Collected Works of Algernon Blackwood
Algernon Blackwood was a prolific, popular, and influential writer,
often associated with “weird fiction,” but whose work spans an
array of genre, subject, form, and audience.
“The Willows,”
his best known work and Lovecraft’s favorite supernatural tale,
narrates a pilgrimage by two men across central Europe—a journey
Tolkien’s readers will recognize as Frodoesque. Both Lovecraft and
Tolkien acknowledged Blackwood’s influence and this influence is
unmistakable any time Tolkien as author finds himself among ancient
trees, climbing a mountain, or afloat on a river. For Lovecraft, it
is Blackwood who transforms the “higher space” of Einstein’s
annus mirabilis into a perilous firmament to be filled with cosmic
horrors and it is Blackwood who first writes the eldritch text that
is to become Lovecraft’s Necronomicon. But, while Blackwood was an
explorer of the macabre corners of “ghostland;” he was captivated
by the beauty of nature, believed in “traveling light,” and never
confined himself anywhere.
It had been one of
Blackwood’s life goals to become a “holy man.” He lived
itinerant, unwed, and wrote only because he “could not keep it
back.” His words were published in books, magazines, journals,
newspapers; presented on stage; and broadcast on radio and
television. Writing for any reader, he was published by The Country
Gentleman, Lady’s Realm, and—for children—in The Merry Go
Round. He wrote for both The Methodist Magazine and The Occult
Review. One of his lesser-read stories was printed exclusively by The
Burrowa News of New South Wales, in Australia.
Even Blackwood lost
count of what he had published, so that no definitive bibliography
exists. Though the present collection is not exhaustive—doubtless
some works are lost to time—it is the most extensive of its kind.
The fiction includes 16 novellas, a 3-act play, 145 short stories, 5
poems, and 3 songs. Supplementing this are 53 non-fiction works. Most
provide background to the fiction stories and some are stories
themselves.
While there is no
“Blackwood Universe” in the modern sense; themes, characters, and
settings are often shared. When Blackwood writes, the categories of
fiction, non-fiction, and autobiography become indistinct, some works
difficult to place. Of the works in this collection, twenty-one were
published for children, but again the distinction is often arbitrary.
In the end, it is
all Blackwood.
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Notes of a crocodile
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