T.E.D. Klein (1947–)
Teoksen The Ceremonies tekijä
T.E.D. Klein on T. E. D. Klein (1). Katso täsmennyssivulta muut tekijät, joiden nimi on T. E. D. Klein.
Sarjat
Tekijän teokset
Raising Goosebumps For Fun And Profit: A Brief Guide, for Beginners, to the How's and the Why's of Horror (1988) 6 kappaletta
Collected Stories 3 kappaletta
One Size Eats All [short fiction] 3 kappaletta
TZ Special #1 Night Cry 1 kappale
Well Connected 1 kappale
Renaissance Man 1 kappale
Ladder 1 kappale
S.f. 1 kappale
Growing Things 1 kappale
Associated Works
American Fantastic Tales: Terror and the Uncanny from the 1940s to Now (2009) — Avustaja — 266 kappaletta
The Collected Jorkens, Vol. 2: Jorkens Has a Large Whiskey and The Fourth Book of Jorkens (2004) — Johdanto — 66 kappaletta
Dagon and other macabre tales: selected by August Derleth with texts edited by S.T. Joshi & an introduction by T.E.D.… (1986) — Esipuhe — 2 kappaletta
Merkitty avainsanalla
Yleistieto
- Virallinen nimi
- Klein, Theodore Donald
- Muut nimet
- Klein, Theodore Eibon Donald
- Syntymäaika
- 1947-07-15
- Sukupuoli
- male
- Kansalaisuus
- USA
- Syntymäpaikka
- New York City, New York, USA
- Koulutus
- Brown University
Columbia University - Ammatit
- editor (Twilight Zone Magazine)
editor (CrimeBeat)
screenwriter - Palkinnot ja kunnianosoitukset
- World Horror Convention Grand Master Award (2012)
Jäseniä
Keskustelut
THE DEEP ONES: "Children of the Kingdom" by T. E. D. Klein, The Weird Tradition (elokuu 2021)
THE DEEP ONES: "The Events at Poroth Farm" by T.E.D. Klein, The Weird Tradition (elokuu 2021)
T.E.D. Klein, The Weird Tradition (elokuu 2011)
Kirja-arvosteluja
Listat
Palkinnot
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Associated Authors
Tilastot
- Teokset
- 62
- Also by
- 30
- Jäseniä
- 1,093
- Suosituimmuussija
- #23,509
- Arvio (tähdet)
- 3.9
- Kirja-arvosteluja
- 23
- ISBN:t
- 41
- Kielet
- 4
- Kuinka monen suosikki
- 15
The second story is both much more effectively creepy but also unfortunately very very explicitly racist! I kept reading in the hope it was just a character thing but nope! It's set in 70s NYC, with the constant background of the "crime wave". And it's presented in an incredibly racist way. And without spoiling the horror part of the end, there's a "horde" of Black people and other minority groups at the end and they're not only bad and dangerous criminals, looting etc, but written to directly parallel dangerous and bad inhuman creatures. It's racist as hell. Lovecraft would be proud.
Then the next story is called "black man with a horn". And it opens with a Lovecraft quote. Do I trust a story in this context to not just be incredibly racist again? Probably not. Maybe I'll call it there… (lisätietoja)