Usually when I, as a lover of short stories, buy a new book (mind it, not borrow it), I follow certain principles, which are: -
1. The author should be known to me, either through his works that I have read, or whose works have been reviewed at prominent places by persons who are qualified to do so.
2. The stories should have some redeeming component that would compel me to go back to them again & again.
Unfortunately, similar to many other decisions that I make in my life, decisions regarding purchase of books often go astray as well, and I end up spending hard-earned money on stuff that I would either not be able to read even once from cover-to-cover, or (which is more often the case) which, once read, cannot be enjoyed again at well, now that the box of tricks has got opened and the author had not put anything in the stories that might compel me to go back to them. However, on some rarest-of-rare occasions, I get to read some stories written by authors whose works I have never encountered anywhere, and yet I instantly fall in love with them. Love, unlike fascination or thrill, is a much more precious commodity, which we encounter in our lives very-very rarely. And loving some short stories mean that they have certain qualities that make them worthy of love: a gentle homely tone, unpretentious way of telling whatever they have to tell, and yet be extremely effective in conveying their thoughts, gentle touch of humour, a tragic sense of loss & poignancy when needed, and a beauty that has to be felt, rather than be seen. When this love occurs while reading ghost stories written by an amateur who has died long ago and who has not produced any other stories apart from those included in this slim volume, my heart gets broken. It is this heartbreak that I encountered while reading Amyas Northcote's "In Ghostly Company". The stories in this slim volume are: -
1. `Brickett Bottom';
2. `Mr. Kershaw and Mr. Wilcox';
3. `In the Woods';
4. `The Late Earl of D.';
5. `Mr. Mortimer's Diary';
6. `The House in the Wood';
7. `The Young Lady in Black';
8. `The Downs';
9. `The Late Mrs Fowke';
10. `The Picture';
11. `The Governess's Story';
12. `Mr Oliver Carmichael'
Apart from the 1st story, ther is every possibility that you have never read anything written by this author, ever. It is also quite true that these gentle ghost stories, evocative of the styles of Le Fanu, M.R. James, Henry James, and at times, the Benson brothers, would not be hailed as the "greatest" and the most "heart-stopping/pounding" (depending upon your take) works of the genre. But I would love going back to them, trying to find out the traces of numerous other stories heard or read since my childhood, whose threads can be found as tantalizing glimpses in these stories, and who can be revived putting my imagination into the `active' mode, as these stories are wonderful matrix of ghost stories in general, dealing with hauntings of all types, and yet imbuing all of them with a gentle hue that seems light-years away from the blood & gore of the present.
This volume had once been published by the venerable Ash Tree Press, but now that it has gone out-of-print for a long time, I would whole-heartedly recommend lovers of ghost stories to lap up the Wordsworth edition which is very-very reasonably priced, and (surprise?!) comes with a biographical sketch from the Editor-in-Chief that is informative and effective. Highly recommended!