Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Contents
- Preface
- My Roots Exhumed, by Ramsey Campbell
- I Biography and Overview
- II The Lovecraftian Fiction
- III The Demons by Daylight Period
- IV The Transformation of Supernaturalism
- V Dreams and Reality
- VI Horrors of the City
- VII Paranoia
- VIII The Child as Victim and Villain
- IX Miscellaneous Writings
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
Preface
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Contents
- Preface
- My Roots Exhumed, by Ramsey Campbell
- I Biography and Overview
- II The Lovecraftian Fiction
- III The Demons by Daylight Period
- IV The Transformation of Supernaturalism
- V Dreams and Reality
- VI Horrors of the City
- VII Paranoia
- VIII The Child as Victim and Villain
- IX Miscellaneous Writings
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
In the realm of modern horror fiction, there are few living writers whose work is sufficiently rich and variegated to justify a full-length critical study. It is not my place here to engage in a polemic for or against some of the more popular figures in the field; but I can say with confidence that Ramsey Campbell, although by no means the most widely known living writer of horror fiction, is worthy of study both because of the intrinsic merit of his work and because of the place he occupies in the historical progression of this literary mode. Campbell, although he is only fifty-five years old, has been publishing for some thirty-five years and has been a professional writer for more than twenty; he has almost twenty novels and hundreds of short stories to his credit; and he represents a bridge between the ‘classic’ weird writers of the first half of the twentieth century and today's diverse crop of best-sellers, although he himself is in many ways still in advance of his younger colleagues in the provocative dynamism of his work.
Campbell himself has facilitated the study of his work by making available documents that ordinarily would only see the light after an author's death. He has been generous enough to allow his juvenilia, written at the age of eleven, to be published; and, more significantly, he has issued his own bibliography of his work. (It should be made clear that the impetus for the publication of this bibliography did not come from Campbell.) This bibliography is doubly valuable in that it lists items in order of composition, not publication, and gives their dates of writing (by year only), allowing one to gain a precise idea of the growth and development of Campbell's output. Although I have decided on a thematic rather than a chronological study of Campbell's novels and tales, I will frequently have occasion to refer to the progression of a given theme or element in his work; hence, when I wish to refer to the date of composition of a given item, I place the date in brackets.
I presume my system of citations is readily understandable.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Ramsey Campbell and Modern Horror Fiction , pp. ix - xPublisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 2001