. . . Loaned to me by fellow writer and dear friend, Jack Mace, this remarkable anthology of 11 storeis by a brilliant writer, Gerald Kersh, unknown to me only a few years ago. Oh, perhaps I have encountered his name somewhere along the line, in one or more (then) obscures references to him by Harlan Ellison or Ray Bradbury, or any one of the writers I admire in an article or essay describing authors they admire. Nightshade & Damnation-11 Storeis of the Weird, the Unspeakable, the Bizarre since its publication in 1968 continues to surface in the ranks of the enthusiasts libraries, regularly attracting new raving fans.
With stories of this magnitude, picking favorites is a bit of a struggle, but inevitably, somehow, your favorites emerge. From this collection, my chosen include "The Queen of Pig Island," "Men Without Bones," "The King Who Collected Clocks," "Voices In The Dust of Annan," and, perhaps my very favorite, "Whatever Happened to Corporal Cuckoo?"
I am resolved to find my very own copy of this anthology; I will cherish it all my days.
Kersh was born in England, quit school before taking a degree, and continued his education in a series of jobs---salesman, baker, fish-and-chips cook, nighclub bouncer, freelance newspaper journalist---while writing his first two novels. The publication of is third novel, NIGHT AND THE CITY, in 1937 put him on the map and marked him as among the front ranks of young British writers. Twenty novels later, he created what he considered his masterpiece, FOWLER'S END, which is widely regarded as one of the outstanding novels of the 20th century. Throughout his career he wrote a number of distinguished short stories; many if not most in this anthology were printed first in the US by THE SATURDAY EVENING POST, PLAYBOY, ESQUIRE, and ON AN ODD NOTE among others.
Kersh fought with the Coldstream Guards in WWII and after traveling extensively, settled in America and gained citizenship (circa 1960) and from about that time lived quietly in Cragsmoor, in a remote section of the Shawangunk Mountains in New York State.