Wednesday, April 02, 2025

Short Story Wednesday, THE WIND IN THE ROSEBUSH, Mary E. Wilkins Freeman

 Jerry House used to live in Southern Maryland. Now he lives in Florida.

This is from 2008.

The Wind in the Rose-bush and Other Stories of the Supernatural
by Mary E. Wilkins Fr
eeman

Mary E. Wilkins Freeman (whose married name was sometimes preceded by a dash) was a popular 19th and early 20th century author. She has been credited with an astonishing 238 novels as well as several short story collections. Her duties as secretary to Oliver Wendall Holmes, Sr., brought her into contact with many of the literary lights of the day. Amazingly versatile, she produced a number of works of very high standard. In 1902 she began a series of supernatural stories which were published in Everybody's Magazine. One of her publishers, Doubleday Page, had an editorial relationship with Everybody's and brought out The Wind in the Rose-bush the following year. About the same time, however, Everybody's was sold to another company which had no use for "outlandish" or "morbid" stories.

With Everbody's market closed to her, Freeman went on to different kinds of fiction. Our loss. While her other work (both deservedly and otherwise) has faded into obscurity, the six stories in The Wind in the Rose-bush remain among the best of its kind. It was the fashion in turn-of-the-century popular fiction to portray family life in a mawkishly sentimental manner, but in Freeman's stories, the domestic trumped the sentimental. Her characters are real people with real flaws, while the supernatural hides quietly in everyday events, slowly coming into light. Several of these stories are standard fare in anthologies collecting "great" supernatural stories.

Here are the contents:

The Wind in the Rose-bush
The Shadows on the Wall
Luella Miller
The Southwest Chamber
The Vacant Lot
The Lost Ghost

Notice that I keep using the word "supernatural" rather than "ghost". Some of the six are true ghost stories; others are ghost stories only by courtesy. Mrs. Freeman does not bother to explain the supernatural in these stories: she allows the reader and the characters to experience it -- which is more than enough. The most accomplished of the stories may be "Luella Miller", who is a woman who may or may not be a psychic vampire and whose influence may or may not have been transferred to her home. In "The Lost Ghost", two gossiping ladies are diverged from telling the expected ghost story by an altogether different ghost story. "The Southwest Corner" gives us a haunted room that grows more menacing as the story progresses. The first of "The Shadows on the Wall" is that of a murdered brother; the next...?

These six stories were later combined with five lesser stories to form the Arkham House publication of The Collected Ghost Stories of Mary Wilkins-Freeman (1974). Despite that title, there evidently several of her supernatual stories that remain uncollected.

George Kelley 

Kevin Tipple 

TracyK 

Jerry House

Todd Mason 

6 comments:

Jeff Meyerson said...

I'm currently reading Charles Dickinson's With Or Without, a book you reviewed a couple of weeks ago. I'd never heard of him before, let alone read him, but it sounded interesting, and the Cloud Library had a copy available, so I downloaded it. I haven't had a lot of reading time this week, but it's interesting. When I was a teenager, Risk was a favorite board game, though I haven't thought about it in years. "Risk" is one of the more interesting stories here, an all-night weekly game.

Diane Kelley said...

Patti, every week I enjoy Short Story Wednesday! Your great idea for posts has led to plenty of wonderful reading pleasure!

TracyK said...

I found a free ebook with these stories, so I got it. Glen might be interested too. I want to try some other type of stories by this author but did not find anything I was interested in immediately.

Todd Mason said...

Mine's up, on a busy short day after a busy long one, but it's still almost 7p... https://socialistjazz.blogspot.com/2025/04/wednesdays-short-stories-fantasy.html

Todd Mason said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Todd Mason said...

Thanks for the link!
One that might interest some who visit here: https://classicsofsciencefiction.com/2025/04/01/the-rocket-man-by-ray-bradbury/