At their best, Onions' ghost stories are subtle, elusive, and haunting, somewhere between Henry James and Robert Aickman. The high point is clearly the much-anthologized "Beckoning Fair One," but the story's theme of an artist haunted by his own creation is repeated rather too often, and later versions of this motif, like "The Real People," lack that earlier tale's ambiguity and darkness. Pagan themes also proliferate, and in tales like "The Painted Face" and "The Lost Thyrsus" Onions recalls the work of John Buchan and Vernon Lee. This particular edition, bound and printed with the usual Dover quality, is worth seeking out for the care in details: they don't make paperbacks like this anymore!