Alfred Hitchcock Presents: Stories that Go Bump in the Night

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Information

  • Published by:
    • Random House, 1977, USA.
  • Also contains:
    • “The Damned Thing” by Ambrose Bierce
    • “The Scruff of the Soul” by Doroty Salisbury Davis
    • “Murder On St.Valentine’s Day” by Mignon G. Eberhart
    • “Hey, Look At Me!” by Jack Finney
    • “Muldoon And The Numbers Game” by Robert L. Fish
    • “The Capture” by James Hay, Jr.
    • “The Guide’s Story” by Dion Henderson
    • “Woodrow Wilson’s Necktie” by Patricia Highsmith
    • “Something For The Dark” by Edward D. Hoch
    • “The Grey Shroud” by Antony Horner
    • “The Gentleman Caller” by Veronica Parker Johns
    • “The Coconut Trial” by Don Knowlton
    • “Man In A Trap” by John D. Macdonald
    • “The Bearded Lady” by Ross Macdonald
    • “Dead Game” by Harold Q. Masur
    • “No Such Thing As A Vampire” by Richard Matheson
    • “A Piece Of The World” by Steve O’Connell
    • “Easy Mark” by Talmage Powell
    • “Proof Of Guilt” by Bill Pronzini
    • “The Operator” by Jack Ritchie
    • “The Other Celia” by Theodore Sturgeon
    • “An Evening In Whitechapel” by Nancy Swoboda
    • “Wile Versus Guile” by Arthur Train
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Alfred Hitchcock Presents: Stories My Mother Never Told Me

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Information

  • Published by:
    • Random House, 1963, USA.
  • Also contains:
    • “Introduction” by Alfred Hitchcock
    • “The Child Who Believed” by Grace Amundson
    • “Just a Dreamer” by Robert Arthur
    • “The Wall-to-Wall Grave [“Walkup to Death”]” by Andrew Benedict
    • “The Wind” by Ray Bradbury
    • “Congo” by Stuart Cloete
    • “Witch’s Money” by John Collier
    • “The Secret of the Bottle [“The Mystery of the Bottle”]” by Gerald Kersh
    • “I Do Not Hear You, Sir” by Avram Davidson
    • “The Arbutus Collar” by Jeremiah Digges
    • “A Short Trip Home” by F. Scott Fitzgerald
    • “An Invitation to the Hunt” by George Hitchcock
    • “The Man Who Was Everywhere” by Edward D. Hoch
    • “The Summer People” by Shirley Jackson
    • “Adjustments” by George Mandel
    • “The Children of Noah” by Richard Matheson
    • “The Idol of the Flies” by Jane Rice
    • “Courtesy of the Road” by Mack Morriss
    • “Remains to Be Seen [as by Steve O’Connell]” by Jack Ritchie
    • “The Man Who Sold Rope to the Gnoles” by Idris Seabright
    • “Lost Dog” by Henry Slesar
    • “Slime” by Joseph Payne Brennan
    • “How Love Came to Professor Guildea” by Robert S. Hichens
    • “Hostage” by Don Stanford
    • “Natural Selection” by Gilbert Thomas
    • “Simone” by Joan Vatsek
    • “Smart Sucker” by Richard Wormser
    • “Some of Your Blood” by Theodore Sturgeon
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Alfred Hitchcock Presents: Stories for Late at Night

Sections: Information | Covers | Dutch Covers


Information

  • Published by:
    • Random House, 1961, USA.
  • Also contains:
    • “Death is a Dream” by Robert Arthur
    • “It’s a Good Life” by Jerome Bixby
    • “The Whole Town Sleeping” by Ray Bradbury
    • “Lady’s Man” by Ruth Chatterton
    • “Evening Primrose” by John Collier
    • “The Cocoon” by John B. L. Goodwin
    • “The Fly” by George Langelaan
    • “Back There in the Grass” by Gouverneur Morris
    • “The Mugging” by Edward L. Perry
    • “Finger! Finger!” by Margaret Ronan
    • “A Cry From the Penthouse” by Henry Slesar
    • “The People Next Door” by Pauline C. Smith
    • “D–Day” by Robert Trout
    • “The Man Who Liked Dickens” by Evelyn Waugh
    • “The Iron Gates” by Margaret Millar
    • And many more…
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Dutch Covers – Verhalen die Hitchcock Koos 3


Alfred Hitchcock Presents: Skeleton Crew

Sections: Information | Covers


Information

  • Also contains:
    • “It’s a Good Life” by Jerome Bixby
    • “Lady’s Man” by Ruth Chatterton
    • “Pieces of Silver” by Brett Halliday
    • “The Whistling Room” by William Hope Hodgson
    • “Told For The Truth” by Cyril Hume
    • “The Fly” by George Langelaan
    • “The Mugging” by Edward L. Perry
    • “Finger! Finger!” by Margaret Ronan
    • “A Cry From The Penthouse” by Henry Slesar
    • “The People Next Door” by Pauline C. Smith

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The 20th Century Children’s Poetry Treasury

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Information

  • Published by:
    • Knopf, 1990, USA.
      • Edited by: Jack Prelutsky
      • Illustrated by: Meilo So
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“Yesterday was Beautiful”

Sections: Information | Plot Description 


Information

  • Connections:
    • The setting is the RAF’s Greek campaign in World War II, which Dahl took part in and describes in Going Solo.

Plot Description

This is a very short little vignette from Dahl’s book of WW2 flying stories, Over to You. There’s not a lot of plot.

Spoiler warning! An English RAF pilot has ejected from his plane and parachuted onto a Greek island. He sprained his ankle when he landed and he’s now looking for a boat to take him back to the mainland. The village he finds is nearly deserted though. Eventually he finds an old man sitting near a drinking trough and asks him if he knows of anyone with a boat. The old man is muddled and expressionless. He asks when the Germans will be back. The pilot thinks they are done for the day. “I do not understand why they come to us, Inglese. There is no one here,” the old man says. The pilot again asks him about a boat. The old man says that Joannis Spirakis has a boat. Joannis used to live in the house nearest the water. It was destroyed by the Germans. He’s now living in the house of Antonina Angelou. The old man says that Joannis probably won’t be there right now, but his wife Anna will be. As the pilot goes to leave, the old man tells him that he should know that Joannis and Anna’s daughter Maria was in the house when the Germans bombed it.

The pilot finds Antonina’s house and is taken in to see Anna. He tells her that he’s looking for her husband because he’s heard he has a boat. “Where are the Germanoi?” the old woman asks. The pilot tells her they are near Lamia. “Soon they will be here,” she says. “Every day they come over and they bom bom bom and you shut your eyes and you open them again and you get up and you go outside and the houses are just dust – and the people.” She asks him how many he has killed. “As many as I could,” he answers. She tells him to kill them all, every man, woman, and child. She then asks him again what he wants. He tells her he is looking for Joannis. She leads him out the front door and points to the old man by the drinking trough. “There he is,” she says. “That’s him.” The pilot turns around to speak to her again, but she has already disappeared back into the house.


“The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar”

Sections: Information | Plot Description | Fun Stuff 


Information

  • Connections:
    • In 1952 Dahl wrote an article about the famous Pakistani mystic Kuda Bux, who inspired this story. He reworked a great portion of that text into Imhrat Khan’s tale. You can read about differences between the texts here.

Plot Description

This story was inspired by the real life Pakistani mystic Kuda Bux, who claimed to be able to see without his eyes.

Spoiler warning! This famous tale is actually a story-within-a-story-within-a-story-within-a-story. We start with Henry Sugar, a wealthy and idle playboy who likes to gamble and is not above cheating to win. One summer weekend, Henry is staying at a friend’s mansion and is depressed at the neverending rain outside. Bored, he wanders into the library and discovers a blue exercise book one one of the shelves. On the first page is written: “A Report on an Interview with Imhrat Khan, the Man Who Could See Without His Eyes” by Dr. John Cartwright. Henry sits down to read the whole thing.

Now we get to read Dr. Cartwright’s report. He explains that one day he was in the doctor’s lounge at his hospital in Bombay, when an Indian man entered and asked for assistance. He claimed to be able to see without his eyes. Cartwright and three other doctors agreed to help him promote his theatre show by bandaging his eyes completely. When they are finished, they are amazed to see him ride off on his bicycle through heavy traffic. That night, Cartwright goes to see Khan’s show. Afterwards, he invites Khan to dinner and asks him to tell him how he learned this amazing trick. Khan agreeds to tell him.

Now we get Khan’s story. As a young boy, he was fascinated with magic and ran off to be a magician’s assistant. He was terribly disappointed to realize it was all trickery and sleight of hand. He decides he wants to learn the strange power called yoga. It’s hard to find a teacher, because Khan wanted to learn yoga for fame and fortune, but real yogis are threatened with death if they perform in public. Eventually Khan manages to locate a yogi called Banerjee, and he watches in secret as Banerjee levitates during meditation. The yogi discovers him and becomes enraged, chasing him off. Khan comes back every day, though, and eventually the Banerjee agrees to recommend him to a yogi friend for instruction. So Khan finally begins the yoga training. He learns about concentrating the conscious mind. He describes all the exercises he does. He has a minor success when he’s able to walk across a firepit with barefeet. Eventually he succeeds in seeing without his eyes. He can even see through playing cards.

Doctor Cartwright is amazed with Imhrat Khan’s story. He decides that it must be published, that Khan’s abilities might pave the way towards helping the blind see and the deaf hear. Before he can speak to him again the next day, though, he learns that Khan has died in his sleep.

Now back to Henry Sugar. He finishes the story and decides to try the yoga training himself. He wants to be able to see through playing cards and win in casinos. He steals the book and begins to practice at home. He begins to make progress immediately, and discovers that he’s one of the one-in-a-million people that can develop yoga powers with amazing speed. Three years later, Henry can see through a playing card in less than four seconds. He goes immediately to a big London casino and proceeds to win over six thousand pounds. When he gets home, though, he realizes that he doesn’t feel as happy as he expected. The yoga training has changed his outlook on life. In the morning, he throws a twenty pound note to someone on the street and realizes that charity makes him feel good. Without a thought, he throws the entire pile out the window. A riot ensues and a policeman comes to question him. Henry is astonished when the policeman berates him for not giving the money to a worthy cause, like a hospital or orphanage. Henry decides the policeman is right and formulates a plan. For the next twenty years, Henry travels the world winning fortunes at casinos and sending it to his personal accountant in Switzerland. The accountant sets up orphanages in every country Henry visits. Henry also has a personal make-up artist who travels with him so he doesn’t get recognized. By the time he dies, he has won over one hundred and forty-four million pounds and set up over twenty orphanages.

Now we get to the last story. The author (presumably Dahl) explains that John Winston, Henry’s accountant, called him not long after Henry’s death. He wanted the world to know what Henry had done. The author is fascinated with the tale and agrees to write it up and protect Henry’s true identity. And the finished result is the story that we’ve just read.


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