Descripción
Thayer, Tiffany. One-Man Show. New York: Julian Messner Inc., 1937. First edition. Octavo, pp. [1-6] [1-2] 3-314. Original crimson cloth, spine panel stamped in gold, fore-edge untrimmed, bottom edge rough trimmed. A fine copy in nearly fine pictorial dust jacket. #3333. $125. "Supernaturalism, the art life, and the rat race of the 1930s. According to Dr. Conti, a psychic researcher who acts as deus explanatorius [a role played in some such fiction by the occult detective], there are several kinds of undead: vampires, and more to the point here, astral-gypsies, or persons who die with such a strong need to fulfill something that they cannot stay dead but assume a certain amount of life until their task is finished. They do not bleed, and they usually do not appear in photographs." -- Bleiler, The Guide to Supernatural Fiction 1587. Reginald 14041. The plot here, more specifically, concerns a writer who dies in a car accident, then returns as a painter. But one of his models his also an astral gypsy. The name of the hero ("Dane Galt") bring to mind the institution of Dane-geld or Dane-gelt in medieval England, a tax levied to provide reimbursements for English citizens pillaged by raiding Danish Vikings. Thayer also wrote the morbid science-fictional fantasy, Doctor Arnoldi (1934), about a sudden universal failure of people to die at all, resulting in massive pile-ups of the undead but not-really-alive. N° de ref. del artículo 3333
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