The Graveyard Rats
"The Graveyard Rats"[1] is a horror short story by American writer Henry Kuttner, first published in the magazine Weird Tales in March 1936.
It was reprinted in The Gruesome Book (1983), edited by Ramsey Campbell; and Weird Tales: Seven Decades of Terror (1997). "The Graveyard Rats" was adapted as part of the made-for-cable anthology film Trilogy of Terror II. In 2022, the story was also adapted as an episode, directed by Vincenzo Natali, of Guillermo del Toro's Cabinet of Curiosities.[2]
Plot summary
At Salem, Massachusetts, cemetery caretaker "Old Masson" must deal with a teeming colony of abnormally large rats that are cutting into his grave-robbing profits; the subterranean rodents drag away newly buried corpses from holes gnawed into the coffins. One night Masson attempts to rob a grave only to see the corpse pulled into a burrow by a rat. In an attempt to retrieve the valuables Masson crawls into the tunnels after the body. After a short time he realizes how dangerous his situation is and tries to turn back, being set upon by the rats which he fends off. As he climbs back up the tunnel Masson eventually comes face-to-face with a burrowing zombie-like creature, from which he flees down a side tunnel. To escape the corpse, he collapses the tunnel behind him. He then finds himself trapped in a coffin which a rat had previously emptied. Masson asphyxiates from lack of air as the rats descend upon him.
References
Sources
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- Henry Kuttner
- C. L. Moore
- Earth's Last Citadel (1943)
- Vintage Season (1946)
- Valley of the Flame (1946)
- The Fairy Chessmen (1946)
- Tomorrow and Tomorrow (1947)
- The Dark World (1965)
- "The Graveyard Rats" (1936)
- "Mimsy Were the Borogoves" (1943)
- "Clash by Night" (1943)
- "Nothing but Gingerbread Left" (1943)
- "Happy Ending" (1948)
- A Gnome There Was (1950)
- Robots Have No Tails (1952)
- Ahead of Time (1953)
- Mutant (1953)
- Line to Tomorrow (1954)
- Elak of Atlantis (1985)
- The Book of Iod (1995)
- The Hogben Chronicles (2013)
- The Twonky (1953)
- Tales of Frankenstein (1958)
- The Last Mimzy (2007)
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