Jesse’s Reviews > Collected Fiction Volume 1: Tales of Psychological and Supernatural Horror > Status Update

Jesse
Jesse is on page 160 of 360
“The Middle Toe of the Right Foot”

This one is a ghost story with a haunted house and a lot of moving parts as befits Bierce. The house has been haunted since its owner murdered his wife and two kids and then ran away. It is chosen as the site of a knife duel to the death. I’m not sure what happened to Rosser, but the twist is very much in Bierce’s serendipity of death.
Jun 26, 2024 02:04PM
Collected Fiction Volume 1: Tales of Psychological and Supernatural Horror

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Jesse’s Previous Updates

Jesse
Jesse is on page 347 of 360
The Appendix here isn’t nearly as useful as the appendices of the Clark Ashton Smith stories, presumably because Bierce supervised a more or less definitive collection of his works. The first Appendix is, uh, single versions of the ghost stories found in the early-middle of this volume. I don’t get a lot of value over the minor differences.
Jun 29, 2024 07:10PM
Collected Fiction Volume 1: Tales of Psychological and Supernatural Horror


Jesse
Jesse is on page 312 of 360
“An Untitled Tale”

Oh wow. This is a short sketch that describes a man who may be hallucinating but may also be a man’s repeated brushes with some kind of cosmic horror, bridging the gulf between dimensions with experiences that are beyond any describable human emotion. I don’t know if this story was available to Smith or Lovecraft but it is uncanny how this relates to what other authors danced around.
Jun 29, 2024 06:54PM
Collected Fiction Volume 1: Tales of Psychological and Supernatural Horror


Jesse
Jesse is on page 308 of 360
“The Stranger”

The core of the story is similar to “Two Lives” but it’s very clear to the reader, if not the genre-ignorant soldiers, that the dude they are talking to is a ghost. It’s a miserable story on his part, with the four prospectors opting for a suicide pact rather than give way to the siege on the cave.
Jun 29, 2024 05:25PM
Collected Fiction Volume 1: Tales of Psychological and Supernatural Horror


Jesse
Jesse is on page 303 of 360
“Beyond the Wall”

This is a tragic romance with just a shade of a ghost story thrown into the ending. The Bierce format is in full effect, here. The narrator, visiting an old friend, hears a supernatural knock on the wall, after which he hears the story behind the knock. It’s bittersweet and a bit too weighted with age to be maudlin.
Jun 29, 2024 05:02PM
Collected Fiction Volume 1: Tales of Psychological and Supernatural Horror


Jesse
Jesse is on page 295 of 360
“The Moonlit Road”

This is the first Bierce that I know for sure I read before, collected in B&N’s Classic Ghost Stories collection. This story is awesome and it’s mostly due to Julia Hetman’s testimony from beyond the veil, because the point of view of the ghost is incredibly well-written. Bierce’s format, as expressed through the son, the father, and the spirit of the wife, feels quite organic.
Jun 29, 2024 04:16PM
Collected Fiction Volume 1: Tales of Psychological and Supernatural Horror


Jesse
Jesse is on page 286 of 360
“John Mortonson’s Funeral”

WHAT

A DUDE HAS AN OSTENTATIOUS FUNERAL IN A GLASS COFFIN AND RIGHT BEFORE HE IS SUPPOSED TO BE BURIED HIS WEEPING WIFE DISCOVERS THAT HIS CAT IS IN THS COFFIN, EATING THE BODY?????!?

What the HELL Bierce
Jun 29, 2024 03:49PM
Collected Fiction Volume 1: Tales of Psychological and Supernatural Horror


Jesse
Jesse is on page 284 of 360
“One Summer Night”

More grotesque, dark humor from Bierce. A man is buried alive but dug up by two medical students and their hired labor, resurrection men. When they open the coffin, he sits up, scaring the students away. The laborer ensures that he gets his pay for the body.
Jun 29, 2024 03:42PM
Collected Fiction Volume 1: Tales of Psychological and Supernatural Horror


Jesse
Jesse is on page 282 of 360
“An Arrest”

Another anecdote. This time a murderer kills his jailer in order to escape but gets turned back by the man’s ghost, who “arrests” him, basically cowing the criminal into returning to the jail with no additional malfeasance.
Jun 29, 2024 03:35PM
Collected Fiction Volume 1: Tales of Psychological and Supernatural Horror


Jesse
Jesse is on page 280 of 360
“A Wireless Message”

This is one of those supernatural anecdote-type stories. A man gets a bizarre vision while he is out walking and it’s some kind of psychic link between himself and his wife, who is - unbeknownst to him at the time - in mortal peril from a fire along with their child.
Jun 29, 2024 03:13PM
Collected Fiction Volume 1: Tales of Psychological and Supernatural Horror


Jesse
Jesse is on page 277 of 360
“A Man With Two Lives”

Supernatural, and something of a tall tale because it breaks so many basic rules of Bierce’s fictions that it’s hard to take seriously. An army courier is ambushed by Native Americans and can’t remember how the fight ended. He ends up unscathed but completely naked in the wilderness, and when he finally makes it to his destination it appears that he has already been buried…
Jun 29, 2024 02:56PM
Collected Fiction Volume 1: Tales of Psychological and Supernatural Horror


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Jesse SPOILERS



one of the duelists is actually the family-murdering husband who is about under an assumed name. When he is left at the house with his opponent, he is scared to death by a manifestation of his wife and children. We know this because of the title of the story, which is an anecdote that prompted the duel in the first place. Rosser used to date the man’s wife but broke it off when he found out that she was missing the middle toe of her right foot. This digit is missing in the track of the dust that they find alongside those of two children when they discover the murderer’s body.


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