The Star of Gnosia collects five hallucinatory narratives steeped in secrecy and transgression, c...
Ada Buisson (1839-1866) put but one novel before the public during her lifetime, the rest of her ...
None of Jean Lorrain’s biographers has contrived to discover exactly when or why he began taking ...
Pitched partway between multivalent modern Orphic hymnal and satiric devastation of the Internet ...
Thirty-six cities. Thirty-six stories of obsession. From ancient Thebes to present day Berlin, th...
One of the best actors of his generation, Eric Clark was born José Fernando del Torres in Asunció...
Histoires ténébreuses by Victor Joly, here translated as The Unknown Collaborator and Other Legen...
Words are an obscure form of consciousness. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . we are alwa...
Praised by Borges, the Unkind Tales of Léon Bloy were produced in a phase of literary evolution t...
There is nothing else quite like the short stories of Lady Dilke in the annals of English literat...
Bluebirds by Catulle Mendès (1841-1909), here delightfully translated for the first time into Eng...
Mark Samuels—'the contemporary British master of visionary weirdness', as Ramsey Campbell has cal...