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{{Wikicopy}}
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{{Infobox writer
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{{Infobox writer <!-- for more information see [[:Template:Infobox writer/doc]] -->
 
βˆ’
| name = Henry S. Whitehead
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|image = Henry_S_Whitehead.jpg
 
|birth_date = March 5, 1882
βˆ’
| image = [[File:Henry_S_Whitehead.jpg|thumb]]
 
 
|birth_place = Elizabeth, New Jersey, United States
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| imagesize =
 
  +
|death_date = November 23, 1932
βˆ’
| caption =
 
 
|death_place = Dunedin, Florida, United States
βˆ’
| pseudonym =
 
 
|occupation = short story writer, rector
| birth_date = March 5, 1882
 
 
|nationality = American
| birth_place = Elizabeth, New Jersey, United States
 
βˆ’
| death_date = November 23, 1932
+
|period = 1905 to 1932
 
|genre = Horror, Fantasy
| death_place = Dunedin, Florida, United States
 
| occupation = short story writer, rector
 
| nationality = American
 
βˆ’
| period = 1905 to 1932
 
| genre = Horror, Fantasy
 
 
}}
 
}}
  +
{{Realworld}}
   
βˆ’
'''Henry St. Clair Whitehead''' (March 5, 1882 – November 23, 1932) was an American writer of horror fiction and fantasy<ref name="rw">"In Memoriam: Henry St. Clair Whitehead". H.P. Lovecraft. Reprinted in [[Robert Weinberg (author)|Robert Weinberg]], ''The Weird Tales Story''. FAX Collector’s Editions. ISBN 0913960160 (p. 127).</ref>
+
'''Henry St. Clair Whitehead''' (March 5, 1882 – November 23, 1932) was an American writer of horror fiction and fantasy<ref name="rw">"In Memoriam: Henry St. Clair Whitehead". H.P. Lovecraft. Reprinted in [[Robert Weinberg]], ''The Weird Tales Story''. FAX Collector’s Editions. ISBN 0913960160 (p. 127).</ref>
   
βˆ’
== Biography ==
+
==Biography==
βˆ’
Henry S. Whitehead was born in [[Elizabeth, New Jersey]], on March 5, 1882, and graduated from [[Harvard University]] in 1904 (in the same class as [[Franklin D. Roosevelt]]).<ref name="sd">[[Stefan R. Dziemianowicz]], "Whitehead, Henry S(t. Clair)", in [[David Pringle]], ed., ''St. James Guide to Horror, Ghost & Gothic Writers''. London: St. James Press, 1998. (pp. 639-640) ISBN 1558622063</ref> He led an active and worldly life in the first decade of the 20th century, playing football at Harvard, editing a Reform democratic newspaper in [[Port Chester, New York]], and serving as commissioner of athletics for the [[Amateur Athletic Union|AAU]].
+
Henry S. Whitehead was born in Elizabeth, New Jersey, on March 5, 1882, and graduated from Harvard University in 1904 (in the same class as Franklin D. Roosevelt).<ref name="sd">[[Stefan Dziemianowicz|Stefan R. Dziemianowicz]], "Whitehead, Henry S(t. Clair)", in [[David Pringle]], ed., ''St. James Guide to Horror, Ghost & Gothic Writers''. London: St. James Press, 1998. (pp. 639-640) ISBN 1558622063</ref> He led an active and worldly life in the first decade of the 20th century, playing football at Harvard, editing a Reform democratic newspaper in Port Chester, New York, and serving as commissioner of athletics for the AAU.
   
βˆ’
He later attended [[Berkeley Divinity School]] in [[Middletown, Connecticut|Middletown]], [[Connecticut]], and was ordained a deacon in the [[Episcopal Church in the United States of America|Episcopal Church]] in 1912. From 1918 to 1919 he was Pastor of the Children, Church of St. Mary the Virgin, New York City. He served as acting archdeacon of the [[Virgin Islands]] from 1921 to 1929.<ref name="rw" /> While there, living on the island of [[Saint Croix, U.S. Virgin Islands|St. Croix]], Whitehead gathered the material he was to use in his tales of the supernatural. A correspondent of [[H. P. Lovecraft]], Whitehead published stories from 1924 onward in ''[[Adventure (magazine)|Adventure]]'', ''[[Black Mask (magazine)|Black Mask]]'', ''[[Strange Tales]]'',<ref name="sd" /> and especially ''[[Weird Tales]]''; in his introduction to ''Jumbee'', [[R. H. Barlow]] would later describe Whitehead as a member of "the serious ''Weird Tales'' school".<ref name="sd" /> Whitehead's supernatural fiction was partially modelled on the work of [[Edward Lucas White]] and [[William Hope Hodgson]].<ref name="sd" /> Whitehead's "The Great Circle" (1932) is a lost-race tale with [[sword and sorcery]] elements.<ref name="sd" />
+
He later attended Berkeley Divinity School in Middletown, Connecticut, and was ordained a deacon in the Episcopal Church in 1912. From 1918 to 1919 he was Pastor of the Children, Church of St. Mary the Virgin, New York City. He served as acting archdeacon of the Virgin Islands from 1921 to 1929.<ref name="rw" /> While there, living on the island of St. Croix, Whitehead gathered the material he was to use in his tales of the supernatural. A correspondent of [[H. P. Lovecraft]], Whitehead published stories from 1924 onward in ''[[Adventure (magazine)|Adventure]]'', ''[[Black Mask (magazine)|Black Mask]]'', ''[[Strange Tales]]'',<ref name="sd" /> and especially ''[[Weird Tales]]''; in his introduction to ''Jumbee'', [[R. H. Barlow]] would later describe Whitehead as a member of "the serious ''Weird Tales'' school".<ref name="sd" /> Whitehead's supernatural fiction was partially modelled on the work of [[Edward Lucas White]] and [[William Hope Hodgson]].<ref name="sd" /> Whitehead's "The Great Circle" (1932) is a lost-race tale with sword and sorcery elements.<ref name="sd" />
   
 
In later life, Whitehead lived in Dunedin, Florida, as rector of the Church of the Good Shepherd and a leader of a boys group there. Barlow collected many of his letters, planning to publish a volume of them; but this never appeared, although Barlow did contribute the introduction to Whitehead's ''[[Jumbee and Other Uncanny Tales]]'' (1944). H. P. Lovecraft was a particular friend of Whitehead's, visiting him at his Dunedin home for several weeks in 1931. Lovecraft said of him: "He has nothing of the musty cleric about him; but dresses in sports clothes, swears like a he-man on occasion, and is an utter stranger to bigotry or priggishness of any sort."
 
In later life, Whitehead lived in Dunedin, Florida, as rector of the Church of the Good Shepherd and a leader of a boys group there. Barlow collected many of his letters, planning to publish a volume of them; but this never appeared, although Barlow did contribute the introduction to Whitehead's ''[[Jumbee and Other Uncanny Tales]]'' (1944). H. P. Lovecraft was a particular friend of Whitehead's, visiting him at his Dunedin home for several weeks in 1931. Lovecraft said of him: "He has nothing of the musty cleric about him; but dresses in sports clothes, swears like a he-man on occasion, and is an utter stranger to bigotry or priggishness of any sort."
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* "Sea Change" (1925) ''Weird Tales''
 
* "Sea Change" (1925) ''Weird Tales''
 
* "The Fireplace" (1925) ''Weird Tales''
 
* "The Fireplace" (1925) ''Weird Tales''
βˆ’
* "The Projection of Armand Dubois" (1926) 'Weird Tales''
+
* "The Projection of Armand Dubois" (1926) 'Weird Tales''<nowiki/>''
 
* "Jumbee" (1926) ''Weird Tales''
 
* "Jumbee" (1926) ''Weird Tales''
 
* "Across the Gulf" (1926) ''Weird Tales''
 
* "Across the Gulf" (1926) ''Weird Tales''
 
* "The Shadows" (1927) ''Weird Tales''
 
* "The Shadows" (1927) ''Weird Tales''
 
* "West India Lights" (1927) ''West India Lights''
 
* "West India Lights" (1927) ''West India Lights''
βˆ’
* "The Left Eye" (1927) ''Weird Tales''
+
* "The Left Eye" (1927) ''Weird Tales''
 
* "Obi in the Caribbean" (1927) ''West India Lights''
 
* "Obi in the Caribbean" (1927) ''West India Lights''
 
* "The Cult of the Skull" (1928) ''Weird Tales''
 
* "The Cult of the Skull" (1928) ''Weird Tales''
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* "Sweet Grass" (1929) ''Weird Tales''
 
* "Sweet Grass" (1929) ''Weird Tales''
 
* "Black Tancrède" (1929) ''Weird Tales''
 
* "Black Tancrède" (1929) ''Weird Tales''
βˆ’
[[File:Weird Tales March 1929.jpg|thumb|right|Whitehead's novelette "The People of Pan" was the cover story in the March 1929 ''Weird Tales'']]
+
* "The People of Pan" (1929) ''Weird Tales'', cover story of the March issue
βˆ’
* "The People of Pan" (1929) ''Weird Tales''
 
 
* "The Tabernacle" (1930) ''Weird Tales''
 
* "The Tabernacle" (1930) ''Weird Tales''
 
* "The Shut Room" (1930) ''Weird Tales''
 
* "The Shut Room" (1930) ''Weird Tales''
βˆ’
* "Machiavelliβ€”Salesman" (1931) ''Popular Fiction Magazine''
+
* "Machiavelliβ€”Salesman" (1931) ''Popular Fiction Magazine''
 
* "The Passing of a God" (1931) ''Weird Tales''
 
* "The Passing of a God" (1931) ''Weird Tales''
βˆ’
* "The Trap" (1931) (with H.P. Lovecraft) ''Strange Tales''
+
* "[[The Trap]]" (1931) (with H.P. Lovecraft) ''Strange Tales''
 
* "The Tree-Man" (1931) ''Weird Tales''
 
* "The Tree-Man" (1931) ''Weird Tales''
 
* "Black Terror" (1931) ''Weird Tales''
 
* "Black Terror" (1931) ''Weird Tales''
 
* "Hill Drums" (1931) ''Weird Tales''
 
* "Hill Drums" (1931) ''Weird Tales''
βˆ’
* "The Black Beast" (1931) ''Jumbee and Other Uncanny Tales''
+
* "The Black Beast" (1931) ''Jumbee and Other Uncanny Tales''
 
* "Cassius" (1931) ''Strange Tales''
 
* "Cassius" (1931) ''Strange Tales''
 
* "Mrs. Lorriquer" (1932) ''Weird Tales''
 
* "Mrs. Lorriquer" (1932) ''Weird Tales''
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* "The Chadbourne Episode" (1933) ''Weird Tales''
 
* "The Chadbourne Episode" (1933) ''Weird Tales''
 
* "The Napier Limousine" (1933) ''Strange Tales''
 
* "The Napier Limousine" (1933) ''Strange Tales''
βˆ’
* "Ruby the Kid" (1933) ''Nickel Western''
+
* "Ruby the Kid" (1933) ''Nickel Western''
 
* "Scar-Tissue" (1946) ''Amazing Stories''
 
* "Scar-Tissue" (1946) ''Amazing Stories''
 
* "The Ravel 'Pavane'" (1946) ''West India Lights''
 
* "The Ravel 'Pavane'" (1946) ''West India Lights''
 
* "Williamson" (1946) ''West India Lights''
 
* "Williamson" (1946) ''West India Lights''
 
* "--In Case of Disaster Only" (1946) ''West India Lights''
 
* "--In Case of Disaster Only" (1946) ''West India Lights''
βˆ’
* "[[s:Bothon|Bothon]]" (1946) (with H.P. Lovecraft) ''West India Lights''
+
* "[[Bothon]]" (1946) (with H.P. Lovecraft) ''West India Lights''
   
 
===Collections===
 
===Collections===
 
*''[[Jumbee and Other Uncanny Tales]]'' (1944)
 
*''[[Jumbee and Other Uncanny Tales]]'' (1944)
 
*''[[West India Lights]]'' (1946)
 
*''[[West India Lights]]'' (1946)
βˆ’
* ''Passing of a God and Other Stories'' (2007), [[Ash-Tree Press]], edited by [[Douglas A. Anderson]] and Stefan Dziemianowicz.
+
* ''Passing of a God and Other Stories'' (2007), [[Ash-Tree Press]], edited by [[Douglas A. Anderson]] and Stefan Dziemianowicz.
 
* ''Tales of the Jumbee: and Other Wonders of the West Indies'' (2009), [[Wildside Press]]
 
* ''Tales of the Jumbee: and Other Wonders of the West Indies'' (2009), [[Wildside Press]]
 
* ''Voodoo Tales: The Ghost Stories of Henry S. Whitehead'' (2012), Wordsworth Editions.
 
* ''Voodoo Tales: The Ghost Stories of Henry S. Whitehead'' (2012), Wordsworth Editions.
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==Sources==
 
==Sources==
 
* Associated Press, Dunedin, November 23, 1932. "Roosevelt's Classmate at Harvard Dies in Dunedin." ''[[The Tampa Tribune|Tampa Tribune]]'', November 24, 1932. Obituary for "Rev. Dr. Henry Sinclair [sic] Whitehead, 50, author, traveler and lecturer...died here today."
 
* Associated Press, Dunedin, November 23, 1932. "Roosevelt's Classmate at Harvard Dies in Dunedin." ''[[The Tampa Tribune|Tampa Tribune]]'', November 24, 1932. Obituary for "Rev. Dr. Henry Sinclair [sic] Whitehead, 50, author, traveler and lecturer...died here today."
βˆ’
*{{cite book | last=Chalker | first=Jack L. | authorlink=Jack L. Chalker |author2=Mark Owings | title=The Science-Fantasy Publishers: A Bibliographic History, 1923-1998 | location=Westminster, MD and Baltimore | publisher=Mirage Press, Ltd. | year=1998| page=27}}
+
*{{cite book |last=Chalker |first=Jack L. |authorlink=Jack L. Chalker |author2=Mark Owings |title=The Science-Fantasy Publishers: A Bibliographic History, 1923-1998 |location=Westminster, MD and Baltimore |publisher=Mirage Press, Ltd. |year=1998|page=27}}
βˆ’
*{{cite book | last=Jaffery | first=Sheldon | authorlink=Sheldon Jaffery | title=The Arkham House Companion | location=Mercer Island, WA | publisher=Starmont House, Inc. | year=1989 | isbn=1-55742-005-X| page=8}}
+
*{{cite book |last=Jaffery |first=Sheldon |authorlink=Sheldon Jaffery |title=The Arkham House Companion |location=Mercer Island, WA |publisher=Starmont House, Inc. |year=1989 |isbn=1-55742-005-X|page=8}}
βˆ’
*{{cite book | last=Joshi| first=S. T.| authorlink=S.T. Joshi | title=[[Sixty Years of Arkham House|Sixty Years of Arkham House: A History and Bibliography]] | location=Sauk City, WI | publisher=Arkham House| pages=26–27 | year=1999 | isbn=0-87054-176-5}}
+
*{{cite book |last=Joshi|first=S. T.|authorlink=S.T. Joshi |title=[[Sixty Years of Arkham House|Sixty Years of Arkham House: A History and Bibliography]] |location=Sauk City, WI |publisher=Arkham House|pages=26–27 |year=1999 |isbn=0-87054-176-5}}
βˆ’
*{{cite book | last=Nielsen | first=Leon | title=Arkham House Books: A Collector's Guide | location=Jefferson, NC and London | publisher=McFarland & Company, Inc.| pages=51–52 | year=2004 | isbn=0-7864-1785-4}}
+
*{{cite book |last=Nielsen |first=Leon |title=Arkham House Books: A Collector's Guide |location=Jefferson, NC and London |publisher=McFarland & Company, Inc.|pages=51–52 |year=2004 |isbn=0-7864-1785-4}}
βˆ’
*{{cite book | last=Ruber| first=Peter| title=Arkham's Masters of Horror | location=Sauk City, WI | publisher=Arkham House| pages=154–158 | year=2000 | isbn=0-87054-177-3}}
+
*{{cite book |last=Ruber|first=Peter|title=Arkham's Masters of Horror |location=Sauk City, WI |publisher=Arkham House|pages=154–158 |year=2000 |isbn=0-87054-177-3}}
   
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
 
*{{isfdb name|id=Henry_S._Whitehead|name=Henry S. Whitehead}}
 
*{{isfdb name|id=Henry_S._Whitehead|name=Henry S. Whitehead}}
 
*Barrett, Mike, "West Indian Frights: The Fiction of Henry S. Whitehead" [http://www.operation-a801.com/whitehead.html]
 
*Barrett, Mike, "West Indian Frights: The Fiction of Henry S. Whitehead" [http://www.operation-a801.com/whitehead.html]
  +
{{DEFAULTSORT:Whitehead, Henry S.}}
  +
[[de:{{PAGENAME}}]]
 
[[Category:Writers]]
 
[[Category:Writers]]
  +
[[Category:Deceased (Real World)]]

Revision as of 01:53, 12 May 2020

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...other beings with wider, stronger, or different range of senses might not only see very differently the things we see, but might see and study whole worlds ...which lie close at hand yet can never be detected with the senses we have. - HPL: From Beyond

This article or section is a placeholder copied from Wikipedia or another Wiki site. You can help the H.P. Lovecraft Wiki by rewriting it or editing out irrelevant information.

This subject is written on a topic in the real world and reflects factual information.

Henry St. Clair Whitehead (March 5, 1882 – November 23, 1932) was an American writer of horror fiction and fantasy[1]

Biography

Henry S. Whitehead was born in Elizabeth, New Jersey, on March 5, 1882, and graduated from Harvard University in 1904 (in the same class as Franklin D. Roosevelt).[2] He led an active and worldly life in the first decade of the 20th century, playing football at Harvard, editing a Reform democratic newspaper in Port Chester, New York, and serving as commissioner of athletics for the AAU.

He later attended Berkeley Divinity School in Middletown, Connecticut, and was ordained a deacon in the Episcopal Church in 1912. From 1918 to 1919 he was Pastor of the Children, Church of St. Mary the Virgin, New York City. He served as acting archdeacon of the Virgin Islands from 1921 to 1929.[1] While there, living on the island of St. Croix, Whitehead gathered the material he was to use in his tales of the supernatural. A correspondent of H. P. Lovecraft, Whitehead published stories from 1924 onward in Adventure, Black Mask, Strange Tales,[2] and especially Weird Tales; in his introduction to Jumbee, R. H. Barlow would later describe Whitehead as a member of "the serious Weird Tales school".[2] Whitehead's supernatural fiction was partially modelled on the work of Edward Lucas White and William Hope Hodgson.[2] Whitehead's "The Great Circle" (1932) is a lost-race tale with sword and sorcery elements.[2]

In later life, Whitehead lived in Dunedin, Florida, as rector of the Church of the Good Shepherd and a leader of a boys group there. Barlow collected many of his letters, planning to publish a volume of them; but this never appeared, although Barlow did contribute the introduction to Whitehead's Jumbee and Other Uncanny Tales (1944). H. P. Lovecraft was a particular friend of Whitehead's, visiting him at his Dunedin home for several weeks in 1931. Lovecraft said of him: "He has nothing of the musty cleric about him; but dresses in sports clothes, swears like a he-man on occasion, and is an utter stranger to bigotry or priggishness of any sort."

Lovecraft expressed admiration for Whitehead's work, described his story "The Passing of a God" as "perhaps representing the peak of his creative genius".[1] Stefan Dziemianowicz describes Whitehead's West Indian tales as "virtually unmatched for the vividness with which they convey the awe and mystery of their exotic locale".[2]

Whitehead died of an apparent gastric problem.[1]

Works

Short fiction

  • "The Intarsia Box" (1923) Adventure
  • "The Wonder-Phone" (1923) People’s Magazine
  • "The Door" (1924) Weird Tales
  • "Tea Leaves" (1924) Weird Tales
  • "The Wonderful Thing" (1925) Weird Tales
  • "The Thin Match" (1925) Weird Tales
  • "Sea Change" (1925) Weird Tales
  • "The Fireplace" (1925) Weird Tales
  • "The Projection of Armand Dubois" (1926) 'Weird Tales
  • "Jumbee" (1926) Weird Tales
  • "Across the Gulf" (1926) Weird Tales
  • "The Shadows" (1927) Weird Tales
  • "West India Lights" (1927) West India Lights
  • "The Left Eye" (1927) Weird Tales
  • "Obi in the Caribbean" (1927) West India Lights
  • "The Cult of the Skull" (1928) Weird Tales
  • "The Lips" (1929) Weird Tales
  • "Sweet Grass" (1929) Weird Tales
  • "Black TancrΓ¨de" (1929) Weird Tales
  • "The People of Pan" (1929) Weird Tales, cover story of the March issue
  • "The Tabernacle" (1930) Weird Tales
  • "The Shut Room" (1930) Weird Tales
  • "Machiavelliβ€”Salesman" (1931) Popular Fiction Magazine
  • "The Passing of a God" (1931) Weird Tales
  • "The Trap" (1931) (with H.P. Lovecraft) Strange Tales
  • "The Tree-Man" (1931) Weird Tales
  • "Black Terror" (1931) Weird Tales
  • "Hill Drums" (1931) Weird Tales
  • "The Black Beast" (1931) Jumbee and Other Uncanny Tales
  • "Cassius" (1931) Strange Tales
  • "Mrs. Lorriquer" (1932) Weird Tales
  • "No Eye-Witnesses" (1932) Weird Tales
  • "Seven Turns in a Hangman's Rope" (1932) Adventure
  • "The Moon-Dial" (1932) Strange Tales
  • "The Great Circle" (1932) Strange Tales
  • "Sea-Tiger" (1932) Strange Tales
  • "The Chadbourne Episode" (1933) Weird Tales
  • "The Napier Limousine" (1933) Strange Tales
  • "Ruby the Kid" (1933) Nickel Western
  • "Scar-Tissue" (1946) Amazing Stories
  • "The Ravel 'Pavane'" (1946) West India Lights
  • "Williamson" (1946) West India Lights
  • "--In Case of Disaster Only" (1946) West India Lights
  • "Bothon" (1946) (with H.P. Lovecraft) West India Lights

Collections

  • Jumbee and Other Uncanny Tales (1944)
  • West India Lights (1946)
  • Passing of a God and Other Stories (2007), Ash-Tree Press, edited by Douglas A. Anderson and Stefan Dziemianowicz.
  • Tales of the Jumbee: and Other Wonders of the West Indies (2009), Wildside Press
  • Voodoo Tales: The Ghost Stories of Henry S. Whitehead (2012), Wordsworth Editions.

Novels for boys

  • Pinkie at Camp Cherokee (1931, Putnam's)

References

  1. ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 "In Memoriam: Henry St. Clair Whitehead". H.P. Lovecraft. Reprinted in Robert Weinberg, The Weird Tales Story. FAX Collector’s Editions. ISBN 0913960160 (p. 127).
  2. ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 Stefan R. Dziemianowicz, "Whitehead, Henry S(t. Clair)", in David Pringle, ed., St. James Guide to Horror, Ghost & Gothic Writers. London: St. James Press, 1998. (pp. 639-640) ISBN 1558622063


Sources

  • Associated Press, Dunedin, November 23, 1932. "Roosevelt's Classmate at Harvard Dies in Dunedin." Tampa Tribune, November 24, 1932. Obituary for "Rev. Dr. Henry Sinclair [sic] Whitehead, 50, author, traveler and lecturer...died here today."
  •  (1998) The Science-Fantasy Publishers: A Bibliographic History, 1923-1998 Westminster, MD and Baltimore: Mirage Press, Ltd..
  •  (1989) The Arkham House Companion Mercer Island, WA: Starmont House, Inc..
  •  (1999) [[Sixty Years of Arkham House: A History and Bibliography]] Sauk City, WI: Arkham House, p. 26–27.
  •  (2004) Arkham House Books: A Collector's Guide Jefferson, NC and London: McFarland & Company, Inc., p. 51–52.
  •  (2000) Arkham's Masters of Horror Sauk City, WI: Arkham House, p. 154–158.

External links

  • Template:Isfdb name
  • Barrett, Mike, "West Indian Frights: The Fiction of Henry S. Whitehead" [1]