories (the first copy i had was Ghost Stories of an Antiquary and More Ghost Stories, and I just picked stuff I liked the look of. then re-read every winter. Have read all of them now I think (inc those not collected in the collected).

i'd be hesitant to tell you start with my favourites, partly because getting into him and his tone i think means you savour the best even more. would for this reason say 'just start with Canon Alberic's Scrap-Book and go from there where your nose takes you' but as you've presumably already done that, then pluck one you like the title of.

Fizzles, Wednesday, 3 January 2018 15:30 (eight years ago)

christ my use or rather abuse of brackets is a constant source of shame.

Fizzles, Wednesday, 3 January 2018 15:31 (eight years ago)

The titular(*) whistle is basically a supernatural equivalent of "Do not throw stones at this notice".

(*) noun/verb confusion notwithstanding

Here comes the phantom menace (ledge), Sunday, 7 January 2018 20:17 (eight years ago)

i've always imagined that the Templars or whoever originally made it had some way of managing whatever it summoned

not raving but droning (Noodle Vague), Sunday, 7 January 2018 21:46 (eight years ago)

I picked up a cheapo best-of reprint this weekend and am looking forward to reading it. Some Gerhard-style crosshatch illustrations throughout.

This seems like an interesting writeup by P Fitzgerald but am avoiding until I've read some of the stories.

https://www.theguardian.com/books/2000/dec/23/fiction.books

Chuck_Tatum, Sunday, 7 January 2018 23:22 (eight years ago)

There's a good and complimentary biography review in the lrb, and a bad and dismissive review of the collected stories which overplays the fear of sex angle. Both paywalled but here's a bit of the latter:

We don’t need to have read any of the Freud which James would have run several miles from to interpret what Mr Dunning in ‘Casting the Runes’ finds when he puts his hand into the well-known nook under his pillow: ‘What he touched was, according to his account, a mouth, with teeth, and with hair about it, and, he declares, not the mouth of a human being.’

Jones [sic]detects a vagina dentata

I'm gonna go with 'nope' there.

i've always imagined that the Templars or whoever originally made it had some way of managing whatever it summoned

The fur/fla/fle/bis inscription, likely translation "oh thief, you will blow it, you will weep" suggests otherwise, that it was made simply to punish and not even to protect any other treasure.

Here comes the phantom menace (ledge), Monday, 8 January 2018 19:36 (eight years ago)

one year passes...

Martin's Close on bbc 4 at 10pm tonight. I might be asleep by then...

Paperbag raita (ledge), Tuesday, 24 December 2019 20:01 (six years ago)

(can't place this one...)

koogs, Tuesday, 24 December 2019 20:26 (six years ago)

it's the one that's a report of a trial, the ghost is a spurned and drowned woman with learning difficulties iirc. definitely not top tier.

Paperbag raita (ledge), Tuesday, 24 December 2019 20:31 (six years ago)

It's from "More..." but still unfamiliar. Maybe that'll make for a better TV experience.

I had a bunch of the 15 minute radio versions from bbc4extra and they'd shuffle up whilst jogging around the park and really kill the mood.

koogs, Tuesday, 24 December 2019 20:37 (six years ago)

Dunno if I'll see it tonight or catch up on iplayer over the holiday. 30 minutes seems a bit skimpy, we don't get them very often so a 45 minute film would've been nice. Most adaptations bar Jonathan Miller's aren't exactly formally daring tho

a very powerful woman in the dog world (Noodle Vague), Tuesday, 24 December 2019 20:51 (six years ago)

it's one of my favourite stories in the books but as a version it wasn't great:they played judge jeffreys as a twerp, where i think he shd be irresponsible playful and funny but switching on the instant to scary and sinister -- p sure he commanded his courtrooms, which this guy really didn't :(

mark s, Wednesday, 25 December 2019 09:59 (six years ago)

oh and the line-reading of "with a knife value a penny" was wrong -- this isn't meant dismissively, it's simply a record of the worth of the object by which the murder was done, as routinely entered in judicial records of crimes committed

viz per the medieval death bot tumblr FAQ, for the question (no.2) Why is the price of this thing mentioned?

"That thing – be it a pot or a knife – is called a deodand and it’s something that is believed to have caused the death of an individual. The price of each deodand is appraised and gathered for the crown’s treasury. The crown was then supposed to use this money for pious means, in the light that a deodand is, in purest form, something forfeited to god. The deodand was either paid by someone in the village or taken out of the deceased’s chattels."

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deodand

mark s, Wednesday, 25 December 2019 19:29 (six years ago)

They also skipped the bit about john martin's name being spelt wrong on the indictment which I think gives a good indication of his deceitful character and desperation, as well as hanging over the story like a chekhov's shotgun only to misfire at the end.

Paperbag raita (ledge), Wednesday, 25 December 2019 21:16 (six years ago)

Yeah maybe the Beeb should let somebody less basic than Gattis have a go next time. This was mostly not quite adequate.

Bojo Rabid (Noodle Vague), Friday, 27 December 2019 10:48 (six years ago)

i liked the dark pokeyness of the inn but not so much the windowed smallness of the court (which i guess i imagined wd be more rumpole-esque)

there's some nice annotative details here at rosemary pardoe's pleasingly nerdy james fansite: including a note on the misspelling legal claim which ledge mentions, pointing out that this is almost certainly a reference to a similar occurrence and claim in the 1660 trial of the regicide henry marten/martin (which claim failed, tho marten was not in fact executed, partly thanks to his courageous and able self-defence)

MRJ's curious little legal history in-joke here is one of several things that make me think something is going on in his mind during this story which is not set out clearly: viz the date of the martin's close trial and martin's execution (via clues in the text) = late 1684, towards the very end of charles ii's reign (viz its 36th year, as measured from the death of charles i -- i.e. excluding the cromwellian interregnum). charles ii's successor, his brother james ii, acceded to the thone in feb 1685. the monmouth rebellion against james took place in the west country (= very much round where this story is set) this same summer, followed by the bloody assizes that made judge jeffrey's reputation, the grim consequence of this rebellion's defeat.

(the titus oates trial mentioned above -- actually a retrial -- also took place in earlyish 1685…)

all this (IMO) is mood music is MRJ's head during this story -- as jeffreys' backstory -- but very little of it is mentioned clearly and so i don't really know what to make of it all lol

mark s, Friday, 27 December 2019 14:39 (six years ago)

https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m000cn0h

Ghost Stories From Ambridge: Lost Hearts

On a biting December night, Jim Lloyd enthrals Ambridge residents with the story of a young boy who arrives at the house of his generous benefactor to find all is not as it seems.

koogs, Tuesday, 31 December 2019 17:24 (six years ago)

eight months pass...

https://unbound.com/books/casting-the-runes/

Crowdfunding for a book of his letters

Robert Adam Gilmour, Wednesday, 23 September 2020 18:28 (five years ago)

weird that this hasn't been done already

how do i shot moon? (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 23 September 2020 19:10 (five years ago)

Yeah, some editions of his books have several letters included but it is weird there was never a dedicated book.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Wednesday, 23 September 2020 22:31 (five years ago)

four months pass...

I've had the Collected for years but never read it. Reading a story a night and thoroughly enjoying myself. I've just finished the Ash Tree, which creeped the shit out of me. I'm also following along with the Freaky Trigger marginalia and thoroughly enjoying these, too. Hat-tip to Mark.

Vanishing Point (Chinaski), Monday, 1 February 2021 19:57 (five years ago)

eight months pass...

Stalls of Barchester on bbc4 tonight, 22:15 and which, according to iplayer, hasn't been broadcast since Christmas eve 1971, but i don't know how accurate that is.

(opposite it on ch5 is a ghost story about an antique book dealer...)

koogs, Sunday, 31 October 2021 19:19 (four years ago)

Mark V pitches in:

Thirty years ago this year, Rosemary Pardoe published The James Gang – A Bibliography of Writers in the M.R. James Tradition (1991). This provided a checklist of books and stories following in the antiquarian ghost story form perfected by James, as well as those (not necessarily in that style) by his circle of friends. Hugh Lamb, who had drawn up a “James List” for his own use in 1973, provided an introduction.

This soon became an invaluable reference source for any enthusiast repining that James’ stories are all very well, but there just aren’t enough of them. Rosemary has said she would like to see the list updated with similar work published since her list—but is not volunteering to do it! There would certainly be a lot more to list, not least because of Rosemary’s own work with the Ghosts & Scholars journals and anthologies.

The James Gang is organised alphabetically by author surname, but I thought it would also be interesting to arrange the main items (not all of them) chronologically, to get a sense of how the Jamesian story developed. I have here focused on books, or groups of stories, rather than individual stories, though these are included in the original booklet.
Here 'tis:
http://wormwoodiana.blogspot.com/2021/11/a-chronology-of-writers-in-m-r-james.html

dow, Wednesday, 3 November 2021 17:18 (four years ago)

Seems like she should have found another title: Thee M.R. The Merrier?

dow, Wednesday, 3 November 2021 17:21 (four years ago)

Bible Black and Starless? Geddit King James

dow, Wednesday, 3 November 2021 17:23 (four years ago)

Stalls of Barchester on bbc4 tonight, 22:15 and which, according to iplayer, hasn't been broadcast since Christmas eve 1971, but i don't know how accurate that is.

(opposite it on ch5 is a ghost story about an antique book dealer...)

― koogs, Sunday, 31 October 2021 19:19 (three days ago) bookmarkflaglink

Def not accurate, I used to have it taped from a mid-2000s repeat.

"Spaghetti" Thompson (Pheeel), Wednesday, 3 November 2021 17:29 (four years ago)

well i've bookmarked that list anyway, hope it's full of people who are good like MRJ not just boring cargo cult MRJ *cough*Susan Hill*cough*

yeah i swear i've watched Barchester on TV in the last few years

maybe these baps are legends (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 3 November 2021 17:30 (four years ago)

> (opposite it on ch5 is a ghost story about an antique book dealer...)

this was by Susan Hill...

koogs, Wednesday, 3 November 2021 18:08 (four years ago)

i know that's what made me think of her

maybe these baps are legends (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 3 November 2021 18:09 (four years ago)

nb i have never nor will i ever read her work

maybe these baps are legends (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 3 November 2021 18:09 (four years ago)

I've taught The Woman in Black a few times. It's a bad book. The upsides are the film from 1988 and particularly the stage show, which is just terrific.

Vanishing Point (Chinaski), Wednesday, 3 November 2021 18:13 (four years ago)

A Warning to the Curious starring Peter Vaughan is on iPlayer now, proper East Anglian uncanny

Critique of the Goth Programme (Neil S), Tuesday, 9 November 2021 09:56 (four years ago)

That story is the subject of the best episode (or two) of ‎A Podcast to the Curious, going into detail on James' experience of WW1 and how it plays into the story. Though they gloss over the strangely mutable dig site (Paxton takes a train back from the dig, then later on they all walk to it from the hotel in half an hour or so.)

namaste darkness my old friend (ledge), Tuesday, 9 November 2021 10:23 (four years ago)

the passage where paxton mentions the train is odder even than that really -- bcz he's clearly describing being shadowed on his walk back to the hotel! i wonder if what it means (but doesn't say at all clearly) is that he was aiming to catch a train first thing in the morning from seaburgh (since he now has the crown) but actually never does: instead he returns to the hotel and slumps there in despair

this allows the dig to be not far from the hotel on the outskirts of the town (of course coastal trains also had stops every two minutes in the 1900s)

mark s, Tuesday, 9 November 2021 14:47 (four years ago)

Aye, you recall that too, friend mark.

dow, Tuesday, 9 November 2021 15:28 (four years ago)

This Halloween Season Spooky Week I learned that there are multiple films based on "Casting the Runes."

Nicholas Raybeat (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 25 November 2025 16:27 (six months ago)

oh yeah, especially when you count the looser ones like Drag Me to Hell

Slouching Towards Benylin (Noodle Vague), Tuesday, 25 November 2025 16:28 (six months ago)

In fact that is exactly what I was counting, since it was showing at MoMI and they mentioned it in the program notes. Still have yet to see it myself.

Nicholas Raybeat (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 25 November 2025 16:48 (six months ago)

Maybe it's only that and Night of the Demon, but it seems like there must be more.

Nicholas Raybeat (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 25 November 2025 17:11 (six months ago)

in themselves the gatiss ones aren't awful, tho they are bad, but what's worse is he's burning through loads of great material with this shite. not sure it's picking up many new fans either and so a decent chance of murdering ghost story for xmas for good. that would be closer to real horror than his weirdly quirky adaptations.

this story feels a really good one but the tone is just so middling. it's weird as he obv loves all this stuff but his actual feel for it just feels completely wrong to me.

LocalGarda, Tuesday, 25 November 2025 17:27 (six months ago)

Maybe it's only that and Night of the Demon, but it seems like there must be more.

There's also Lawrence Gordon Clark's Casting the Runes.

--

I've probably said this before but I think a couple of the Gatiss ones are actually good (I really rate The Dead Room in particular), but most of them are just very bland and unscary. I'm not really on the hater train, more just 'Gatiss sceptical', and I really wish they'd give someone else a go. However, he probably is the only person who has both the passion for it and the name recognition to get the BBC to sign off on continuing.

If you want an adaptation that shows you what Ghost Stories for Christmas COULD be, I suggest checking out Kier-La Janisse's The Occupant of the Room, which showed at this year's Mayhem Festival and was prob my highlight of the whole thing.

emil.y, Tuesday, 25 November 2025 17:44 (six months ago)

one month passes...

I wondered about the reason for the framing, then thought Mrs Stone was a pretty rubbish revenant for allowing herself to get knocked down with one blow like a cheap scarecrow. So the ending was satisfying on both those counts. I don't care if it was corny or unsubtle, the original ending is weak and needed something more. The whole story still lacks a raison d'etre though.

ledge, Thursday, 25 December 2025 22:31 (five months ago)

caught up with lot 249 at the same time as the room in the tower (plus rewatched the one with the stone knights)

i kind of hate bagging on gatisss-- long passed time for my challopsy ilx heel turn -- but theyre all bad and so is he 😔👎🏽😑

mark s, Friday, 26 December 2025 17:05 (five months ago)


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