Publisher: Ash-Tree Press
Publisher description:
With an Introduction by A. F. Kidd and an Afterword by Douglas A. Anderson.
'I was peering down. The thing seemed to be rising out of the depths. It was
taking shape. As I realised what the shape was, a queer, cold funk took me.
'"See," said Tammy. "It's just like the shadow of a ship!"
'And it was. The shadow of a ship rising out of the unexplored immensity beneath
our keel.’
The Mortzestus, bound from ’Frisco, has the reputation of being unlucky; some
even say that she is haunted. 'Too many shadows' is how one sailor—the only
returning crew member from her most recent voyage—puts it; and soon the
narrator, Jessop, understands all too well what he means. Shadowy figures seem
to come and go over the side of the ship, and lurk high in the rigging,
endangering the lives of the crew. One man disappears without trace; others are
killed; and Jessop realises that the Mortzestus and those aboard her have
entered a twilight world of shadows and silences, cut off from the rest of
humanity, where they are relentlessly pursued by the great ghost ships beneath
them: ships which are growing clearer and larger with each passing day.
William Hope Hodgson (1877–1918) spent his early years (unhappily) at sea; and
this experience coloured much of his very best work, which rings with authority
and authenticity. The Ghost Pirates was first published in 1909, as part of a
series including The Boats of the 'Glen Carrig' and The House on the Borderland,
and over the years has been overshadowed by the latter novel, as well as the
epic The Night Land. However, as A. F. Kidd argues in her introduction, The
Ghost Pirates is a little masterpiece: a 'small and almost perfectly formed gem'
written by an author who, at his best, 'can make your flesh creep like a
master'.
Availability: In stock and ready to ship