Jean Ray (born July 8, 1887, Ghent, Belgium—died September 17, 1964, Ghent) was a Belgian novelist, short-story writer, and journalist who is known for his crime fiction and narratives of horror and the fantastic in both French and Flemish (Dutch).
De Kremer worked as a city employee, from 1910 to 1919, before working as a journalist (1919–40). He began to publish fiction in 1925, with the short-story collection, Les Contes du whisky (1925; “Whisky’s Tales”). This collection reveals his characteristic descriptive skill, humorous tone, and ability to create a sinister atmosphere. Deeply Flemish in sensibility (he was a friend of Michel de Ghelderode), he wrote rapidly for a mass audience with which he identified, having come from a modest background. His interest in science fiction emerged in La Croisière des ombres (1932; “Cruising the Shadows”), which introduces a “fourth dimension” theme in colourful terms.
Having fallen on hard times following a prison sentence, De Kremer wrote doggedly to survive. From 1933 to 1940 he turned out some 100 installments of a magazine series whose hero, Harry Dickson, was known as the “American Sherlock Holmes.” He wrote this series pseudonymously or anonymously, because his reputation had been damaged and his work ignored. Resurfacing as Jean Ray, he produced his best work during and after World War II, starting a publishing company with fellow fantasy and crime writers Thomas Owen and Stanislas-André Steeman. Ray’s Le Grand Nocturne (1942) combines sea stories with the theme of “intercalary worlds.” Malpertuis (1943; filmed 1972), considered a classic of modern Gothic fantasy, is based on Ray’s childhood memories and on mythology. The complex novel was made into a film, starring Orson Welles, by Belgian director Harry Kümel.
Ray also tried his hand at mock-Chaucerian narrative in Les Derniers Contes de Canterbury (1944; “The Last Canterbury Tales”). Le Carrousel des maléfices (1964; “The Carousel of Evil Spells”) collects his short stories published in magazines, while the gentle irony of Les Contes noirs du golf (1964; “Golf’s Dark Tales”) confirms Ray’s passion for British culture epitomized by the London settings of the Harry Dickson stories.