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Ghost Stories
Ghost Stories
Dec 24, 2025 2:39 PM

Author:M. R. James

Ghost Stories

'Still as the night was, the mysterious population of the distant moonlit woods was not yet lulled to rest'

The aim of a good ghost story is to make the blood freeze, pleasurably, and this M. R. James achieves to perfection in these wonderful stories. His most atmospheric settings include English country houses and gardens, the north end of the churchyard, the yew-maze in 'Mr Humphreys and his Inheritance' and the unforgettable train journey in 'Casting the Runes'. To each of these stories he brings an eye for the telling detail, an imaginative twist and a narrative tone that is, at least to begin with, urbane and reassuring ...

The Penguin English Library - collectable general readers' editions of the best fiction in English, from the eighteenth century to the end of the Second World War.

Reviews

It is a masterpiece in the true sense of the word.

—— CONN IGGULDEN, author of The Falcon of Sparta

Some of us grew up with T H White’s Once and Future King as our touchstone for authenticity in the Arthurian myths; others found that Rosemary Sutcliff, Bernard Cornwell or Mary Stewart filled that role. Giles Kristian pulls together the best of the best and infuses it with his own utterly transformative understanding of myth, magic – and the many faces of love . . . There are so many modern retellings of the Arthurian myth, but this one stands head and shoulders above the rest, in the company of true greatness.

—— MANDA SCOTT, author of Boudica

Without doubt this is Giles Kristian’s finest novel to date. Glorious. Tragic. Lyrical. Totally gripping. I loved it.

—— BEN KANE, author of Clash of Empires

This most fascinating character from Arthurian legend has been plucked from the 14th-century romances and positioned firmly back in the early medieval environment he belongs in. Giles is an extraordinary writer, able to capture sounds, smells, sensations in a sentence. No other writer thinks and feels his way back to the medieval past the way he does . . . Lancelot is an exceptional book and does what only great historical fiction can do: transport you back through time to feast, fight and feel alongside fascinating characters from the past. No one does this better than Giles Kristian.

—— DR JANINA RAMIREZ

A gorgeous, rich retelling of the Arthurian tale.

—— Antonia Senior , THE TIMES

I loved the post Roman chaos of Giles’ vision, just as I imagine it would have been but with the life of that vision breathed into it to render it in stark and bloody tones. But what I enjoyed most was the sheer glorious brutality of the age, delivered by a writer with the heart of a warrior and the soul of a poet. It’s really, really good.

—— ANTHONY RICHES, author of The Centurions series

His Lancelot is no airy tale of magic and romance, but a muscular telling of warriors and survival, beautifully rendered in a prose that is both visceral and lyrical. This is historical fiction at its very best.

—— ELIZABETH FREMANTLE, author of The Girl in the Glass Tower

Intense and powerful . . . written with deep expression and enormous feeling. It is a marvellous historical adventure.

—— Sunday Express

Kristian is a writer with rare power to grab you at the opening of the story and to keep the pace going. Lancelot is a powerful reworking of the King Arthur myths. The pages turn by themselves.

—— JUSTIN HILL, author of Viking Fire

My impression as I was reading Lancelot was of a flare being held up in the gloom of this peculiarly dark passage of history. Every detail illuminated, every motive believable, every heart laid bare. A bright intensity but passing away, guttering, about to go out. And, by the time his tale comes to its conclusion, that seems to be his point. A gentle lament at the onrushing of a dark and inexorable tide which comes to extinguish a bright and golden age of Britain forever. Lancelot is a gem of a book. If there were six stars, it could have them all. Or, to use the words of Spinal Tap, “This one goes to eleven.” Loved it.

—— THEODORE BRUN, author of The Wanderer Chronicles

Truly magical . . . reads with the authority and gravitas of Manda Scott's Boudica books, such that I found it utterly believable throughout . . . it was a stroke of genius to retell this legend through Lancelot's POV, the betrayer rather than the betrayed.

—— ANNA STEPHENS, author of Godblind

Giles Kristian’s brilliant take on the Arthurian love-triangle is impressively fresh and original . . . the language is arrestingly beautiful, poetic and poignant; the fights are satisfyingly bloody; the background is a believably muddy, pagan and benighted post-Roman Britain, against which Giles unfolds a tender and tragic love story. We know it will end badly, but reading this enchanting and elegiac novel, you can’t help rooting for Lancelot and his love and hoping it will all work out somehow by the final page.

—— ANGUS DONALD, author of Outlaw

Authentic, epic, and wonderfully Arthurian.

—— CHRISTIAN CAMERON, author of The Ill-Made Knight

Kristian is one of the finest storytellers in the genre . . . this is a novel that you feel as much as you read. What we end up with is utterly staggering . . . Giles has surpassed the Cornwell trilogy in a single title.

—— ROBIN CARTER , Parmenion Books

Fiercely beautiful and gripping.

—— ANNA SMITH-SPARK, author of The Court of Broken Knives

It’s difficult to think of any author more gifted to retell Lancelot’s story than Giles Kristian . . . [he] writes so beautifully. He brings these post-Roman years so vividly to life. I love the way in which the recent Roman past haunts this landscape. There is myth here, there is the Druid Merlin, and we’re reminded of many of the famous Arthurian legends, such as Excalibur, but Giles Kristian evokes a time rooted in history and in the land around us even now . . . his writing comes closest to the feeling, mood and beauty of the Old and Middle English verse that I love so much . . . there is power here, deep expression and enormous feeling. I cried and cried as the story ended in the only way it could.

—— KATE ATHERTON , For Winter Nights

This is a story that is packed full of imagery and meaning. Kristian’s prose is unique – stunningly beautiful without ever feeling overdone . . . a wonderfully textured story from a perspective I had never encountered before. Truly masterful storytelling.

—— FANTASY HIVE

Mirza's writing is like poetry as she examines just how far the bonds of family can bend

—— Glamour (US)

The great achievement of this novel – as of Vikram Seth’s witty and bounteous classic, A Suitable Boy – is that it traces family troubles that could happen to anybody... touching and unsettling... If this is the standard of Sarah Jessica Parker's list, we can look forward to a feast from Hogarth

—— Bookoxygen

Fatima Mirza is brilliant and this novel will break your heart and make it new again

—— Garth Greenwell

Beautiful, intimate, tender. So vividly told the characters live and breathe

—— Rachel Joyce

A radiant debut novel about the cultural forces that bind and divide members of one close-knit Muslim-American family

—— People, Books of the Year

A Place for Us is a triumph and an inspiration. I wish everyone would read this novel. A chronicle of the shattered expectations and irreconcilable desires within an American-Muslim family, A Place for Us hums with a deep faith in an unknown future, reminding its readers that when we are lost, love gives us a map home

—— Karen Russell, author of Swamplandia!

‘Fatima Farheen Mirza’s A Place For Us is a work of extraordinary and enthralling beauty. It is so deeply imagined, so intimately attentive to and solicitous of the lives it follows, so artful in describing the inseparable human experiences of pride and resentment, humility and loyalty -- and, most of all, love – that it feels not as if we are reading a novel about this Indian Muslim family struggling with tradition and a new culture, but as if we become actual members of the family. It is that immersive, that brilliant, that true’

—— Paul Harding, Pulizer Prize-winning author of Tinkers

[I]t’s groundbreaking to read… That we become so invested in a testament to Mirza’s talent

—— Mail Online

Throughout the course of the novel a complex dynamic of emotion emerges, and the novel unspools with striking maturity

—— Erica Wagner , Harper's Bazaar

With unwavering compassion, this [is a] beautiful heartbreaker

—— People Magazine

Fatima Farheen Mirza’s A Place For Us is a radiant debut. It accretes its power, beauty, and insight through its tender witnessing of private and family life. With her deeply compassionate view, Mirza dignifies terrain often desecrated by contemporary culture: maternity, faith, the bonds of community, the yearning for goodness, and our duty to others. She shows us the destructiveness of our doubt in those we love, and the mercy of forgiveness. Most wondrously, with this felt and moving novel, Mirza creates a place in which rebellion and reverence seem to embrace

—— Charmaine Craig, author of Miss Burma

A Place for Us is a radiantly envisioned, beautifully achieved epic about nearly everything that matters: love, family, faith, freedom, betrayal, contrition, absolution. Fatima Farheen Mirza is a magnificent new voice

—— Anthony Marra, author of A Constellation of Vital Phenomena and The Tsar of Love and Techno

The title of the book echoes a song from West Side Story, itself a retelling of Romeo and Juliet. Here the warring forces are not two families but one, split by the tension between reverence and rebellion. The author's passion for her subject shines like the moon in the night sky, a recurrent image in this ardent and powerful novel

—— Kirkus

Extraordinary in its depth... slow-brewing, affecting

—— Booklist

Ondaatje brings to life this work…with meticulous detail

—— Hirsh Sawhney , Times Literary Supplement

Ondaatje is a skillfully deliberate writer

—— Andrew Motion , Guardian

Warlight not only shines a light into the shadowy wars…but also the uncertain age of adolescene

—— Donal O’Donoghue , RTE Guide

This seam of subterfuge and the truth being gradually released from the shadows make Warlight gripping reading… Ondaatje adorns the walls with his characters like a master gallerist

—— Irish Independent

Warlight is a layered, precisely written, erudite meditation on the damage we do when we make war. It’s eerily prescient.

—— Morag MacInnes , Tablet

Hypnotic.

—— Tatler

An exquisite, elegiac account of a life forged in the shadow of other people's secrets, told in language as feathery and delicate as a moth.

—— Anthony Cummins , Daily Mail

I look above all else in fiction for sureness of touch with sentences – and that was abundantly in evidence…in Michael Ondaatje’s Warlight… [Warlight has] the unmistakable stamp of [the author] knowing exactly what [he’s] doing.

—— Sam Leith , Spectator **Books of the Year**

Ostensibly realistic, it is phantasmagoric… Everything he says bristles with improbable life. Reading it is like watching a movie in which, however much activity there is, the atmosphere dominates the plot

—— Allan Massie , Oldie

A meditative and dreamily lyrical espionage thriller

—— Claire Allfree and Anthony Cummins , Metro

Ondaatje brings Warlight’s seemingly disparate fragments together with such skill that the ending feels not just satisfying but inevitable. The most lovely conjuring trick, it leaves you in awe of the magician. I emerged blinking into the glare of the 21st century, bereft in a way a novel hasn’t left me bereft for a longtime

—— Allison Pearson , Sunday Telegraph

Ondaatje’s onion of a novel, his first since 2011’s The Cat’s Table, combines rich intrigue with a meditation on how we rewrite our memories by examining them… a stunning return.

—— Pat Carty , Hot Press

Magnificent.

—— Jenna Rak , Glamour Magazine

Nothing in the world of this novel is ever redundant; nothing is accidental. Whenever you come across a striking detail…you can be sure it will crop up again, be charged with more significance, be joined with the rest of the story in a long chain of meaning.

—— Tessa Hadley , London Review of Books

Mesmerising.

—— Craig Brown , Mail on Sunday, **Books of the Year**

Ondaatje’s first novel in seven years is also one of his best – a quiet but profoundly powerful book… A superior, espionage novel about the unstable, shape-shifting nature of personal history.

—— Claire Allfree , Metro, **Books of the Year**

The evocation of night journeys through the fog-bound city and along mysterious canals and forgotten rivers is spellbinding.

—— Allan Massie , The Catholic Herald, **Books of the Year**

Michael Ondaatje’s Warlight is one of the best books I’ve read in years. I’d pick it up again in a heartbeat.

—— Chris Catchpole , Q

Ondaatje’s prose is beautiful, and he successfully builds suspense and tension without seeming too heavy-handed

—— Ella Walker , Herald Scotland

Michael Ondaatje is at his best when writing about awkward, quiet types

—— A. S. H. Smyth , Spectator

Brilliant dramatic tale

—— Love it!

Ondaatje’s prose is consistently illuminating. Warlight is a meditation on the purpose and possibilities of storytelling

—— Ben Masters , Literary Review

[T]his elegiac novel combines the stealth of an espionage thriller with the irresolute shift of a memory play, purposefully full of fragments, loss and unfinished stories. Wonderful

—— Claire Allfree , Daily Mail

Warlight is a subtly thrilling story… It's a masterful book

—— Rachel Fellows , Esquire UK

[C]ompulsively and grippingly readable… Ondaatje is a marvelous writer, and Warlight is a novel which will continue to play in the reader’s imagination

—— Allan Massie , The Scotsman

For the lyrical strength of the prose alone, a new Michael Ondaatje novel is always a treat

—— Irish Independent

Warlight is a layered, precisely written, erudite meditation on the damage we do when we make war

—— Morag MacInnes , Tablet

In Warlight we have a writer who knows exactly what he’s doing – and has constructed something of real emotional and psychological heft, delicate melancholy and yet, frequently, page-turning plottiness. I haven’t read a better novel this year

—— Sam Leith , Daily Telegraph

[Ondaatje’s] prose has a haunting musicality, which George Blagden brings out to the full.

—— Christina Hardyment , The Times

Kushner’s writing is the most marvellous I read this year… time and again I found myself rereading paragraphs of The Mars Room for her perfectly turned sentences, the music of her prose

—— Neil D. A. Stewart , Civilian, **Books of the Year**
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