The delightful title - 'The Mozart of the English Ghost Story' - certainly lays down a marker. And the author goes a long way to justify his high opinion of a writer much admired by Wodehouse, among others. As often happens, Jacobs moved between the comical and the Gothic, as was also the case with John Dickson Carr and of course M.R. James. Comedy and horror are closely allied.
Jacobs’s story The Boatswain’s Mate was made into an enjoyable comic opera in 1913, with libretto and music by Ethel Smyth. One wonders why, with the continuing popularity of Dad’s Army, no one has televised Jacobs’s beautifully plotted and very spirited stories. Perhaps their endings, which often turn verbally on a penny, would be difficult to bring off visually.Well worth a read, and the blog is a repository of information, opinion, and some classic stories available to read online.
Don't do it Homer! |
1 comment:
I came across a collection of his stories years ago - all featuring old salts hanging around in a seaside town, not unlike 'Last of the Summer Wine' in tone? - with 'The Monkey's Paw' representing the dissonant note. I only mention this because I'm pretty sure I subsequently saw a TV adaptation of at least one of those stories (it may even have been a series). This was a while ago, mind!
Post a Comment