Nesbit on the dark side

IF you hear the name E Nesbit, you picture the cosy period charm of The Railway Children – but writing as Edith, Nesbit had a dark side, which is explored in an evening of horror story-telling at the Marine Theatre, Lyme Regis, on Friday 15th May at 7.30pm.

Following the success of The Masks of Aphra Behn, actress Claire Louise Amias returns with another one-woman show, Haunted Shadows: The Gothic Tales of Edith Nesbit. This gripping insight into the other side of a famous author is directed by a renowned horror expert Jonathan Rigby.

An expert at chilling the spine and curdling the blood, Edith Nesbit (Amias) relates three of her best Gothic tales while recalling her own childhood terrors. The Shadow finds a repressed housekeeper meeting an abominable entity. In The Pavilion, the shade of a long-dead necromancer envelops a social gathering. Finally, a deranged young woman harbours a deadly secret in a rediscovered story called A Strange Experience.​