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AND AFTERWARD, THE DARK: SEVEN TALES.
Sauk City: Arkham House [Publishers, Inc.], 1977. Octavo, cloth. First edition. Seven stories with introduction by Edward Wagenknecht. Includes the science-fiction-horror hybrid, "The Flabby Men," pp. 165-222, a novella set in the future after the Earth has been poisoned by nuclear war. Mankind's fragile remaining civilization is menaced by jelly-like ocean dwelling fungoid creatures who absorb their victims. Barron (ed), Fantasy and Horror 6-99.
FROM EVIL'S PILLOW.
Sauk City, WI: Arkham House, 1973. Octavo, cloth. First edition. Collects five stories. "...this collection demonstrates the verbal precision, meticulous attention to detail, mastery of tone and implication, and adroit narrative structuring that have established him as one of Great Britain's masters of the genre." - Barron: Horror Literature 4-84. Barron (ed), Horror Literature 4-84. Tymn (ed), Horror Literature 4-76.
FROM EVIL'S PILLOW.
Sauk City, WI: Arkham House, 1973. Octavo, cloth. First edition. Collects five stories. "...this collection demonstrates the verbal precision, meticulous attention to detail, mastery of tone and implication, and adroit narrative structuring that have established him as one of Great Britain's masters of the genre." - Barron: Horror Literature 4-84. Barron (ed), Horror Literature 4-84. Tymn (ed), Horror Literature 4-76.
FROM EVIL'S PILLOW.
Sauk City, WI: Arkham House, 1973. Octavo, cloth. First edition. Collects five stories. "...this collection demonstrates the verbal precision, meticulous attention to detail, mastery of tone and implication, and adroit narrative structuring that have established him as one of Great Britain's masters of the genre." - Barron: Horror Literature 4-84. Barron (ed), Horror Literature 4-84. Tymn (ed), Horror Literature 4-76.
THE HOUSE OF THE WOLF.
[Sauk City, WI]: Arkham House Publishers, Inc, [1983]. Octavo, illustrations by Stephen Fabian, cloth. First edition. Victorian thriller in which an expert on Lycanthropy attending a conference in Hungary is confronted with the possibility that a murder of villager, having the throat torn out, is by a werewolf. Barron (ed), Fantasy and Horror 6-102.
THE WEREWOLF IN LEGEND, FACT AND ART.
New York: St. Martin's Press. London: Robert Hale Limited, [1977]. Octavo, boards. First edition, U. S. issue. Typed letter from Copper signed by him thanking the writer for providing information on lycanthropy.