A. M. Burrage (1889–1956), during the first four decades of this century, Alfred McLelland Burrage, was one of the most prolific British writers of short popular fiction. There was scarcely a mainstream weekly, fortnightly, or monthly whose Contents page did not, at one time or another, feature his name.
Warning Whispers,when the original edition of Warning Whispers was published by Equation in 1988, it represented the first collection of entirely “new” Burrage stories since Someone In The Room appeared in 1931. The seventeen stories in the volume had lain undiscovered since their original magazine appearances between 1915 and 1930, and were unearthed by Jack Adrian, who has now found a further eight previously unknown Burrage stories, which have been included in this volume. From the gentle comedy of “The Imperturbable Tucker” to the terror of “The Acquittal” and “The Witch of Oxshott”; from the romance of “Fellow Travellers” and “The Garden of Fancy” to the sinister “The Little Blue Flames” and “Warning Whispers”: these stories provide further proof of A.M. Burrage’s mastery of the ghost story in all its forms, and show why he remains one of the most popular writers of supernatural fiction of this century.