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The Drone

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Abraham Merritt (January 20, 1884-August 21, 1943), who published under the byline A. Merritt, was an American editor and author of works of fantastic fiction

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First published September 1, 1934

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About the author

A. Merritt

241 books125 followers
Abraham Grace Merritt, wrote under the name of A. Merritt, born in New Jersey moved as a child to Philadelphia, Pa. in 1894, began studying law and than switched to journalism. Later a very popular writer starting in 1919 of the teens, twenties and thirties, horror and fantasy genres. King of the purple prose, most famous The Moon Pool, a south seas lost island civilization, hidden underground and The Ship of Ishtar, an Arabian Nights type fable, and six other novels and short stories collections (he had written at first, just for fun). Nobody could do that variety better, sold millions of books in his career. The bright man, became editor of the most successful magazine during the Depression, The American Weekly , with a fabulous $100,000 in salary. A great traveler, in search of unusual items he collected. His private library of 5,000 volumes had many of the occult macabre kind. Yet this talented author is now largely been forgotten.

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Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews
Profile Image for Benjamin Uke.
599 reviews49 followers
October 19, 2023
Gentlemen at the Explorers Club discuss cases of human transformation, fox women, were-wolves, etc. People understanding and becoming more and more relatable to animals, adopting their mannerisms and behavior.
Ending with a man who relates to bee's so much he turns into one.
Profile Image for Dan.
644 reviews54 followers
December 20, 2021
I doubt I will ever encounter another werebee story. This clever concept is well executed. It is widely available for free online and in many Kindle anthologies making it virtually free or costing just pennies to read. I found my copy in The Werewolf Megapack. Recommended.
Profile Image for Tonari.
152 reviews4 followers
July 3, 2020
Bella l'idea, meno la realizzazione. Quando Merritt arriva al succo del discorso, alla vicenda che dà il titolo alla storia, il risultato è ottimo, ma prima la noia regna sovrana e quando finalmente il racconto si anima -puff- è già finito.
Profile Image for Liz.
1,836 reviews13 followers
June 2, 2023
3.5 Not your typical shape shifter story. First published in 1934 in Fantasy magazine. Four gentlemen at the Explorer's Club are discussing the topic of people with animal qualities. One of them shares an interesting story involving a man or was he a hyena. This leads to the story of one of the other men who had an old acquaintance from college visit him. The man's body was taking on distinctly unusual characteristics. The college friend invite the man from the Explorer's Club to come and visit him and see his apiary. This leads to a weird experience, and then the story abruptly ends.
Available in HorrorBabble's Ultimate Weird Tales Collection, narrated by Ian Gordon.
Profile Image for Justin Howe.
Author 18 books37 followers
August 11, 2012
Gentlemen at the Explorers Club discuss cases of human transformation, fox women, were-wolves, etc. much of it routine, but for a third of it that's weird and outlandish.
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews

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