Gregory Frost - Articles

Articles

  • Beginning in 1985, numerous book reviews, appearing in Fantasy Review, The Philadelphia Inquirer, and The Washington Post.
  • "Amongst the Laughing Dead" (Fear, No. 8, August 1989 (Great Britain)
    (an article about the making of, and participation in, S. P. Somtow's horror film The Laughing Dead)
  • "Twice Encountered" in Dancing With the Dark, edited by Stephen Jones (Vista Books (U.K.) June 1997)
    (a collection of true ghost stories related by horror and fantasy writers)
  • "Celtic Influence on Contemporary Fantasy Fiction," (Brigit’s Feast, Spring 1999).
  • "The Tale of the Puzzle of the Tales," (Realms of Fantasy, August, 2001; reprinted on the Endicott Studio of Mythic Arts site)
    (a history of The Arabian Nights)
  • "The Fantasy Life of Salons," (Realms of Fantasy, Nov/December 2001; reprinted on the Endicott Studio of Mythic Arts site)
    (an article on Mesmerism in the French salons of the 18th century)
  • "Reading the Slipstream," The Cambridge Companion to Fantasy Literature, edited by Edward James & Farah Mendlesohn, Cambridge University Press, 2012.

Read more about this topic:  Gregory Frost

Famous quotes containing the word articles:

    It was not sufficient for the disquiet of our minds that we disputed at the end of seventeen hundred years upon the articles of our own religion, but we must likewise introduce into our quarrels those of the Chinese. This dispute, however, was not productive of any great disturbances, but it served more than any other to characterize that busy, contentious, and jarring spirit which prevails in our climates.
    Voltaire [François Marie Arouet] (1694–1778)

    How many things served us but yesterday as articles of faith, which today we deem but fables?
    Michel de Montaigne (1533–1592)

    There are several natural phenomena which I shall have to have explained to me before I can keep on going as a resident member of the human race. One is the metamorphosis which hats and suits undergo exactly one week after their purchase, whereby they are changed from smart, intensely becoming articles of apparel into something children use when they want to “dress up like daddy.”
    Robert Benchley (1889–1945)