Masters of Horror Vol. One Allison V. HardingThe Forgotten Queen of Horror
Armchair Fiction features the best in classic horror and fantasy short story collections. "Allison V. Harding, the Forgotten Queen of Horror” features some of the best horror tales of the 1940s and 1950s. Who was Allison V. Harding? She was, frankly, Weird Tales’ best kept secret. Her real name was Jean Milligan; she was born in Cleveland, Ohio in 1919 and passed away in 2004. She was a virtual unknown during her career and little is known about her personal life, but the one thing we do know is that you almost couldn’t pick up an issue of Weird Tales from 1943 through the beginning of 1951 and not come across one of her stories. And if you were a Weird Tales aficionado during those years, you were treated to some of the most imaginative, terrifying, and downright entertaining horror stories of the day. During that span Harding gave us 33 tales of terror. In fact, from 1943 through 1949, a Harding story graced the pages of 31 of the 42 Weird Tales issues published. Harding’s horror writings touched many subjects—some of her stories delve into science fiction, some into adventure, some into mystery, etc.; but no matter what the sub-genre was, all were well-written tales of terror. Harding was a master at building a sense of growing, impending horror that would creep right under your skin and up the back of your spine—a powerful telescope that slowly reveals a terrible secret; a steam shovel that seems to have a life of its own; an “imaginary” friend that lives under the ground; an odd hill that refuses to be excavated; or a moviemaker whose films seem to have a sinister sense of premonition. Many of Harding’s stories are true forgotten classics, so aim your reading glasses upon tales like “The Frightened Engineer,” “The Coming of M. Alkerhaus,” “Scope,” “The Underbody,” “Ride the El to Doom,” “Death Went That Way,” “Night of Impossible Shadows,” “The City of Lost People,” “The Damp Man,” or “The Murderous Steam Shovel” and you’ll understand why. This is the first published collection of Allison V. Harding’s works, but it certainly won’t be the last. Have a bite of her scrumptious entrées—16 chilling tales of terror.
Contents
1. The Frightened Engineer (1948)
2. The Coming of M. Alkerhaus (1948)
3. The Murderous Steam Shovel (1945)
4. City of Lost People (1948)
5. The Underbody (1949)
6. Scope (1951)
7. The Damp Man [Damp Man] (1947)
8. Ride the El to Doom (1944)
9. Night of Impossible Shadows (1945)
10. Isle of Women (1948)
11. Tunnel Terror (1946)
12. The Machine (1946)
13. Revolt of the Trees (1945)
14. House of Hate (1944)
15. Death Went That Way (1943)
16. Fog Country (1945)
Allison V. Harding
It is now generally accepted that Allison V. Harding was a pseudonym used by Jean Milligan, 1919 – 2004, born in Cleveland, Ohio and raised in New Canaan, Connecticut
She married Charles Lamont Buchanan an associate editor of Weird Tales magazine and it has been suggested that the stories attributed to Harding were a collaboration between the couple, however payments for the stories were made to Milligan.
She was one of the most published authors in the later years of “Weird Tales”.
Armchair Fiction Masters of Horror
Armchair Fiction Masters of Horror consists of six books. The current recommended reading order for the series is provided below.
