'There was a rumour, too, that he was a devil-worshipper, or something of that sort, and also that he had the evil eye...'
Arthur Conan Doyle was the greatest genre writer Britain has ever produced. Throughout a long writing career, he drew on his own medical background, his travels, and his increasing interest in spiritualism and the occult to produce a spectacular array of Gothic Tales. Many of Doyle's writings are recognised as the very greatest tales of terror. They range from hauntings in the polar wasteland to evil surgeons and malevolent jungle landscapes.
This collection brings together over thirty of Conan Doyle's best Gothic Tales. Darryl Jones's introduction discusses the contradictions in Conan Doyle's very public life - as a medical doctor who became obsessed with the spirit world, or a British imperialist drawn to support Irish Home Rule - and shows the ways in which these found articulation in that most anxious of all literary forms, the Gothic.
A scholarly edition of Conan Doyle's "Gothic Tales", sourced with full details of the publication history of each tale. Draws on the latest scholarship, and offers an analysis of the importance of the Gothic to the whole of Doyle's writing career.
This volume provides a welcomed and much-needed reminder of the full range of Conan Doyleâs achievement, deepening our appreciation of his unbounded imagination and fertile legacy.