A woman without a soul


A Woman without a Soul

and Other Writings

 

Althea Gyles

 

edited by Daniel Corrick

 

Althea Gyles (1867-1949), Irish artist and mystic, though primarily remembered today for the book covers she did for the poet William Butler Yeats and her association with the author and occultist Aleister Crowley, was, in her own right, also a writer of great interest.

The present volume collects together all of her short fiction and a great deal of her poetry, most of which has never before seen publication. In the title novelette, described by one critic as a female retelling of “The Picture of Dorian Gray”, a heart-broken woman enters into a pact with a black magician to escape the pains of love through soulless, amoral beauty.

Two effulgent, Decadent fairy-tales show Gyles’ fascination with elemental spirits as well as the human capacity for corruption or redemption.

Finally, a wide selection of her poetry displays her visionary spirituality, coloured by theosophy and the cabalistic mysticism of the Golden Dawn.

 

About the Author

 

About Daniel Corrick
Daniel Corrick is an editor and literary historian with a specialist interest in nineteenth-­century literature, especially the evolution of Gothicism and the Decadent movement. He has worked on a number of volumes including the collected fiction of Montague Summers, and unpublished works of Edgar Saltus and Edward Heron-Allen. In addition, he has edited several anthologies, including Sorcery and Sanctity: A Homage to Arthur Machen (Hieroglyphic Press, 2013), and Drowning in Beauty: The Neo-Decadent Anthology (Snuggly Books, 2018).

 

 

Paperback, 166 pages. Release date: October 8, 2024
ISBN-13: 978-1-64525-158-3
Price: US$18.00