In his introduction to the 2007 Ash-Tree Press collection Masques of Satan: Twelve Tales and a Novella, author Reggie Oliver gives us his "manifesto" for strange stories: that they are designed "to trouble the reader in some way," and that "the reader is meant to be left with an abiding sense of disquiet which is somehow, paradoxically, satisfying to the psyche.'
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On Reggie Oliver: Masques of Satan; Twelve…
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In his introduction to the 2007 Ash-Tree Press collection Masques of Satan: Twelve Tales and a Novella, author Reggie Oliver gives us his "manifesto" for strange stories: that they are designed "to trouble the reader in some way," and that "the reader is meant to be left with an abiding sense of disquiet which is somehow, paradoxically, satisfying to the psyche.'