The Revenant
Paul Muldoon
Back. Then. . . .
Margaret Atwood
Endlings
Carmen Maria Machado
Drive
Brian Evenson
Proof of Concept
Stephen Graham Jones
Those I Have Never Known
Katherine Cart
Fern’s Room
Elizabeth Hand
The Family Night Watchman
Can Xue
Walkers
Bradford Morrow
Henry
Julia Elliott
Archies
Paul Tremblay
A Woman’s Place Is in the Haunted Home
Charlotte Tierney
Fredo and the Rain Club
Jonathan Carroll
An Incident in Monte Carlo
Peter Straub
Ghost Story Three
Kathryn Davis
Ghost Goggles
James Morrow
Necronauts
Ryan Habermeyer
The Last Boyfriend
Marilyn Chin
The Massacre at Mount Pitcairn
Joyce Carol Oates
Finally
Patricia Smith
Anarcha
Marc Anthony Richardson
It Is Certain
Erin MacNair
A Monstrum
Timothy J. Jarvis
Lost Gonfalon
Mark Valentine
The Old Man of the Woods
Reggie Oliver
From the Ashes
Valerie Martin
Try This
Joanna Scott
That Mysterious Weight of Night
Ben Okri
Plunged in the Years
Jeffrey Ford
Ghosts, wraiths, specters. Poltergeists, phantoms, shades. They manifest in many shapes and dispositions in our lives and the literatures of all cultures. From the Egyptian to the Tibetan Book of the Dead , from the Homeric epics to Shakespeare’s King Hamlet, from the Victorian ghosts of Sheridan Le Fanu, Violet Hunt, and MR James to Amos Tutuola’s My Life in the Bush of Ghosts , from the ethereal creatures of Poe to the startlingly “realistic” ghosts of Henry James and Edith Wharton, phantasmagoric beings mingle with the living. Nature itself may be “haunted”—an unknowable presence hostile to human intrusion, as in Algernon Blackwood’s classic “The Willows.” Sometimes a ghostly haunting is metaphoric; often it is literal. The Japanese jorōgumo ghost appears as a beautiful maiden but is a lethal spider monster. Buddhism’s hungry ghosts have enormous stomachs and tiny mouths that represent how worldly desires blocked their path to nirvana.
Being a ghost is being stuck in a limbo between vitality and finality. Ghosts are the unliving-living, the not-quite-dead deceased. Stubborn survivors, they are sometimes caught by surprise, traumatized by violence in the midstream of their lives with much left undone, unsaid, or vengeance to wreak upon the living. Other times they cling to their lives with such intensity that their spirits don’t believe they’ve been torn from a familiar earthly place: a childhood house, a forest glade, a hospital. But however the living are unable to “rest in peace,” returnants are left to wander in search of what was lost when they passed away—usually their very selves.
In Revenants , Joyce Carol Oates and Bradford Morrow will bring together a wide array of writers to explore this venerable theme, including Margaret Atwood, Carmen Maria Machado, Ben Okri, Paul Tremblay, Stephen Graham Jones, Valerie Martin, Jonathan Carroll, Reggie Oliver, James Morrow, Can Xue, Brian Evenson, Paul Muldoon, and the editors themselves, with original cover art by Laurel Hausler.
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