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After Midnight

Thirteen Chilling Tales for the Dark Hours

by

INTRODUCED BY INTERNATIONAL BESTSELLER STEPHEN KING A STUNNING NEW HARDBACK COLLECTION OF DAPHNE DU MAURIER'S DARKEST STORIES Amid the reflections and twisting alleyways of Venice, a grieving couple are haunted by the past. On a sharp December day, the wind changes - and the birds begin to gather. A group of wartime scientists attempt to capture the power of death, an eye operation reveals a monstrous reality, and a woman returns home to find she doesn't exist. From murderous desires to supernatural forces, du Maurier's masterful short stories stare into the dark heart of our relationships: between men and women, humanity and nature, love and obsession, the future and the past. Whatever you do, don't look now . . . This brand new collection brings together thirteen of du Maurier's greatest uncanny stories for the first time - including 'The Birds' and 'Don't Look Now'. *** PRAISE FOR DAPHNE DU MAURIER 'These stories are staggeringly good' Stephen King 'Masterful, troubling and wickedly seductive' Sarah Perry 'The characters are incredibly vivid, and the twists superb' Clare Mackintosh 'Moody and unnerving' Gillian Flynn 'The perfect story by the perfect storyteller' Joanna Cannon 'Du Maurier is mistress of the sleight of hand in fiction' Maggie O'Farrell 'Rebecca, Jamaica Inn and The Scapegoat . . . made me want to be a writer' Katy Hays 'Will chill you as much as any thriller. I love it' Alice Slater 'She's so deviant. So fascinating. Every time I read her, my sympathy lies with a different character' Emerald Fennell, director of Saltburn 'A dark, brooding psychological thriller, hauntingly beautiful' S J Watson 'Brooding, dangerous and engrossing' Kit de Waal 'She was able to make worlds in which people and even houses are mysterious and mutable, not as they seem; haunted rooms in which disembodied spirits sometimes dance at absolute liberty' Olivia Laing 'The master of slow-burning menace' Stacey Halls 'A masterclass of the genre' Sarah Pinborough 'A great gothic writer' Kate Mosse 'Daphne du Maurier remains the indisputable queen of the sophisticated literary thriller . . .often imitated and never, ever surpassed' Laura Shepperson
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About author
Daphne du Maurier was born on 13 May 1907 in London, England, United Kingdom, the second of three daughters of Muriel Beaumont, an actress and maternal niece of William Comyns Beaumont, and Sir Gerald du Maurier, the prominent actor-manager, son of the author and Punch cartoonist George du Maurier, who created the character of Svengali in the novel Trilby. She was also the cousin of the Llewelyn Davies boys, who served as J.M. Barrie's inspiration for the characters in the play Peter Pan, or The Boy Who Wouldn't Grow Up. As a young child, she met many of the brightest stars of the theatre, thanks to the celebrity of her father. These connections helped her in establishing her literary career, and she published some of her early stories in Beaumont's Bystander magazine. Her first novel, The Loving Spirit, was published in 1931, and she continued writing successfull gothic novels in addition to biographies and other non-fiction books. Alfred Hitchcock was a fan of her novels and short stories, and adapted some of these to films: Jamaica Inn (1939), Rebecca (1940), and The Birds (1963). Other of her works adapted were Frenchman's Creek (1942), Hungry Hill (1943), My Cousin Rachel (1951), and "Don't Look Now" (1973). She was named a Dame of the British Empire. In 1932, she married Frederick "Boy" Browning, with whom she had three children, Tessa, Flavia and Christian. Her husband died in 1965, and she passed away on 19 April 1989 in Fowey, Cornwall. After her death, it was revealed that she was bisexual.
ISBN
0349019533
9780349019536