11 March 2025

5th Armada Ghost Book

It's January 1st, 1973, and look what has just hit the bookshop shelves:

 

Moving on to the 5th Armada Ghost Book, we find the first girl protagonist decorating a cover in the series. It also features its first horse! And doesn't that horse look terrified? 

The rear cover art does a great job, with the scariest looking treesthe in the Armada books to date terror too. Shame the publisher didn't think to credit the artist!

The story's illustrations are pretty scary too, especially for the age group the book was aimed at:



I've not read any of the stories in Book 5 yet, but when I do, the tale with the illustration directly above will definitely the first I tuck into.

10 March 2025

4th Armada Ghost Book


1972 saw Armada publish its 4th Ghost Book. Peter Archer was responsible for illustrating the book's cover and internal pages. This was the first of the Armada Ghost books to ditch the familiar running boy motif on the front cover Whilst the running boy motif


I love seeing the prices on old books -you could leave a bookstore with this little beauty having spent just 20p!

This is a delightful collection of stories with some genuine stand-out first-class spooky entries nestled amongst the lineup. It's great to see children introduced to the Master of the Macabre, M.R. James, who adds literary class to the ghoulish fayre with his tale The Haunted Doll's House. And I remember E.F. Benson's classic The Bus Conductor giving me the heeby-jeebies when I first read it as a child in my bedroom at night. This tale haunted me for a long while afterwards, adding to my reluctance to open my bedroom curtain at night to peek out into the dark! The tale was made famous by featuring in the 1945 portmanteau Ealing horror Dead of Night.



9 March 2025

Just what I need...

... a new project to justify my collecting and give me something new to work on...

3rd Armada Ghost Book


1970, two years after their previous anthology, the 3rd Armada Ghost Book hit the bookshelves. This time, a new Captain had taken the helm - Mary Danby. 

Danby's name was to become synonymous with the ghostly Armada franchise over the next thirteen years. Much to their reader's delight, as well as curating the stories presented in the anthologies, she was also happy to include her own spooky outings amongst their number.


Peter Archer was the chosen illustrator for this third volume of ghost stories, and he did a sterling job - even keeping the now familiar running boy, crooked tree and flying agressor motifs on the cover artwork.


Archer also delivered the scariest story illustration so far in the series. Imagine laying in bed as a child reading scary stories and coming across this image! 

8 March 2025

Out of the Blue

I do love it when a new project infatuates me out of the blue...

Caturday