Folk horror, a history: from The Wicker Man to The League of Gentlemen
Author Adam Scovell’s tone is perfectly pitched between articulate academic and box-set binger.
By![Folk horror, a history: from The Wicker Man to The League of Gentlemen Folk horror, a history: from The Wicker Man to The League of Gentlemen](https://dl6pgk4f88hky.cloudfront.net/2021/06/2017_28_ben_myers.jpg)
New Times,
New Thinking.
Author Adam Scovell’s tone is perfectly pitched between articulate academic and box-set binger.
ByThe Mountain Goats musician's novel has some structural problems, but is not without interest and insight.
ByStuart Maconie tells the story of the men who marched from Tyneside to London.
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ByA newly unearthed photograph identifies the African-American Trafalgar survivor who appears in Melville’s final novel. Could the book’s hero have…
ByBrian Dillon’s study of the essay is a beautiful and elegiac volume – having read it, I re-read it.
ByThai author Prabda Yoon descends into the voices and minds of a small cast of characters.
ByThe displacements in Madame Zero are literal, figurative and occasionally fantastical.
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