Features more than thirty seasonal stories dealing with mysteries of every kind, ranging from stories by such nineteenth-century masters as Thomas Hardy and Charles Dickens, to such popular contemporary writers as Muriel Spark and H.R.F. Keating
The most interesting stories are at the historical end of the book. They are a Thomas Hardy appropriately about a shepherd boy and a dark deed on the hill, and a Dolf Wyllarde traveller's tale of old Persia during a famine. There's also an Erckmann-Chatrian story of travelling musicians in the Black Forest. The newer stories include motor-cars and acids and are quite standard. Even a word-processor. The descriptions of foods for Christmas dinner may be the nicest part.
I really enjoy this book and how interesting and suspenseful the stories are in the book, you never know what’s coming next and the endings are very surprising. In the banshees warning the ending has you shocked because nobody expected it. If you have extra time on your hands this is a wonderful book to read :) 👍
A good selection of short stories, some better than others. I like that they range from 19th century through to the late twentieth. There's one in particular that has M. R. James bringing a case to Sherlock Holmes that was especially fun.
I was enjoying this atmospheric anthology and now it is misplaced; perhaps lost.
Thought the book was in my van when it broke down but the van is back and the book is not. :(
YAY!! I did find it in the van, after all, but not until after Christmas. Will probably get back into reading it sometime this month, though or put it back on the shelf for next November/December. I always have such grand reading plans for November/December but it is humanly impossible to read every Christmas - themed book new and classic in just two months.