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Pan's Garden / Incredible Adventures - by Algernon Blackwood (Paperback)
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Highlights
- PAN'S GARDEN Pan's Garden is a thematic collection of stories which, in the words of the author, "illustrates that characteristic belief, present in all my work, that there exists a definite relationship between Human Beings and Nature.
- Author(s): Algernon Blackwood
- 442 Pages
- Fiction + Literature Genres, Mystery & Detective
Description
About the Book
Two of Blackwood's best supernatural story collections, originally published 1912 and 1914, including the classic "The Man Whom the Trees Loved."Book Synopsis
PAN'S GARDEN
Pan's Garden is a thematic collection of stories which, in the words of the author, "illustrates that characteristic belief, present in all my work, that there exists a definite relationship between Human Beings and Nature." From the opening novella, "The Man Whom the Trees Loved"--in which Nature welcomes and absorbs the soul of a man--to the concluding "The Temptations of the Clay"--in which Nature rejects the spirit of the man who tries to profit from it--we are transported into a natural world where the elements hold sway. Mike Ashley, in his introduction, calls Pan's Garden "the definitive volume of Blackwood's short stories. . . because it defines the true nature of Blackwood's writing."
INCREDIBLE ADVENTURES
Incredible Adventures represents what biographer Mike Ashley calls "the
last outburst of his golden period" and is comprised of three novellas
and two short stories. Here, nature is a living force, truth is the
only religion and the past holds sway over the present. At times almost
surreal in their intensity, these tales exert a strange power over the
reader, opening our eyes to a larger world around us. From the rugged
mountains of Eastern Europe in "The Regeneration of Lord Ernie" to the
vast deserts of Egypt in "A Descent Into Egypt," Blackwood takes us to
other places--and other worlds.
Review Quotes
"Algernon Blackwood is the great master of visionary horror. At his best he scaled peaks of awe and terror no other writer has reached." -Ramsey Campbell, author of Midnight Sun "As a writer he was extraordinary...exploring the links between humans and nature, man and woman and the Earth itself." -Tim Lebbon, author of Dusk "Blackwood's personal quest was to introduce the public at large to the world beyond this one, and the 'spirit' that inhabits it."-Simon Clark, author of The Night of the Triffids