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Famous Like Me > Writer > A > Robert Aickman

Profile of Robert Aickman on Famous Like Me

 
Name: Robert Aickman  
   
Also Know As:
   
Date of Birth: 27th June 1914
   
Place of Birth: England, UK
   
Profession: Writer
 
 
From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia

Robert Fordyce Aickman (born June 24, 1914 - died February 26, 1981) was a British author of supernatural short stories he liked to describe as "strange".

Overview

Aickman was the grandson of prolific Victorian novelist Richard Marsh (1857-1915), known for his occult novel The Beetle (1897), a book arguably almost as popular in its time as Bram Stoker's Dracula. Aickman, however, is probably best remembered for his co-founding of The Inland Waterways Association, a group devoted to restoring and preserving England's inland canal system. One of his co-founders, L. T. C. Rolt, also produced a volume of twelve superb supernatual tales: Sleep No More (London: Constable 1948). Aickman was married to Edith Ray Gregorson from 1941 to 1957. For a full exposition of the battle for the waterways, David Bolton's book Race Against Time: How Britain's Waterways Were Saved (London: Methuen 1990) is essential.

In addition to his own stories, Aickman edited the first eight volumes of the Fontana Book of Great Ghost Stories between 1964 and 1972, selecting six of his own stories for inclusion over the course of the series (the fourth and sixth volumes lack one of his tales). He also added insightful introductions to seven of the collections (volume six lacks any introduction).

Only two novels—The Late Breakfasters (London: Victor Gollancz Ltd 1964) and The Model: A Novel of the Fantastic (New York: Arbor House 1987)—have been published. Aickman's autobiographical writings can be found in the volumes The Attempted Rescue (London: Victor Gollancz Ltd 1966) and The River Runs Uphill: A Story of Success and Failure (Burton-on-Trent: Pearson 1986).

Aickman also wrote a number of plays, Allowance For Error, Duty and The Golden Round, none of which has yet been published. Two further books, a vast philosophical work entitled Panacea (running to over 1000 pages in manuscript form) and a further novel Go Back At Once have also never seen publication. Copies of these items are preserved, along with all of Aickman's other remaining papers, in the Robert Aickman Collection at Bowling Green State University, Ohio.

Aickman originally received his training in architecture, the profession of his father, William Arthur Aickman ("the oddest man I have ever known", according to his writing son in The Attempted Rescue); however, he was more naturally centred in the milieu of literature, the theatre, ballet and music. He was theatre critic for The Nineteenth Century and After as well as the chairman of the London Opera Society. He was also active in the London Opera Club, the Ballet Minerva and the Mikron Theatre Company in London.

Aickman died from cancer on 26 February 1981 and his obituary appeared in The Times on 28 February 1981.

Awards

In 1975, Aickman received the World Fantasy Award for short fiction for his story “Pages from a Young Girl's Journal”. This story originally appeared in February 1973 in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction and two years later in the collection Cold Hand in Mine: Eight Strange Stories (London: Victor Gollancz Ltd 1975). In 1981, the year he died, Aickman was awarded the British Fantasy Society prize for his story "The Stains" which had first appeared in 1980 in the anthology New Terrors (London: Pan 1980), edited by his friend and protégé Ramsey Campbell. It subsequently appeared, posthumously, in Aickman's final collection of stories Night Voices: Strange Stories.

Bibliography

Altogether, twelve collections of Aickman's "strange stories" have now been published. Of these books, eight are original collections and four are reprint collections (one of which—Painted Devils: Strange Stories—consists of revised versions of stories which appeared in earlier volumes).

The eight collections are as follows:

  • We Are for the Dark: Six Ghost Stories, London: Jonathan Cape 1951
  • Dark Entries: Curious and Macabre Ghost Stories, London: Collins 1964
  • Powers of Darkness: Macabre Stories, London: Collins 1966
  • Sub Rosa: Strange Tales, London: Victor Gollancz Ltd 1968
  • Cold Hand in Mine: Eight Strange Stories, London: Victor Gollancz Ltd 1975
  • Tales of Love and Death, London: Victor Gollancz Ltd 1977
  • Intrusions: Strange Tales, London: Victor Gollancz Ltd 1980
  • Night Voices: Strange Stories, London: Victor Gollancz Ltd 1985

The reprint collections are:

  • Painted Devils: Strange Stories, New York: Charles Scribner's Sons 1979 (revised stories)
  • The Wine-Dark Sea, New York: Arbor House/William Morrow 1988
  • The Unsettled Dust, London: Mandarin 1990
  • The Collected Strange Stories, Carlton-in-Coverdale: Tartarus Press/Durtro Press 1999 (two volumes)

A critical essay on Aickman's fiction appears in S. T. Joshi's book The Modern Weird Tale (2001).

The original collections of short stories, particularly the first four, all command high prices on the used book market, as does the extremely rare novel The Late Breakfasters. The most accessible avenue to acquiring Aickman's stories is via the excellent two volume Tartarus Press complete edition mentioned above. In 2001, Tartarus also reissued the first volume of Aickman's autobiography, The Attempted Rescue in a handsome edition with a foreword by writer and Aickman enthusiast Jeremy Dyson, of British comedy quartet The League of Gentlemen.

This content from Wikipedia is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article Robert Aickman