This collection of 37 stories by a master of the form features tales that are sometimes funny, sometimes violent, and sometimes weird and nightmarish: in short, it is quintessential Gerald Kersh. Kersh (1911-1968) published more than thirty books, including the noir classic
Night and the City (1938) and
Fowlers End (1957), which Anthony Burgess called "one of the great comic novels of the century," as well as hundreds of short stories which were once ubiquitous in British and American magazines. But though he has been championed by Angela Carter, Harlan Ellison, Ian Fleming, Michael Moorcock and others, Kersh has undeservedly fallen into neglect since his death. This is the first-ever reprint of
Neither Man Nor Dog (1946), one of the author's scarcest volumes.
Kersh's novels
Fowlers End and
The Great Wash and the short story collections
Nightshade and Damnations,
On an Odd Note, and
Clock Without Hands are also available from Valancourt.
"[B]rutal but highly talented ... at least one [story] is ... a little masterpiece, and all of them possess the virtue of being highly readable." - J.D. Beresford,
The Guardian "[E]xplosive with violence . . . The best of them are very good. The unfailing fertility of his imagination is indeed to be wondered at . . . For entertainment of a strong kind, Mr. Kersh would be hard to beat." -
Times Literary Supplement "Kersh tells a story, as such, rather better than anybody else." - Pamela Hansford Johnson,
Daily Telegraph