One of the main forces in early nineteenth-century literature, Sir
Walter Scott was not only among the greatest novelists of his time, but
influenced generations of writers, including literary giants such as
Stendhal and Tolstoy. Though chiefly remembered for his historical epics
Ivanhoe, Rob Roy and Guy Mannering, Scott penned a number of short
stories which have been unjustly eclipsed by the enduring fame of his
longer works.
This volume brings together some of Scott's best short stories, each
containing an element of the supernatural - a ghostly apparition in 'The
Tapestried Chamber', a tale of magic in 'My Aunt Margaret's Mirror',
grotesque diablerie in 'Wandering Willie's Tale', the power of second
sight in 'The Two Drovers', and the inevitability of Fate in 'The
Highland Widow' - all revealing the author's great talent in the
shorter-fiction form.