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Lee Foust
is on page 167 of 189
"Beetles" Again with the mummies! I imagine another early tale: quite Lovecraftian. Doesn't play to Bloch's strong points--although certainly a gesture toward the psychological horror for which he's famous.
— Sep 24, 2024 03:27PM
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Lee Foust
is on page 153 of 189
"The Cloak" Perfect Bloch. the narrator here is Bloch's best cynical, hard-boiled voice who keeps on slipping into the forced purple prose of the romantic Gothic. And that is also what happens in the story. Excellent wedding of form and content.
— Sep 24, 2024 11:25AM
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Lee Foust
is on page 134 of 189
"The House of the Hatchet" A perfectly crafted gruesome little tale. It plays perfectly to Bloch's strengths--a hard boiled narrator, his ironic humor, and a grisly, ghostly, and reasonably unexpected ending. Nicely done.
— Sep 24, 2024 02:42AM
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Lee Foust
is on page 114 of 189
"the Mannikin" This one is truly creepy. It's rather too Lovecraft, but without his leisurely approach to setting the eldritch scene--Bloch is so much better with a noir-ish, hard-boiled clipped tone. Here the style and plot are a tad at odds. Still, effective.
— Sep 22, 2024 03:02PM
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Lee Foust
is on page 94 of 189
"The Eyes of the Mummy" Not a whole lot you can do with mummies except bring them back to life. VERY perfunctory set up without much atmosphere, but the denouement wasn't horrible although narratively-speaking a real stretch. Seems like younger, unseasoned Bloch.
— Sep 22, 2024 09:14AM
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Lee Foust
is on page 77 of 189
"Yours Truly, Jack the Riper." Apparently Bloch's breakthrough, his first great success outside of his youthful Lovecraftian tales. It's a good one & features what will become his trademark: a melding of the macabre & the hard-boiled detective fiction of the era. The beatnik scene here is funny too. The eternal ripper trope became a staple in later years through Bloch reusing it & others ripping it off mostly for TV.
— Sep 21, 2024 02:33PM
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Lee Foust
is on page 54 of 189
"The Dream-Makers" A lovely 5-part hard-boiled tale about the magical beauty of silent films and possibility that free will is an illusion. The very best of the pulps: outcast, common man philosophy.
— Sep 21, 2024 11:20AM
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Lee Foust
is on page 19 of 189
"Sweets for the Sweet." Classic pithy Bloch. Economical to a tee, just on the creepy edge of gross. Perfect for the pre-1970s weird tale.
— Sep 20, 2024 03:56PM
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Katie.dorny
is on page 63 of 104
I love it. LOVE IT. I'm so happy I discovered comics this year!!
— Mar 03, 2018 09:51AM
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Katie.dorny
is on page 37 of 104
I know I'm going to like this already!!
— Mar 03, 2018 09:30AM
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![Yours Truly, Jack the Ripper [Pulphouse Short Story Paperback #10]](https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1348569743l/2292005._SY75_.jpg)













