Alexander Kinghorn (b.
London, 12
October 1926; d. Oakington, Cambridgeshire, 25 April 2007)
Alexander (“Sandy”) Manson Kinghorn was born in London to a Scottish family. He studied at the University of Aberdeen, and received an M.A. in 1947 for his dissertation “A Study of Literary Criticism in Scotland during the Second Half of the Eighteenth Century”. He received a Ph.D. from Pembroke College, Cambridge, in 1953. His studies had been interrupted for three years service in post-war Vienna as part of the army intelligence corps. His scholarly publications were numerous (some signed “A.M. Kinghorn”), including The Chorus of History, 1485-1558: Literary-Historical Relations in Renaissance Britain (1971), and the booklet Death and the Makars: Timor Mortis in Scottish Poetry to 1600 (1979). He also edited texts such as John Barbour’s The Bruce: A Selection (1960), and anthology of Mediaeval Drama (1968; second edition, as The Rise of English Drama to 1600, 1984), The Middle Scots Poets (1970), and Shakespeare: The Merchant of Venice (1988). With his longtime friend Alexander Law he co-edited The Works of Allan Ramsey in six volumes (1951-1974), and The Poems of Allan Ramsey and Robert Fergusson (1974). Kinghorn also contributed to many journals. His pseudonymous work includes a biography, The Life and Death of Michael X (1981), as by James Sharp, and a short book of illustrated rhymes, Jittery Goose (1975), as by Tom Piper.

In retirement he turned to writing ghost
stories, following the example of M.R. James. These stories were published as a
trade paperback original, Thirteen Ghost
Stories (Bognor Regis, West Sussex:
Woodfield Publishing, 2004). In his
Preface, Kinghorn notes that James “drew attention to the suggestive importance
of settings” in the writing of ghost stories, and Kinghorn has followed James’s
example. Indeed, it is the details of
Kinghorn’s settings that give the stories real verisimilitude, along with
(again following James) a tendency for malevolent ghosts. These are literate, atmospheric tales, which
have gone mostly unnoticed by readers of the genre. Kinghorn died of cancer.