Greye La Spina

Greye La Spina
Born (1880-07-10)July 10, 1880
Wakefield, Massachusetts, US
Died September 17, 1969(1969-09-17) (aged 89)
Pen name Isra Putnam
Occupation writer, playwright
Nationality American
Period 1919 to 1926
Genre horror, Fantasy, Detective fiction

Greye La Spina (July 10, 1880 – September 17, 1969) was an American writer who published more than one hundred short stories, serials, novelettes, and one-act plays. Her stories appeared in Metropolitan, Black Mask, Action Stories, Ten-Story Book, The Thrill Book, Weird Tales, Modern Marriage, Top-Notch Magazine, All-Story, Photoplay, and many other magazines.

Biography

La Spina was born Fanny Greye Bragg on July 10, 1880, in Wakefield, Massachusetts. Her father was a Methodist clergyman. She was married to Ralph Geissler in 1898 and gave birth to a daughter, Celia, two years later. The following year, her husband died. In 1910 she married Baron Robert La Spina, an Italian aristocrat.

Her first supernatural story, "The Wolf on the Steppes" was sold to Thrill Book in 1919. She won second place in Photoplay magazine's 1921 short story contest gaining her a $2,500 prize. Her first book, Invaders from the Dark, was published by Arkham House in 1960.

La Spina's "A Suitor from the Shades" was the cover story in the June 1927 Weird Tales

Selected short stories

  • "The Ultimate Ingredient" (Thrill Book, 1919)
  • "The Tortoise-Shell Cat" (Weird Tales, November 1924)
  • "The Scarf of the Beloved" (Weird Tales, February 1925)
  • "The Gargoyle" (Weird Tales, September - November 1925)
  • "The Devil's Pool" (Weird Tales, June 1932)
  • "The Sinister Painting" (Weird Tales, September 1934)
  • "Death Has Red Hair" (Weird Tales, September 1942)
  • "Great Pan Is Here" (Weird Tales, November 1943)
  • "The Antimacassar" (Weird Tales, May 1949)
  • "Old Mr. Wiley" (Weird Tales, March, 1951)

References

  • Barrett, Mike. "Weaver of Weird Tales: Greye La Spina" in his Doors to Elsewhere. Cheadle, Staffordshire, UK: Alchemy Press, 2013, pp. 45–61.
  • Ruber, Peter (2000). Arkham's Masters of Horror. Sauk City, WI: Arkham House. pp. 224–228. ISBN 0-87054-177-3.
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