· Classics From The Master Of Horror / A. M. Burrage Classic Collection. 1 The Waxwork Other Stories () [C] 2 Warning Whispers Other Stories () [C] 3 The Hawthorn Tree Other Stories () [C] 4 The Box In The Attic Other Stories () [C] 5 The Acquittal Other Stories () [C] 6 The Occult Files Of Francis Chard () [C]. There are many things people are ready to do when they need money. A modest journalist is forced to apply to the head of Marriner's Waxworks and ask to let him spend a night in this museum. There is a Murderers' Room. Many waxworks of the most terrific maniacs in the world are gathered there. It is terrifying to spend some time along in this room. · The Waxwork Other Stories (A.M. Burrage Classic Collection, Volume 1) by. Alfred McClelland Burrage. · Rating details · 14 ratings · 2 reviews. Alfred McLelland Burrage was born in His father and uncle were both writers, primarily of boy’s fiction, and by age 16 AM Burrage had joined them and quickly became a master of the market publishing his stories regularly across a /5(2).
The new collections likely do not present Burrage's work in any chronological order, but the first volume includes his masterful story "The Waxwork." This was the story that first introduced me to his writing, as it was included in the compilation Alfred Hitchcock's Ghostly Gallery that I read as a child! As a prelude to The New Exhibit, Tom Elliot reads a classic tale in a similar vein. The Waxwork by Alfred McClelland Burrage. The post Special: Tom Elliot Reads, The Waxwork appeared first on The Twilight Zone Podcast. Burrage was a prolific writer of the early twentieth century. Most of his fictions have been deservedly forgotten, but his ghost stories were a cut above most of his output. The stories here are no exception; some of them, such as 'The Sweeper' and "The Waxwork' have been anthologised many times.
The Waxwork It was closing time at Marriner's Waxworks. The last few visitors came out in twos and threes through the big glass doors. But Mr Marriner, the boss, sat in his office, talking to a caller, Raymond Hewson. Hewson was a thin man, carefully but poorly dressed. He spoke well but seemed to be losing his fight to do well in the world. A M Burrage. (Alfred McClelland Burrage) ( - ) aka Frank Lelland, Ex-Private X. Alfred McLelland Burrage was a British writer. He was noted in his time as an author of fiction for boys which he published under the pseudonym Frank Lelland, including a popular series called "Tufty". He served in the First World War and published a memoir. As a prelude to The New Exhibit, Tom Elliot reads a classic tale in a similar vein. The Waxwork by Alfred McClelland Burrage. The post Special: Tom Elliot Reads, The Waxwork appeared first on The Twil – Lyssna på Special: Tom Elliot Reads, The Waxwork av The Twilight Zone Podcast direkt i din mobil, surfplatta eller webbläsare - utan app.
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