This is a pre-1923 historical reproduction that was curated for quality. Quality assurance was conducted on each of these books in an attempt to remove books with imperfections introduced by the digitization process. Though we have made best efforts - the books may have occasional errors that do not impede the reading experience. We believe this work is culturally important and have elected to bring the book back into print as part of our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed works worldwide.
Devil Stories: An Anthology itself is of little more than historical interest. Many of the stories are worthwhile, poignant or droll by turns; most, alas, are simply authorial japes. Perhaps only after April 8, 1966 could the devil get his due as a subject of mass market fiction, thanks to Ira Levin, William Peter Blatty, and their epigones?
Rudwin's notes on each story are a treasure for the reader of forgotten folklore, tales, and strange stories. They make reading some of his selections worth the aggravation.
The stories in this anthology are not horror fiction in the modern sense. Most are - or try to be - comedy or satire. The Devil is used as a rhetorical foil in most, as authors attempt to demonstrate their theses or conceits by minor negations.
(Read in the Gutenberg edition, which is amazingly free of typos) A wide-ranging collection, with some folk stories mixed with literary. As in any anthology, some pieces worked better than others, but some outstanding bits, including "The Devil in a Nunnery," with the devil playing music that causes nuns to confess their deepest secrets, "The Devil and Tom Walker" (Washington Irving), "Devil Puzzlers," and "The Devil and the Old Man," by John Masefield. (I've read a number of Masefield's works for children; must look for more of his work for adults.) Found E. A. Poe a bit too much, so "Bon-Bon" got a skip. Rudwin's tiny essays between each story are interesting and informative. A fun collection.
Solid anthology consisting mostly of humorous interpretations of the devil, with a few downbeat tales thrown in. Not one I didn’t enjoy, but obviously many on the theme of selling one’s soul. The last quarter of the book featured notes and histories on each story and the legends they were based on. FYI, there’s usually a way out of a diabolical contract if you’re clever enough.
I found this delightful 1921 anthology in a collectible book store. The stories are mostly from the mid- to late 1800s. "The Devil and Tom Walker" (1824) by the great Washington Irving could have been ripped from yesterday's headlines about political and financial misdeeds and machinations. The prose is vivid, tight, and bold--not at all what I usually associate with Victorian writing. Another standout is "The Devil's Wager" (1833) by William Makepeace Thackeray, a story that also roasts the political and financial foibles of the time and waxes eloquently about the evils of strong drink. The one disappointment was "Bon-Bon" (1835) by Edgar Allen Poe. This story is about an obese, indulgent gourmand but is half written in French (I'm not kidding), a language I don't read or speak. So I couldn't follow the story, which rambled too much.
Still, if you're looking for some good old-fashioned fun about outwitting the Devil or having him outwit you, this is a great little anthology.