Shadows 2: edited by Charles L. Grant (1979; this edition 1984) containing the following stories:
  
 
 
Saturday's Shadow by William F. Nolan
 Night Visions by Jack Dann
 The Spring by Manly Wade Wellman
 Valentine by Janet Fox
 Mackintosh Willy by Ramsey Campbell
 Dragon Sunday by Ruth Berman
 The White King's Dream by Elizabeth A. Lynn
 The Chair by Alan Dean Foster and Jane Cozart
 Clocks by Barry N. Malzberg and Bill Pronzini
 Holly, Don't Tell by Juleen Brantingham
 The Old Man's Will by Lee Wells
 The Closing Off of Old Doors by Peter D. Pautz
 Dead End by Richard Christian Matheson
 Seasons of Belief by Michael Bishop
 Petey by T. E. D. Klein
  
The late Charles L. Grant was both a talented writer and one of the four or five finest anthologists the horror genre has had. His original anthology series -- Shadows -- was a high point for horror short fiction in the late 1970's and early 1980's, sometimes reading more like a 'Best of' than anything else. Most stories in Shadows are contemporary in setting, as the mandate seemed to focus thereon, but beyond that, anything seemed to go.
  
There isn't a clunker in the bunch in Shadows 2. Moreover, there are at least two all-timers that appeared here for the first time: Ramsey Campbell's unnerving tale of childhood horror, "Mackintosh Willy", and T.E.D. Klein's "Petey," a novella about a house-warming party that plays enjoyably as both social satire and a Lovecraft-infused horror of suggestion and accumulation of detail. Entries by Michael Bishop and William F. Nolan are also excellent, and the whole anthology is well worth the read. Highly recommended.

 
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