
‘Without Rhyme or Reason’ by Peter Valentine Timlett is our second story from a collection edited by Ramsey Campbell. The cover of New Terrors 1 may look familiar to you as it was also the collection that originally published Wagner’s ‘.220 Swift’ which we covered in episodes 4 and 5. ‘Without Rhyme or Reason’ was later published in a collection of Timlett’s short stories called A Singing in the Wilderness (2003). He is best known for his Seedbearers trilogy about exiles from the doomed Atlantis. Apparently, he was heavily influenced by his own interest in the occult, “For several years Timlett was a practicing ritual magician…”.
It was surprising to me that with his background in the occult and a previous fantasy series this final story that rounds out the collection is a crime tale. I had expected a flourish of the supernatural but was not disappointed by the macabre ending. In ‘Without Rhyme or Reason’ we learn the story of Miss Templeton and Mrs. Bates. Templeton, a young woman, is hired to take care of the estate and affairs of Mrs. Bates while Bates, an older woman, tends to her garden all day. Before hiring her, Bates makes it clear she wants her employees to have little connection with others outside the house because she doesn’t like to be disturbed. As Miss Templeton gets to know Mrs. Bates, we discover Bates has a grudge against the young and beautiful, we also learn her last six employees have left the job suddenly and not been heard from again. The horror sets in while Miss Templeton is in the garden one night and remembers the old nursery rhyme:
Mary, Mary, quite contrary,
How does your garden grow?
With silver bells, and cockle shells,
And pretty maids all in a row.
The story is a great note to end the collection on and a great use of the unreliable narrator.
Thus ends my coverage of The Year’s Best Horror Stories Series IX edited by Karl Edward Wagner. I thought this was a really strong collection that, for the most part, holds up well. It feels like a quick read with only ten stories. I’m looking forward to reading the next collection in the series as the 80’s horror boom ratchets up.
Join us is two weeks where Jonathan and I will be finishing up our Season of Kane with ‘The Treasure of Lynortis’ and ‘Lynortis Reprise’. After that, we’ll take a hiatus and then come back in the summer with season 3.

This story inspired me to listen to the live album from Elvis Presley Aloha from Hawaii Via Satellite which I highly recommend. Colonel Thomas Parker, Elvis’s agent, reportedly got the idea for a live worldwide television concert after being inspired by the then recent trip President Nixon took to China in 1972. Nixon had a television crew following him around on his historic trip documenting everything, bringing the world together through television. Colonel Parker wanted the same thing for Elvis. On January 14th, 1973 Elvis performed a concert raising money for the Kui Lee Cancer Fund, a fund for Cancer Research at the University of Hawaii. It was aired in over 40 countries and was watched by an estimated 1.5 billion people. Sadly the United States had to wait to watch until April 4th, 1973 because January 14th happened to be the same day as the Superbowl. But what does all this King talk have to do with William Relling’s story ‘The King’ you say? EVERYTHING.
throughout the story to great effect. At the beginning the narrator mentions Elvis being at the top of his game at that point. Later he mentions the set list the Elvis cover band plays the night of the haunting. It starts out with ‘Also Spracht Zarathustra’ and goes into ‘C. C. Rider’ which is how the Hawaii concert also started. These callbacks to the concert call readers attention to the mythic and even God-like status of Elvis. During the concert, Elvis was appearing to a possible 1.5 billion people in their homes. The action of throwing his cape into the audience, which is played over and over again like a ritual by Elvis impersonators, originates from this concert. In the repetition of this musical event to the masses from beyond the grave through impersonators, it is as if Elvis has risen indeed. The whole story draws into focus a commentary on modern-day idolatry, and like Pet Sematary when we ask for something to come back will we like what it has become?

‘The Catacomb’ by Peter Shilston hits that



This story is a great example of the variety of sources Wagner scoured to create his collections. This one almost slipped through his fingers, it comes from A Touch of Paris an English language magazine marketed to tourists in Paris. Wagner credits fellow writer Tim Sullivan as the person who brought this story to his attention.