Goldsboro Books
Hardback · Chatto & Windus · First edition · First printing
First Edition, First Printing
ISBN 9780897609517
History
Last confirmed 12 Jul 2026
View at Goldsboro Books
Written by H. G. Wells
This story is a satire in allegorical form. In its symbolism it has affinities with The Island of Doctor Moreau (1896) & Mr Blettsworthy on Rampole Island (1928). This allegorical satire about a man fleeing from his evil dreams was written under the influence of the Spanish Civil War.
The croquet player, comfortably sipping a vermouth, listens to the strange & terrible tale of the haunted countryside of Cainsmarsh--a horror which broadens & deepens until it embraces the world. Wells' modern ghost story of a remote English Village, Cainsmarsh, unfolds as dark events plague its people.
A terrified farmer murders a scarecrow. Family pets are being bludgeoned to death. Loving couples are turning on each other in vicious rage. People are becoming suspicious of every move each other makes. Children are coming to school with marks on them.
One observer thinks there's evil underground scattered all over the marsh, invading villagers' minds, & it's spreading. A well bred, affable & somewhat effeminate croquet player is told the strange story of Cainsmarsh & it's impending doom as if its plight was the beginning of the end of civilization.
Goldsboro Books
Hardback · Chatto & Windus · First edition · First printing
First Edition, First Printing
ISBN 9780897609517
Last confirmed 12 Jul 2026
View at Goldsboro Books