
He wrote many different types of novels, but particularly enjoyed what he called 'macabre' novels, like The Killer and the Slain, which was dedicated to Henry James and inspired in part by his The Turn of the Screw. Tenebrae by Henham Ernest (23 results) You searched for: Author: henham ernest, Title: tenebrae. Walpole, a distant cousin of Horace Walpole, was a hugely popular and prolific novelist whose reputation has declined immeasurably since his death in 1941. Tenebrae (Paperback) by Ernest George Henham and a great selection of related books. We've also secured permission to reissue Hugh Walpole's posthumous 'macabre' novel, The Killer and the Slain (1942). new editions of Francis King's Never Again (1947) and The Dark Glasses (1954), two of King's own favorites from among his novels, and which he and I discussed reissuing while we were working on our 2008 edition of his An Air that Kills.

We hope to be able to announce some of these soon, although for the moment we can disclose that we'll be bringing out in the U.S. We are in negotiations with the estates of numerous 20th century authors, some whose names you've never heard and some you will certainly recognize, to bring into print a number of lost classics.

Black Birds in the Sky by Brandy Colbert.I Shall Never Fall in Love by Hari Conner.In Black and White by Jun’ichiro Tanizaki.Velvet Was the Night by Silvia Moreno-Garcia.Feelings: A Story in Seasons by Manjit Thapp.The Blood of Others by Simone de Beauvoir.The Only Harmless Great Thing by Brooke Bolander.


Whisper Down the Lane by Clay McLeod Chapman.Tenebrae is a compact work, just over 200 pages, but Henham makes every description and every line of dialogue bristle. Published in 1898, at the end of a decade in which English writers explored the literary possibilities of the Gothic with such characters as Dorian Gray, Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde, Dracula, and The. The Boy Who Talked to Dogs by Martin McKenna The narrator, after committing an especially gruesome murder, begins a quick descent into guilt, paranoia, and madness, pulling the reader along on a terrifying ride.
