1917年、短編「竜鏡の向こうに」(Through the Dragon Glass) が All-Story Weekly[3]に掲載され、ファンタジー作家としてデビュー。その後「秘境の地底人」(The People of the Pit)が『ウィアード・テイルズ』誌に掲載され(1918年)、寡作ながら続々と作品を発表していった。
The Fox Woman and the Blue Pagoda (1946) はメリットの未完の作品をその死後にボクが完成させたものである。The Fox Woman and Other Stories (1949) ではボクの加筆部分を除き、他の短編を追加した短編集として出版された。1948年の The Black Wheel もメリットの死後に彼が残した資料を元にボクが書き上げた作品である。
^"I was extremely glad to meet Merritt in person, for I have admired his work for 15 years. ... he has a peculiar power of working up an atmosphere and investing a region with an aura of unholy dread" H.P. Lovecraft's letter to R. H. Barlow (January 13, 1934) [1]
^Skinner, Doug (August 2005). “What's This? A Shaver Revival?”. Fate. August 26, 2009閲覧。 “Shaver’s main literary model was Abraham Merritt. Merritt isn’t read much today, but his fantasy novels were quite popular throughout the ’20s and ’30s. Beginning with The Moon Pool in 1919, he produced a series of novels about underground caverns, lost races, ancient ray machines, shell-shaped hovercraft, and other marvels. He was also a member of the original Fortean Society and the editor of The American Weekly, a Sunday newspaper supplement that often featured scientific and historical oddities. Shaver thought Merritt had seen the caves but could only mention them in fiction. One might also suspect that Merritt’s novels had influenced Shaver’s beliefs.”