Genesee Rickel’s Reviews > The Eerie Book > Status Update
Genesee Rickel
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“We loved tales of blood and death a century ago when this book was first published; we loved them for centuries before that. I expect we will love them for centuries still to come. We may think we’re different now. We have different beliefs; we tell different stories. We are haunted by different fears.” (xiii)
— Mar 30, 2026 08:35AM
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Genesee’s Previous Updates
Genesee Rickel
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“Let’s descend the darker stairs together. Let’s follow the witch into the woods. Let’s see what we find in those old hidden passages.” (xiii)
— Mar 30, 2026 08:37AM
Genesee Rickel
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“But one thing that never seems to change about humans is that desire to slip out of the light and into the shadows; to lift up the rock; to stare at the ambulance lights. In another hundred years we will crave stories of new horrors— or perhaps these same old classic ones. As a final story in this book says: “the secret passages still survive.”” (xiii)
— Mar 30, 2026 08:36AM
Genesee Rickel
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“William Brown (credited as W.B.) Macdougall’s style has strong echoes of Aubrey Beardsley; the images are symbolic and somber.” (xii)
— Mar 30, 2026 08:32AM
Genesee Rickel
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“The interest in this particular book, for me, is the curation: the way that the stories are put in conversation with one another. I’ve read ghost stories and I’ve read fairy tales, but there’s something interesting about making them stand beside one another, in making them look one another in the eye and try to find a common language.” (x)
— Mar 30, 2026 08:30AM
Genesee Rickel
is starting
“The Eerie Book is a collection of supernatural stories ranging from gory folk and fairy tales to Gothic short stories, to excerpts of classic novels.” (viii)
— Mar 30, 2026 08:29AM

