GHOSTS & SCHOLARS



"Shortly before his death I asked him what he really thought on the subject, since he had written better ghost-stories than any man living. He answered: 'Depend upon it! Some of these things are so, but we do not know the rules!'" --- Shane Leslie on M.R. James.

Montague Rhodes James (1862-1936), Provost of King's College, Cambridge, and later of Eton, was a noted medieval scholar, antiquary, and expert on Bible apocrypha. He also authored some of the greatest and most influential ghost stories in the English language. There are approximately forty of his supernatural tales (some incomplete), most of which were published in Ghost Stories of an Antiquary (1904), More Ghost Stories (1911), A Thin Ghost and Others (1919), A Warning to the Curious (1925) and The Collected Ghost Stories of M.R. James (1931). Among them are famous titles such as "Casting the Runes" and "Oh, Whistle, and I'll Come to You, My Lad". James also wrote a short supernatural fairy-tale novel for children, The Five Jars (1922).

M.R. James can arguably be described as the Father of the Modern Ghost Story, and Ghosts & Scholars Magazine continued the Jamesian tradition, as well as encouraging scholarly research into James, his themes and his followers. Founded in 1979, it was a small press, non-profit journal containing new stories, articles, reviews, columns and artwork. Ghosts & Scholars 33 (December 2001) was the final issue. In 2002 it was succeeded by The Ghosts & Scholars M.R. James Newsletter,
which is similar in content but does not usually include new fiction.

The Newsletter is edited by Rosemary Pardoe (pardos@globalnet.co.uk); with assistant editors, David Rowlands and Steve Duffy.

Issue 21 (April 2012) of The Ghosts & Scholars M.R. James Newsletter is out.
For how to order, see "Current and Forthcoming Publications" below.

Jamesian News. (March 29, 2012)

Current and Forthcoming Publications, Back Issues List, and Subscription Information. (March 29, 2012)

Guidelines for Contributors to The G&S M.R. James Newsletter.

Jamesian Cards and Bookmarks For Sale.

Frequently Asked Questions.

A Chronological Listing of M.R. James's Ghost Stories

Index to Ghosts & Scholars 1-33.

Index to The Ghosts & Scholars M.R. James Newsletter 1-12.

Complete Checklist of Haunted Library Publications (and notes on earlier publications).

Bibliography of Writings about M.R. James's Ghost Stories.

M.R. James on TV, Radio and Film: An Updated Checklist.

An Index to M.R. James's Eton and King's: Recollections, Mostly Trivial.

An Index to M.R. James's Letters to a Friend.

The M.R. James Memorial Plaque and other MRJ-related Great Livermere Photographs

M.R. James's Gravestone at Eton and related Photographs

Douglas Walters' illustrations for Tales from Lectoure by M.R. James


Ghosts & Scholars Archive:

The Ghosts & Scholars Archive features selections from most issues of the magazine (including all the material by M.R. James), and from the Ghosts & Scholars book (edited by Rosemary Pardoe and Richard Dalby in 1987), together with related items from other Haunted Library publications and elsewhere. MRJ's "The Malice of Inanimate Objects" and most of his unfinished draft stories are here, among many other things.


The Everlasting Club:

How about a change from the Internet? If the idea of an on-paper ghost story discussion group appeals to you, The Everlasting Club is the perfect place to publish your own small zine or simply to chat bi-monthly through the mail with others who share your interests.


Jamesian Links: (Please let me know if you encounter any non-working links.)

(1) M.R. James's Stories and Related Material

These sites contain the texts of many of M.R. James's stories: Frank Adey's M.R. James Homepage, the Literary Gothic M.R. James page, the "Collected Ghost Stories of M.R. James" on the Gaslight site, the HorrorMasters site (also here are stories by MRJ's associates, Arthur Gray, E.G. Swain, and the Benson brothers). The Albion Chronicles site has MRJ's essay, "Stories I Have Tried to Write" and Robert Hood's site has MRJ's essay, "Ghosts - Treat Them Gently!". In the Catalogue of the M.R. James Papers at King's College Library (Cambridge), there is information on several ghost story manuscripts.

Stephen Gray's A Thin Ghost is a site entirely devoted to MRJ's ghost stories, with links, bibliography, media and artwork sections. Consider the Evidence is another MRJ site.

Clark Ashton Smith's "The Weird Works of M.R. James", from the February 1934 issue of The Fantasy Fan, is on the superb Eldritch Dark site. Jacqueline Simpson's "'The Rules of Folklore' in the Ghost Stories of M.R. James" is her excellent 1997 Folklore Society paper, relating especially to Scandinavian sources. Her article, "Repentant soul or walking corpse? Debatable apparitions in Medieval England" (Folklore, December 2003), covers the medieval ghost stories from Byland Abbey which MRJ brought to light in 1922. Robert A. Kraft's "Rescuing Ghosts from the Shadows: Montague Rhodes James and his Curiously Converging Imaginations" is part of his on-going MRJ project (for more, see the "Non-Ghost-Story Writings" section below). "Ghosts, trains and trams: the technologies of transport in the ghost stories of M.R. James", "M.R. James: supernaturalism, Christianity, and moral accountability" and "'So jarred were all my nerves': supernatural shock and traumatic terror in the ghost stories of M.R. James" are essays on Ralph Harrington's site. The pdf of Diegesis 7 (Summer 2004) contains Andrew Smith's article, "M.R. James's Gothic Revival". On the Harry Price site, Eddie Brazil asks "Did M.R. James Visit Borley?"

"The Ghost Master: The supernatural affinity of M.R. James" by Michael Dirda (The Weekly Standard, Jan 2, 2006) is an article cum review of Eton and King's & S.T. Joshi's Count Magnus. An unusual subject for an article is "'I Shall Most Likely Be Out on the Links': Golf as Metaphor in the Ghost Stories of M.R. James" (Papers on Language and Literature, Fall 2004). "Thrillingly creepy tales of ghosts and ghouls" in the Telegraph (October 28, 2006) is mainly about "Canon Alberic's Scrap-book". Ron Breznay's "The Old Masters of Horror: M.R. James" is revised and expanded from Hellnotes (March 6, 2003). "Was What Sauniere Found A Codex?", on the Codex Celtica blog, looks at the intriguing but unlikely theory that "Canon Alberic's Scrap-book" was inspired by the discoveries at Rennes-le-Chateau.

Gareth Preston has essays about the MRJ adaptations in BBC TV's 1970s A Ghost Story for Christmas series and Jonathan Miller's 1968 Whistle and I'll Come to You on his site. And on the British Film Institute web site is "Ghost Stories on Film", an interesting "resource to support English at Key Stages 3 and 4 and Media Studies at GCSE" by Jerome Monahan, intended for use along with BFI Videos/DVDs including Miller's Whistle and I'll Come to You and Lawrence Gordon Clark's A Warning to the Curious. Further useful commentaries on some of the TV MRJ adaptations are in the BFI's Screenonline.

Paul Di Filippo's cute little piece on The Five Jars (and Led Zeppelin!) is from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction in 2000. Robert Price's 1997 "The Transition of Abdul Alhazred" is Alhazred's own account of his Black Pilgrimage to Chorazin.

A Podcast to the Curious is the only podcast devoted to the weird fiction of MRJ: it is progressively working through his stories with commentaries and discussions on each.

Nancy Gregory is leading walking tours "In the Ghostly Footsteps of M.R. James" in Cambridge: the Cambridge Tourist Information Centre site has booking details.

(2) M.R. James's Non-Ghost-Story Writings and Related Material

Two entertaining papers by MRJ about "The Bestiary" are on David Badke's wonderful site devoted to the medieval Bestiaries: MRJ's inaugural address at the Historical Association Annual Meeting in 1931, and his article in the 1930-31 Annual Report of the Eton College Natural History Society.

Roger Pearse's Tertullian Project has the texts of MRJ's 1931 lecture, Two Ancient English Scholars (St Aldhelm and William of Malmesbury), and his The Wanderings and Homes of Manuscripts (1919). The text of MRJ's The Lost Apocrypha of the Old Testament (1920) forms part of Robert A. Kraft's ambitious plan for electronically "Reviving, Refurbishing, and Repurposing the Lost Apocrypha of M.R. James": access via Robert Kraft's "Directory of Materials Relating to the Montague Rhodes James Project(s)" page. Some of the translations and introductory notes from MRJ's The Apocryphal New Testament (1924) can be found in the (highly recommended) Gnosis Archive and on the Early Christian Writings site. Similarly recommended is the Sacred Texts site, which includes MRJ's translation (with his introduction) of The Biblical Antiquities of Philo (1917). MRJ's Old Testament Legends (1913), retelling for children some stories from the OT Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha, is available as a Project Gutenberg text. The chapter on Glastonbury Abbey from MRJ's Abbeys (1925) is on the Isle of Avalon site.

The web site of the John Rylands Library (Manchester) has an interesting page (with illustrations) about MRJ's cataloguing of Michael Scot's Magic Book. More of MRJ's cataloguing work can be seen on the web site of St John's College, Cambridge, where they have placed the medieval entries from his 1913 Descriptive Catalogue of the MSS in the Library of St John's College. And MRJ's The Western Manuscripts in the Library of Trinity College, Cambridge catalogue (1900-1904) is here.

(3) Other Links of Interest

Warnings to the Curious: A Sheaf of Criticism on M.R. James is a collection of new and reprint essays on MRJ and his supernatural fiction, edited by S.T. Joshi and Rosemary Pardoe, which was published by Hippocampus Press in 2007. In 2001 Ash-Tree Press published the essential A Pleasing Terror: The Complete Supernatural Writings of M.R. James (out of print) (click here for the G&S review). Also recommended are Tartarus Press, Sarob Press and Supernatural Tales.

The Holiday Movie Company organises holidays in Britain and France during which participants are involved in the making of a short film, often inspired by a selected M.R. James story. Their first film, inspired by "Rats", can be viewed here; watch the trailer here.

Among G&S contributors with their own web sites are: Ramsey Campbell, John Whitbourn, Chico Kidd, David Sutton, Tina Rath, David Longhorn (blog), Dave Carson, Jane Jakeman and John Howard (the latter two sites include material from G&S).

A Ghostly Company is a small, England-based, society devoted to fictional ghost stories, which holds get-togethers - called 'Black Pilgrimages' - in various parts of the country, and publishes a newsletter and magazine.

Last altered: March 29th, 2012.

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