I'm busier with events this year than I have been since the end of COVID. Fortunately I'm not working on a book at the moment.
Some tickets still available here. Starts outside Westminster Reference Library WC2H 7HP
There's a cheaper copy of Mansion of Gloom for sale on eBay at the moment. See here.
At a recent screening of Monty Python and the Holy Grail at the Electric Palace in Hastings the film's producer Mark Forstater took part in a Q&A in which he said that he is currently putting together a film set in Hastings with an Aleister Crowley theme (something to do with AC's supposed 'curse' on the town). Watch this space.
I'm enjoying the music of London-based musician, composer and producer DoomCannon at the moment - the Renaissance album draws inspiration from early 1970s fusion and spiritual jazz. Also two reissued albums by Joe Henderson Power to the People and Multiple.
Two gigs I was going to have been postponed Throwing Muses at the White Rock and Lost Crowns in Brighton (I suspect this gig will never happen). Next up is The Warlocks at The Piper in St Leonards, see here and here.
The next event I'm involved in is a walk for the Sohemian Society about William Burroughs' time in London in the early 1970s in the company of Bill Redwood and Jim Pennington. Half the tickets have already sold (it was first advertised yesterday) so may be time to get a ticket now to avoid disappointment.
Tickets here. Sunday 12 August starting at 2.30 outside Westminster Reference Library in St Martin's Street WC2. We'll finish outside the block in Bury Street where he lived and entertained friends such as Brion Gysin.
More events on the way.
So there I was, sitting at my laptop last week, when I suddenly started to receive a lot of online orders for Mansion of Gloom, scrolling down the screen.
The reason for this flurry of activity was a positive and astute review in this month's (July) Fortean Times by Roger Luckhurst, who kindly awarded it 5 STARS.
Here are some extracts: 'It is a grand exercise in obsession and textual hoarding that feels typical, perhaps, of one of Poe's own slightly unhinged neurotic protagonists.' (I take this as a compliment).
Antony Clayton has published erudite and beautiful limited-edition books through his own Accumulator Press . . . The Poe book is more recognisably an outsider scholar's massive work of sifting and sorting Poe's likely influences on Usher . . It feels at once a strange folly of the collector's completist mindset and an indispensable volume for the Poe reader.'
'Scholarly and eccentric, for Poe readers this is essential. Snap one up before the limited run sells out.' (my underlining)
Also for those who buy from me at talks or through Big Cartel you also receive a limited edition artist's print, although there are only around 20 of these left as of June 14 2025.
As I type this another order has come in, so get them while you can.
You can buy Mansion of Gloom here - I've dropped the price for a limited period. Click on Accumulator Press online store.
Roger Luckhurst himself has written some wonderful books that overlap with my interests which you can check out here. His book on the Mummy's Curse was very useful for one of my folklore pieces on this blog. Link here.
Mansion of Gloom is also available from these bookshops: Watkins, Atlantis, Treadwells, Hare & Hawthorn Hastings, Courtyard Books Glastonbury.
Jonathan Rigby: 'A stupendous tome'.
More details and booking here
The Whistler walk for the Sohemian Society on Sunday 8 June has sold out.
Copies of my latest book Mansion of Gloom: The Unsettling Legacy of Edgar Allan Poe's The Fall of the House of Usher can be purchased here.
Further events to promote the book are in the pipeline.
Upcoming gigs:
Jazz Hastings at East Hastings Sea Angling Association: Byron Wallen's Four Corners (great musicians including brilliant Rob Luft on guitar and Rod Youngs on drums. See here
I was intending to see Throwing Muses in Hastings last night but the gig has been rescheduled owing to Kristin Hersh losing here voice. See here
Lost Crowns at Alphabet Brighton see here
More information and ticket booking here.
Limited places so book early. It will take 90 to 120 minutes and involve a fair amount of walking. Hope to finish at a pub for those interested.
Mansion of Gloom is now available from Courtyard Books in Glastonbury, a friendly esoterically-minded bookshop I visited a while ago.
Have a look here.
Thursday talk here
From the end of the week Mansion of Gloom should also be available from the venerable Atlantis Bookshop in London. A quarter of the total print run have sold since December.
Stephen Coates has written: "Mansion of Gloom is magnificent. An incredible piece of deep dive research and also slightly bonkers.' I take that as a compliment.
More tomes from Barry Humphries' incredible library will be auctioned later this month.
See The Library of Barry Humphries at Forum Auctions here. Plenty of Gothic, Decadent and Crowlean texts to salivate over.
Meanwhile, rather than working on another book this year I intend to do some promotional events, mainly for Mansion of Gloom. Copies will be for sale at all events (not sure about the walks!).
Copies of Mansion of Gloom can be purchased here.
So far we have:
The Last Tuesday Society online talk on Mansion of Gloom April 10 20:00 to 21:30.
The Dracula Society April 26. A talk about Mansion of Gloom. See here.
Salon For The City October 30. See here. An in-person talk at the Horse Hospital on the artist Whistler and his life in London, together with Dr Ian Mudway from Imperial, who will talk about London fogs, so prevalent in the artist's works. Tickets not yet available.
I've agreed to do a talk for the Sohemian Society at some point this year - they are moving from the Wheatsheaf pub to the Fitzroy Tavern over the next few weeks and a new programme is being arranged.
I also said that I'd do a few walks for the Sohemians (probably my last) covering Decadent London, Whistler's Chelsea, and with the expert accompaniment of Bill Redwood and Jim Pennington, William Burroughs in the West End of London. Dates in the summer to be confirmed.
There will also be a Poe-related event for The London Month of the Dead in October. See here for 2024.
In the autumn I'm hoping to screen the Jean Epstein silent Usher film at a venue in Hastings with live accompaniment by a local musician. Details when available.
Don't forget the Nick Drake event at Westminster Music Library with Richard Morton Jack, James Wilson and Cathi Unsworth. Tickets are getting low so a good time to book through Eventbrite here.
See here for Christie's sale.
What a treasure trove for the decadent and symbolist enthusiast:
a small work by Fernand Khnopff, many paintings by Charles Conder, a letter from Beardsley, many signed editions of Oscar Wilde, rare books including several by Aleister Crowley (Diary of a Drug Fiend with dust jacket), Bodley Head books with sumptuous covers, first yellow 1897 edition of Dracula, as well as Dame Edna Everage dresses (including the Munch Scream dress) and glasses.
Apparently I bought the very last catalogue (sorry). Not everything was extravagantly priced, so it might be worth bidding for some items, although I imagine they will net much more than their estimated prices.
The advantage to the purchaser is that they can make an offer rather than pay full price (although obviously I'd prefer to get the full amount). Also I reduce the price myself to encourage sales. You're only allowed to list one item at at time, but I try to relist the book as soon as it sells.
While stocks last you will receive one of the copies with a limited edition artist's print.
I have some very good made-to-measure cardboard packaging and post and packing is free.
There are 7 tickets left for the talk in London on Friday 7 February. Book here. Books also for sale at the talk. I've bought a SumUp portable reader for card sales.
This FREE event will take place on Friday 21 March from 6-7pm.
Half the tickets have already been reserved at time of writing.
Book through Eventbrite HERE
Richard Morton Jack's previous books include Labyrinth (2024), Galactic Ramble (2019), Psychedelia(2017) and Endless Trip (2010). He edits the occasional music history magazine Flashback and has overseen definitive reissues of many classic rock, jazz and folk albums. He also co-founded the music marketplace and archive elvinyl.com, which launched in 2020.
James Wilson is the author of six previous novels: The Dark Clue, The Bastard Boy, The Woman in the Picture, Consolation, The Summer of Broken Stories , and Coyote Fork. He has also written plays, radio and TV documentaries, and a prize-winning work of narrative non-fiction, The Earth Shall Weep: A History of Native America. His work has been translated into nine languages.
Cathi Unsworth began her writing career on the legendary music weekly Sounds. Her journalism has subsequently appeared in The Guardian, Bizarre, The Financial Times, Melody Maker, The Fortean Times and Uncut. She has also published six crime novels and two works of nonfiction, the most recent of which is Season of the Witch: the Book of Goth.
Eventbrite says that the FREE Illustrated talk about Mansion of Gloom at Westminster Reference Library has sold out. However I've released a few more places today (27 January) as, in my experience, there are usually a considerable number of no-shows on the night and it's disappointing when 100 people have booked and only 40 show up.
Book here.
I've just learned of an exhibition of Frank Norman's prison paintings that are on show at the Century Club on Shaftesbury Avenue. There's also a display of photographs from the classic Soho Night and Day he wrote with Jeffrey Bernard (one of my favourite London books) at Soho's French House. I've mentioned Frank in the blog before:
see here.
Century Club here.
French House here.
The showing of the Watson & Webber 1928 avant garde interpretation and the 1949/50 Hastings-filmed version (partly filmed in the Netherwood guesthouse with Aleister Crowley in attendance) directed by George Ivan Barnett and introduced via short film by his son Adrian went very well on Sunday. The first short film was greatly enhanced by Maria Christofi's atmospheric accompaniment with singing bowls and percussion. I hope to do some more similar events over this year.
Thank you to Katie Spooner and the rest of the staff at the Electric Palace.
Mansion of Gloom that includes a long section on The Fall of the House of Usher on film can be purchased here.
In addition to Mansion of Gloom talks listed in previous posts there will be a talk to the Dracula Society on Saturday 26 April at The Barley Mow pub in Horseferry Road, London.
Booking details to follow.
Also an online talk for the Viktor Wynd Museum of Curiosities on Thursday 10 April.
Sohemians talk at the Fitzroy Tavern to be confirmed.
I've also agreed to do three walks in London over the summer on Decadent London, Whistler in Chelsea and William Burroughs in London (the last with Bill Redwood and Jim Pennington).
Booking details to follow.
There may be a reprint of Decadent London this year, time and money allowing.
There's also the Electric Palace Hastings film event with two versions of The Fall of the House of Usher on Sunday 19 January. Book here. THIS EVENT IS NOW SOLD OUT.
Illustrated talk about Mansion of Gloom at Westminster Reference Library (about 15 tickets left at time of writing). This event will probably sell out soon.
Book here.
I'm also organising some non-Mansion-of-Gloom events featuring other guest speakers that I hope will prove popular. Details to follow shortly.
Mansion of Gloom is now available from Treadwell's Books in London.
Online purchases through The Big Cartel.