Tales of the Macabre by Jim Kjlegaard & Robert Bloch
Introduction
to Tales of the Macabre by Jim Kjelgaard
[now available from Vintage Lists in the Tales of the Macabre /
The Black Fawn collection]
While the genre
Kjelgaard was writing for changed—Western, romance, mystery, adventure—his
stories were charmingly consistent and familiar to his regular readers. They
often featured animals and thoughtful protagonists living in wild places. A
genre Kjelgaard rarely visited was horror, but that changed when a tale of the
supernatural, “The Thing from the Barrens,” appeared in the September 1945
issue of Weird Tales. This story, and the three others published by Weird
Tales over the next ten months—“The Fangs of Tsan-Lo” (Nov. 1945), “Chanu”
(Mar. 1946), and “The Man Who Told the Truth” (July 1946) —had Kjelgaard’s traditional hallmarks, but were also dependent on their
supernatural elements: a stalking creature from the wastelands of the Arctic,
an ancient dog, a sinister hybrid ape-man, and…
While the stories all
appeared under Jim Kjelgaard’s name, a young Robert Bloch—the writer that gave
us Psycho (1963)—revised the stories for publication. Both Bloch and
Kjelgaard belonged to a writing group, the Milwaukee Fictioneers, which
included the Western writer Lawrence A. Keating, the golden age science fiction
writer, Ralph Milne Farley, and the cult-favorite science fiction writer
Stanley G. Weinbaum. In Bloch’s 1994 autobiography, Once Around the Bloch,
he mentioned his work with Kjelgaard and another of the group’s members: “I rewrote
and sold stories which appeared under the bylines of Ralph Milne Farley and
another member, Jim Kjelgaard.”
Robert Bloch was a
supernatural horror specialist and his participation in the stories can be seen
from the eerie descriptions— “I seemed to hear the rustle of leaves, to see
snarling, man-beast faces” —but the concepts and plotting are in the classical
vein of Jim Kjelgaard. Things changed a bit for the fourth tale, “The Man Who
Told the Truth,” which is less Kjelgaard and more Robert Bloch. In fact,
this story was included in Bloch’s posthumous collection, Flowers from the
Moon and Other Lunacies (1998). These collaborations often
appeared alongside stories under Bloch’s own name. “The Thing from the Barrens”
appeared with Bloch’s “The Skull of the Marquis de Sade”; “The Fangs of Tsan-Lo”
with “Soul Proprietor”; and “Chanu” with “Bogy Man Will Get You.”
For the first time in
more than 70 years, Jim Kjelgaard’s first three tales of the macabre are back
in print. And we’re betting you’ll enjoy them as much today as their original
readers did so long ago.
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Got to Amazon for the paperback version (here) or Kindle version (here).
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