Ron Weighell Explained

Ron Weighell (1950–2020) was a British writer of fiction in the supernatural, fantasy and horror genre, whose work was published in the U.K., the U.S.A., Canada, Germany, Ireland, Romania, Finland, Belgium and Mexico. His stories were included in over fifty anthologies and published in six volumes containing his own work exclusively. Weighell is listed as an author in the online Bibliothèque Nationale de France, with a selected bibliography.[1] A short biography and limited bibliography are available in the goodreads.com website.[2] A more extensive bibliography of his published work is available in the Internet Speculative Fiction Database.[3] Weighell died on 24 December 2020, some weeks after suffering a stroke. Obituaries have been published by the Fortean Times magazine, the newsletter of The Sherlock Holmes Society of London, and Locus Magazine.[4] [5] [6]

Two of Weighell’s stories, "Carven of Onyx" and "China Rose", were chosen to appear in the 1992 and 1993 volumes, respectively, of the annual U.S. publication The Year's Best Horror Stories.[7] Three further stories, "The Four Strengths of Shadow", "The Chapel of Infernal Devotion", and "Under the Frenzy of the Fourteenth Moon" appeared in the annual British publication Best New Horror, volumes 26 (2015), 27 (2016), and 31 (2021) respectively.[8]

Weighell's fiction is characterized by his knowledge of incunabula, architecture, art and art symbolism, mysticism, and the occult, and pays homage to his two primary influences, M. R. James and Arthur Machen. While his protagonists are typically scholars, archaeologists, and bibliophiles, much of his fiction moves beyond traditional antiquarian ghost stories to explore both wonder and terror in the presence of supernatural forces.

Weighell's first published short story, "Bishop Asgarth's Chantry," was in the small press Ghosts and Scholars magazine,[9] devoted to the M. R. James tradition. From that point on, his work was published in those magazines and others, such as AKLO[10] and All Hallows,[11] , and in book anthologies with other writers. In 1986, Haunted Library Publications published Weighell's first short story collection, entitled An Empty House and Other Stories.

In 1992, the Northern Musgraves Sherlock Holmes Society invited Weighell to produce a story for their "Aspects of Holmes" weekend. The positive reception of "The Shadow of the Wolf",[12] read out at the society's annual dinner, led Weighell to write more Sherlock Holmes stories. His collection The Irregular Casebook of Sherlock Holmes,[13] published in 2000, proved a popular work and was re-printed in 2018 by Zagava Press.

Weighell’s second collection of short stories, entitled The White Road,[14] was published in 1997 by Ghost Story Press.[15] The collection sold out and became a rarity, and today only an occasional copy crops up online to be purchased by collectors of his work.

During his writing career, Weighell was invited to submit articles to journals such as Warnings to the Curious: A Sheaf of Criticism on M. R. James, edited by S. T. Joshi and Rosemary Pardoe (2007).

Two further Weighell collections, Tarshishim (a box set), and Summonings, were published in 2011 and 2014 respectively. In 2017, a new edition of The White Road was published by Sarob Press, with a few stories removed and new stories added. Both editions of The White Road were illustrated by Weighell’s lifelong friend Nick Maloret. Further stories of Weighell's were published up to and including 2024.

Before he was taken ill, Weighell had been putting the finishing touches to a new novel titled King Satyr. In October 2021, small press publisher Sarob Press announced that a limited edition of the novel would be published in late November/early December 2021.[16] The announcement was covered by the Portsmouth area UK newspaper The News in its online[17] and paper editions, by The Isle of Wight County Press,[18] and by the Isle of Wight online news site On the Wight.[19]

Weighell had supplied quotes to writer Sandy Robertson for an introduction Robertson was writing for James Blish's The Day After Judgment, as part of a set of Blish's After Such Knowledge quartet of books to be reissued by Centipede Press. This was published in 2022 with a note on Weighell's passing and a mention of the posthumous publication of his novel King Satyr.

Two of Weighell's stories, "Now Feel That Pulse No More" and "The Stryx" are listed in Literary Hauntings: A Gazetteer of Literary Ghost Stories from Britain and Ireland published by Tartarus Press in 2022.[20]

Publications

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Ron Weighell. Bibliothèque Nationale de France.
  2. Web site: Ron Weighell. goodreads.
  3. Web site: Summary Bibliography. Internet Speculative Fiction Database.
  4. July 2021. Obituary - Ron Weighell. Fortean Times, Dennis Publishing LTD.. 407. 28 to 29.
  5. Web site: Obituary in The District Messenger no. 408 newsletter, February 2021. The Sherlock Holmes Society of London.
  6. September 2021. Ron Weighell (1950-2020). Locus: The Magazine of the Science Fiction & Fantasy Field.
  7. Web site: The Year's Best Horror Stories. The Internet Speculative Fiction Database.
  8. Web site: Best New Horror. Internet Speculative Fiction Database.
  9. Web site: Ghosts & Scholars (editor Rosemary Pardoe) from 1979 to 2001 published creative and critical responses to M. R. James. It continued online as The Ghosts & Scholars M. R. James Newsletter..
  10. Web site: Small press "journal of the fantastic" containing a blend of fiction and non-fiction. A final edition of Aklo was published as a book in 1998.. The Science Fiction, Fantasy, & Weird Fiction Magazine Index.
  11. Web site: Small press ghost story magazine containing a blend of fiction and non-fiction, produced on behalf of the Ghost Story Society.. The Science Fiction, Fantasy, & Weird Fiction Magazine Index.
  12. Web site: The Shadow of the Wolf. Jisc Library Hub Database.
  13. Web site: Sherlockian Story Summaries. School and Holmes.
  14. Web site: The White Road. Supernatural Fiction Database.
  15. Web site: Ghost Story Press, founded in 1993 by Richard Dalby (1940 - 2017) and David Tibet, was a small press that published many well-regarded anthologies of supernatural stories, including The Sorceress in Stained Glass (1971), Tales of Witchcraft (1991) and Mistletoe and Mayhem (1993). Described in Richard Dalby obituary 1 June 2017.. The Times.
  16. Web site: October 2021. KING SATYR (a novel) by RON WEIGHELL ~ NEW TITLE NEWS.
  17. News: Deeks. Steve. 28 October 2021. Ex-University of Portsmouth carpenter and international horror author has final novel published posthumously. The News. 28 October 2021.
  18. News: Saunders. Zach. 15 November 2021. Posthumous publication for Portsmouth author's last horror novel. The Isle of Wight County Press. 15 November 2021.
  19. News: 26 October 2021. Final horror novel by former Islander published following his death. ON THE WIGHT. 28 October 2021.
  20. Web site: R. B. Russell . Rosalie Parker . Mark Valentine . 2 December 2022 . LITERARY HAUNTINGS A Gazetteer of Literary Ghost Stories . 2 December 2022 . Tartarus Press.
  21. Wessex Association for The Study of Unexplained Phenomena, a Hampshire-based group of British UFO (unidentified flying objects) spotters who met to discuss and investigate UFOs and other unexplained phenomena.
  22. WATSUP is mentioned in 'Raising the Devil: Satanism, New Religions, and the Media' by Bill Ellis, University of Kentucky (2000).
  23. WATSUP is mentioned in 'From Demons to Dracula: The Creation of the Modern Vampire Myth', Matthew Beresford, Chicago Press (2008).
  24. WATSUP is mentioned in 'The Primordial Pyramid' by M. Bromwyn Handley, Strategic Book Group (2010).
  25. Referenced in footnote 47 of the critical essay 'Amateur Error, Templar Terror, and M. R. James's Haunted Whistle', Fred Porcheddu and Patrick J. Murphy, Philological Quarterly, journal of the University of Iowa College of Liberal Arts & Sciences (2013)
  26. A booklet titled 'Sliding Down the Snakes: Night of the Demon and the Charismatic Magus', by Kat Ellinger, contains a brief excerpt from 'Dark Devotions' and credits Weighell in a footnote. The booklet accompanied the Powerhouse Films 2018 special edition 2 disc Blu-Ray release of the 1957 film 'Night of the Demon'.
  27. Cited as a source in the bibliography of 'PANIC ON THE BRITISH BORDERLANDS: THE GREAT GOD PAN, VICTORIAN SEXUALITY, AND SACRED SPACE IN THE WORKS OF ARTHUR MACHEN', Ph.D. dissertation, Temple University, Jeffrey Michael Renye, January 2013.
  28. Web site: Carven of Onyx in suggested reading in article 'Nuns have a long history in horror fiction'.. Springfield News-Leader.
  29. Web site: The Irregular Casebook of Sherlock Holmes (2000). U.S. Library of Congress.
  30. Mentioned in the editor's introduction to 'The MX Book of New Sherlock Holmes Stories - Part VIII', editor David Marcum, MX Publishing (2018)
  31. Referenced on page 82 of 'The Victorian Ghost Story: From Le Fanu to James', Zöe Lehmann Imfield, Springer (2016)
  32. Referenced in footnote 96 of 'The Mummy's Curse: The True History of a Dark Fantasy', Roger Luckhurst, Oxford University Press (2016)
  33. Referenced in 'Medieval Studies and the Ghost Stories of M. R. James', Patrick J. Murphy, Penn State Press (2017)
  34. Web site: Warnings to the Curious: A Sheaf of Criticism on M. R. James. The Internet Speculative Fiction Database.
  35. News: July 2015. Romances of the White Day recommended in article 'Summer's Hidden Gems'. The Washington Post.
  36. Web site: Honourable mention for 'The Palace of Force and Fire' in 2018 Recommended Reading List. The Best of British Fantasy.
  37. Web site: Review of 'The Silent Garden: A Journal of Esoteric Fabulism'.. THIS IS HORROR.
  38. Web site: New Title News: Spirits of the Dead by Ron Weighell. 21 June 2024. SAROBLOG – The Sarob Press News Blog.