American Gothic Tales Explained

American Gothic Tales is an anthology of "gothic" American short fiction. Edited and with an Introduction by Joyce Carol Oates, it was published by Plume in 1996. It featured contributions by Washington Irving, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Edgar Allan Poe, Stephen King, Anne Rice and others, and included over 40 stories.[1]

Contents

Wieland; or, the Transformation

"The Legend of Sleepy Hollow"

"The Man of Adamant" and "Young Goodman Brown"

"The Tartarus of Maids"

"The Black Cat"

"The Yellow Wallpaper"

"The Romance of Certain Old Clothes"

"That Damned Thing"

"Afterward"

"The Striding Place"

"Death in the Woods"

"The Outsider"

"A Rose for Emily"

"The Lonesome Place"

"The Door"

"The Lovely House"

"Allal"

"The Reencounter"

"In the Icebound Hothouse"

"The Enormous Radio"

"The Veldt"

"The Dachau Shoe", "The Approved", "Spiders I Have Known", "Postcards from the Maginot Line"

"Johnny Panic and the Bible of Dreams"

"In Bed One Night"

"Schrodinger's Cat"

"The Waterworks"

"Shattered Like a Glass Goblin"

"Human Moments in World War III"

"The Anatomy of Desire"

"Little Things"

"The Temple"

"Freniere"

"A Short Guide to the City"

"In the Penny Arcade"

"The Reach"

"Exchange Value"

"Snow"

"The Last Feast of Harlequin"

"Time and Again"

"Spirit Seizures"

"Cat in Glass"

"The Girl Who Loved Animals"

""

"Subsoil"

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://jco.usfca.edu/works/anthologies/gothic.html "A Joyce Carol Oates Home Page - Dust Jacket Blurb, Introduction, Contents"