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Occult Detective Magazine #9

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Once again we explore the concept of the ‘occult detective’ in its widest sense, with tales across many periods and settings. So within this issue we have an M.R. James-adjacent period tale of a school curse by SIMON BUCHER-JONES, and CORDELIA HARRISON’s historical and haunting tragedy (with a rather singular investigator) set in Eastern Europe, balanced by two bleak contemporary stories from ADAM GALLARDO and SARAH LAMPARELLI. Then we offer an unusual piece of Lovecraftian weird fiction by EMMA CULLA, whilst MIKE CHINN provides an episode in the career of the mysterious Black Tarot, who engineers arcane justice in the 1930s (set in the same world as his Damian Paladin adventures). Valerie Trelawney looks into a psychic affliction in DAVIDE MANA’s ‘The Case of the Inkmaker’s Daughter’, and DAVE RING takes us elsewhere entirely with an original urban fantasy of wards, psychic webs and betrayals.

As with weird fiction magazines of old, we also like to welcome returning characters. This time we have a delightfully varied clutch on offer – a case for the genteel but sharp Irene Rogers, by MARION PITMAN (last seen in ODM #5) and a return to S.L. EDWARDS’ world of the dogged Bartred family (ODM #6 and our promotional issue ODM #0). LOREN RHOADS brings us another story of witch Alondra DeCourval (ODM #5); ED ERDELAC is back with another tale of his 1970s Black conjure-detective, John Conquer (ODM #3) and JOSHUA M. REYNOLDS offers a new tale of the suave Royal Occultist from his own long-running series (last with us in ODM #0).

Finally we have a tale from the late MICHAEL KELLAR, who previously contributed a non-fiction piece in ODM #6. ‘The Big Sleep, Disrupted’ would have been his first, but I’m sure not his last, piece of fiction for ODM, had he not tragically passed away last year.

325 pages, Kindle Edition

Published March 25, 2023

About the author

John Linwood Grant

93 books38 followers
John Linwood Grant lives in Yorkshire with a pack of lurchers and a beard. He may also have a family.

When he's not chronicling the adventures of Mr Bubbles, the slightly psychotic pony, he writes a range of supernatural, horror and speculative tales, some of which are actually published.

You can find him every week on his website which celebrates weird fiction and weird art, greydogtales.com, often with his dogs.

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Eamonn Murphy.
Author 32 books9 followers
July 13, 2023
‘Occult Detective Magazine’ is a quarterly periodical featuring short stories and articles in the genre specified in the title. All fourteen tales herein were enjoyable in different ways but these were my favourites.

‘The Case Of The Shattered Decanter’ by Marion Pitman is a good opener featuring psychic investigator Irene Rogers down among the Luvvies. Top actor Sir Norman Brangwyn, a decent chap, is subject to strange incidents since the death of his beloved wife. Jealous rival Willy Merton, a loud man who tells rude stories, may be involved. This had the feel of an old Poirot story with magic thrown in and I thoroughly enjoyed it.

‘In The Ruined Places’ by Sarah Lamparelli has Buffalo police detective Susie Bronson entering an old Victorian house with mouldy wallpaper, dusty lamps, blacked out windows, decomposing dead bodies, rats, stolen credit cards and a man who chants ‘There is a place for you in Dun Dreach- Fhola’. This will scare the pants off you. A strange ending but you can get away with that if you’re Thomas Ligotti or Caitlin R. Kiernan. Sarah Lamparelli can now be added to that list. Brrrrr.

‘Lost In The Shuffle’ by Mike Chinn is an adventure of the Black Tarot who uses cards to perform various magics and is secretly Lane DiRoca, a Great War aviator terribly maimed in a burning plane crash but fixed up with ancient Chinese magic. Terrific fun in the style of Doc Savage, the Shadow and other pre-Superman super-heroes.

‘A Hank Of Hair’ by Simon Bucher-Jones is another in the old-fashioned Edwardian manner. Two bachelor schoolmasters stay over the Christmas holidays to look after the few boarders who can’t go home for various reasons. Henry Myers is cursed by a hair spell, choking on it, feeling it in his mattress and all over his body even though no physical hair can be seen. ‘A torment of ticklesome hair.’ Occult detective Alexander Nye turns up because he dreamt that they needed him. A good strong story with a literary, spiritual bent for, if you admit the existence of devils and demons, then God fits in your worldview, too. When I grew up, many English people believed in God. It was nice.

‘An Incident In A Haunted House’ by S.L. Edwards is unusual in this genre because it takes place in a hippie commune. Artist Willard Michaels walked into a wall painted with rolling hills and windswept grass under a blue sky and vanished. A dark tale of grief with some scares.

‘The Case Of The Ink-Maker’s Daughter’ by Davide Mana has Occult Consultant Valerie Trelawney investigating Olivia, an ink-maker’s daughter who mixed a special recipe for a grand lady customer who supplied certain ingredients and specified that it only be mixed at night. Since then, Olivia has nightmares and wakes up with scratches on the walls of her bedroom. This involves Egyptian magic. Since gods, magic and superstitions abound in every tribe and have done for the past 5,000 years or more, there is plenty of ancient lore to draw on for stories and you can even make stuff up! I enjoyed the polite, formal Victorian atmosphere of this one and others of its ilk.

Stage magician Christopher Dark is also a real magician and living a quiet life when the ghost of his old girlfriend turns up ‘Inviting A World Of Trouble’ by Adam Gallardo. Allison got hooked on crystal meth by drug dealer/pimp Joe before he killed her so brutally that she cannot rest in peace. Chris is reluctant to mess with anyone as dangerous as Joe but feels obliged. Grimly gripping gangster games with black magic.

Two years after Nixon quit, there’s a Tutankhamun exhibition at the New York Metropolitan Museum. Private investigator/magician John Conquer has nothing better to do on Christmas Eve, so he pays it a visit and is picked up by a beautiful girl in the queue, for he has two tickets. There’s more to her than meets the eye, though what meets the eye is lovely. ‘Conquer’s Golden Case’ by Edward M. Erdelac has the feel of an old Hammer Horror or a Roger Corman film, and that’s no bad thing.

‘The Tallboy’ by Josh Reynolds is another case for Royal Occultist Charles St. Cyprian and his feisty assistant, Miss Ebe Gallowglass. A tallboy is a giant wardrobe but the one owned by Lord Littlecross, shipped to his mansion from Ladysmith, Natal, where it was involved in a siege during the Second Boer War, is downright nasty. ‘Most of the better houses in England are haunted, you know’, Charles tells his Lordship. Another fun romp.

As usual, ‘Occult Detective Magazine’ features stories as varied as the straight detective genre and a bit more besides, Lovecraftian mystery for example. I particularly enjoy the Victorian and Edwardian tales but appreciate modern hard-boiled, too, and don’t mind a bit of grimdark for added seasoning, but not too much. Illustrations and non-fiction articles are a bonus. There’s tons of content and it’s great value for money. I read it as a pdf review file but rather think it will work better as a paper magazine for that old-fashioned feel. Recommended in any form.

Profile Image for Loren.
Author 51 books329 followers
August 19, 2024
The thing I love best about Occult Detective magazine is the variety of "detectives" involved. In this issue, they range from cops to school masters, witches to a half-demon Russian count (which was actually one of my favorite stories in the issue).

I really liked "The Case of the Ink-Maker's Daughter" by Davide Mana. The Egyptiana in Victorian London was a lot of fun. I liked "An Incident in a Haunted House" by S. L. Edwards, in which a psychic couple fights an old god in a commune in the 1960s. The story with John Conquer wasn't one of my favorites, although I love the smooth-talking Harlem private eye. In this case, he isn't thinking with his head and I was disappointed in him for being taken in so easily.

Disclosure: I have an Alondra story in this issue, but I've been a fan of Occult Detective since the very first issue.
246 reviews2 followers
March 17, 2023
Quite a range of stories in another good issue. My favorites stories were those by Edward M. Erdelac and Josh Reynolds. I rate eight more stories good, and four stories OK, so all of them worth reading.
2 reviews
March 21, 2023
Another excellent collection of stories, all very different, about investigation of the occult
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