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![]() ![]() Some of the strange stories are horrible and not for the squeamish.” - Sydney Morning Herald Syn’s creator cannot but write interestingly. “It is all very good reading for a windy night, alone in front of an open fireplace.” - Winnipeg Tribune ![]() ![]() This first-ever republication of the novel includes the original jacket art and a new introduction by Mark Valentine. Syn, Russell Thorndike (1885-1972) in The Master of the Macabre (1947) delivers an irresistible mix of horror, adventure, and black humour that is certain to please fans of classic ghost stories and supernatural fiction. But the terrors are not confined to Hogarth’s tales: the monastery is haunted by the evil spirit of an apostate monk and besieged by more corporeal foes, who will stop at nothing to get their hands on one of the Master’s treasures.īest known for his series of novels featuring the smuggler Dr. Instead, he finds things may have gone from bad to worse when he crashes his car, breaks his ankle, and is forced to take refuge at a medieval monastery now inhabited by the eccentric Charles Hogarth, known as “The Master of the Macabre.” As Kent’s ankle heals, Hogarth entertains him with fine food, brandy, and a series of gruesome stories connected with an odd assortment of old relics on display in a curio cabinet. ![]() Tayler Kent flees London in a blinding snowstorm, hoping to escape the ghosts that haunt his home. ![]()
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