![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() His most acclaimed novels include The Doll Who Ate His Mother, The Nameless, Incarnate, Midnight Sun, The Overnight, The Grin of the Dark, Thirteen Days by Sunset Beach, and The Bricester Mythos Trilogy (consisting of The Searching Dead, Born to the Dark, and The Way of the Worm). He’s edited numerous collections of short fiction and is himself the subject of more than one nonfiction book on the craft of horror writing and his impact on the field. Since breaking in with the short story “The Church in High Street” in 1962 for Arkham House Publishing, Ramsey Campbell has gone on to write over thirty novels and hundreds of short stories. Praise like that doesn’t come lightly, but Ramsey Campbell has more than earned every word of it. Joshi said that, “…future generations will regard him as the leading horror writer of our generation, every bit the equal of Lovecraft or Blackwood.” Dubbed "Britain's most respected living horror writer" by the Oxford Companion to English Literature, no less than S.T. Chances are pretty good that if you have read horror fiction at all in the twentieth or twenty-first century, you are familiar with Ramsey Campbell. ![]()
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