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Charles Lewis Grant (September 12, 1942 – September 15, 2006) was an American novelist and short story writer specializing in what he called "dark fantasy" and "quiet horror". He also wrote under the pseudonyms of Geoffrey Marsh, Lionel Fenn, Simon Lake, Felicia Andrews, Deborah Lewis, Timothy Boggs, Mark Rivers, and Steven Charles.
From 1973 to 1977, Grant was Secretary of Science Fiction Writers of America.[2] In 1987-1988, he served as President of the Horror Writers Association.[3]
Grant won a World Fantasy Award for his novella collection Nightmare Seasons, a Nebula Award in 1976 for his short story "A Crowd of Shadows", and another Nebula Award in 1978 for his novella A Glow of Candles, a Unicorn's Eye, the latter telling of an actor's dilemma in a post-literate future. Grant also edited the award-winning Shadowsanthology se, running eleven volumes from 1978 to 1991. Contributors include Stephen King, Ramsey Campbell, Al Sarrantonio, R. A. Lafferty, Avram Davidson, and Steve Rasnic Tem and Melanie Tem. Grant was a former Executive Secretary and Eastern Regional Director of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America and president of the Horror Writers Association. His story "Temperature Days on Hawthorne Street" was adapted into an episode of Tales from the Darkside titled "The Milkman Cometh" in 1987, the same year he wrote the Introduction and Afterward to Tor Books' publication of Washington Irving's The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, Grant's favorite Irving story.[4]
Grant wrote twelve books (eight novels and four collections of four related novellas each, with interstitial material) set in the fictional Connecticut town of Oxrun Station. Three of these were intentionally pastiches of classic Universal and Hammer horror films, and feature a vampire, a werewolf, and an animated mummy.[5]
Personal life
Grant's first wife is Debbie Voss, with whom he had two children. Ian Matthew and Emily Kathryn. Ian has two sons Payton and Logan; Emily has three children, sons Aaron and William, and daughter, Ella In February, 1982, Grant married writer and editor Kathryn Ptacek.[6]
Death
Suffering ill health in his later years, Grant died on September 15, 2006, from a heart attack.[7]
Critical reception
Stephen King expressed admiration for Grant's work, stating that Grant was "One of the premier horror writers of his or any generation". This quote was usually placed on the front of Grant's books.[8] Discussing Grant's fiction, Jess Nevins said that "Grant excelled at building foreboding atmosphere and mounting dramatic tension, at characterization and pacing."[9]
"Make a Wish Upon the Moon" (1991) Dead End: City Limits, ed. Paul F. Olson & David B. Silva
"One Life, in an Hourglass" (1991) The Bradbury Chronicles, ed. William F. Nolan & Martin H. Greenberg
"The Awful Truth in Arthur's Barrow" (1992) Grails: Quests, Visitations and Other Occurrences, ed. Richard Gilliam, Martin H. Greenberg & Edward E. Kramer
"The Alien Visitor, Probably from Someplace Else" (1993) Tomorrow Speculative Fiction, Jan
"Sons" (1993) Confederacy of the Dead, ed. Richard Gilliam, Martin H. Greenberg & Edward E. Kramer
"In the Still, Small Hours" (1993) Deathport, ed. Ramsey Campbell
"Josie, In the Fog" (1993) In the Fog, ed. Charles L. Grant
"The Dead Speaketh Not, They Just Grunt Now and Then" (1993) The Ultimate Zombie ed. John Betancourt & Byron Preiss
"Name That Tune" (1993) Monsters in Our Midst, ed. Robert Bloch
"Holding Hands" (1993) Touch Wood, ed. Peter Crowther
"The Mask of Truth Has Many Holes" (1993) Cemetery Dance #15, Winter
"After You’ve Gone" (1994) Phobias, ed. Wendy Webb, Richard Gilliam, Edward E. Kramer & Martin H. Greenberg
"Sometimes, in the Rain" (1994) Northern Frights 2, ed. Don Hutchison
"Always, in the Dark" (1994) Return to the Twilight Zone, ed. Carol Serling & Martin H. Greenberg
"Prologue" (1995) The Black Carousel, by Charles L. Grant
"Penny Tunes for a Gold Lion" (1995) The Black Carousel, by Charles L. Grant
"Will You Be Mine?" (1995) The Black Carousel, by Charles L. Grant
"Lost in Amber Light" (1995) The Black Carousel, by Charles L. Grant
"The Rain is Filled with Ghosts Tonight" (1995) The Black Carousel, by Charles L. Grant
"Epilogue" (1995) The Black Carousel, by Charles L. Grant
"Gray" (1995) Dark Destiny: Proprietors of Fate, ed. Edward E. Kramer
"Riding the Black" (1997) Revelations, ed. Douglas E. Winter
"Haunted" (1997) Psychos, ed. Robert Bloch
"The Soft Sound of Wings" (1998) In the Shadow of the Gargoyle, ed. Nancy Kilpatrick & Thomas S. Roche
"Cody" (1999) Horror at Halloween, ed. Stephen Jones & Jo Fletcher
"Whose Ghosts These Are" (2001) The Museum of Horror, ed. Dennis Etchison
"For My Birthday, Another Candle" (2003) 13 Horrors, ed. Brian A. Hopkins
"Brownie and Me" (2003) The Dark: New Ghost Stories, ed. Ellen Datlow
"Friday Night at the Wicked Swan" (2005) Taverns of the Dead, ed. Kealan Patrick Burke
^Nevins, Jeff, Horror Fiction in the Twentieth Century : Exploring Literature's Most Chilling Genre. Santa Barbara, CA: Prager Publishers, 2020. ISBN9781440862052 (p.154).