A delightful little book of horrors, as curated by Mary E. MacEwen. Sans foreword nor introduction, it goes straight for the kill, if you'll pardon my pun. Indeed, seven of the nine stories deliver the suspense, and then some. Four of the nine I had already read, and amazingly, I can still recall the decade I'd read them: Charles by Shirley Jackson, I'd read from our thick book of Laughter, the Best Medicine from Reader's Digest as a kid in the early eighties, Flowers for Algernon by Daniel Keyes I first read from my friend Cecille's psychology book in the late eighties, followed by one or two re-readings in the next twenty years or so, The Birds by Daphne du Maurier sometime in the mid second decade of the 21st century, and Taste by Roald Dahl during the pandemic).
Horror comes in many forms, and what terrifies one reader may merely garner a flinch from the other. To captivate both requires storytelling panache, easily suspending the reader's disbelief, and asking "what would I have done?" I feel the following short stories have this in spades:
1) The Birds by Daphne du Maurier - An unprovoked, spontaneous aggressive uprising of birds of all flocks and feathers holds terror over the British Isles. The horror!
2) Of Missing Persons by Jack Finney - Finney's short tale takes a page or two from his other stories of inter-dimensional and time travels, and delivers this gem. (Had I been asked to guess the writer, I think I would have pointed to Ray Bradbury.)
3) Flowers for Algernon by Daniel Keyes - Suspenseful as it is, I'm not sure this story belongs here, but looking at it from Charly and Algernon's points of view, then yes--horrific.
4) Taste by Roald Dahl - Horror and suspense of an altogether different bouquet, featuring epicurean snobs, social climbers, and ghastly dinner conversation. Very Oscar Wilde, this would be perfect fodder for a one-act play.
5) Two Bottles of Relish by Lord Dunsany - Pure horror, as our bestselling crime writers know it to be. Indeed, while we know what's coming, we have no inkling how we can prove it.
6) Contents of a Dead Man's Pockets by Jack Finney - Finney again, minus his usual science fictional devices. His story takes place in a matter of minutes, with narration so precise, leaving this reader swooning over the thrill of the dilemma.
7) The Perfectionist by Margaret St. Clair - A frightful little comedy in the vein of Arsenic and Lace, needing little guesswork to ascertain the outcome. But what can I say, it's hard to brush off Dotty Aunt Muriel. (Aunt Muriel has a Pomeranian named Teddy, and I had mixed feelings reading this, having lost our beloved ten-year-old Pomeranian, Loki just days before.)
Three and a half stars.