Crafts and Assaults: Two Uncanny Tales for the Season

It’s ‘the time of year when the English-speaking peoples, not without an assist from their Celtic connexions, tend invariably towards the haunted and the grotesque in their tales and anecdotes’; and rather than allow that season to pass without something to offer our readers from the very beginning of it, Mr Pyle and Mr Wemyss made a wager on the Saturday before All Hallows’ Eve: a story apiece, as ‘unco’ uncanny’ as they felt they wished to be.

The novelist, West Country essayist, and historian GMW Wemyss returns us to the dark, deep woods of Wiltshire at night, older than Stonehenge, where dark deeds are afoot – until interrupted by the well-loved ensemble cast of his Village Tales series, led as ever by the indomitable (and exasperating) duke of Taunton and the Muscular Christianity of the Rector, Fr Noel Paddick. (Apparently, a case of possession can, actually, be stopped by a brilliant throw in to the wicket. Sometimes....)

And Markham Shaw Pyle, the historian and critic, then takes us out ‘West of One-Hundredth’, to the Big Empty of rural Texas, where anything might happen: and does happen, posing a problem of law and ethics, and the howling question, ‘When does the beast crowd out the man?’

From the Eve of All Hallows to Christmas of the Dickensian ghost stories, this is the season of the uncanny and the strange; and this volume is as near to a gift as the authors can contrive, in hopes that their loyal readers ‘may be, for a moment, if no more, diverted and amused with what is, after all, the merest trifle … as they await more substantial fare, quite soon’.

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Crafts and Assaults: Two Uncanny Tales for the Season

It’s ‘the time of year when the English-speaking peoples, not without an assist from their Celtic connexions, tend invariably towards the haunted and the grotesque in their tales and anecdotes’; and rather than allow that season to pass without something to offer our readers from the very beginning of it, Mr Pyle and Mr Wemyss made a wager on the Saturday before All Hallows’ Eve: a story apiece, as ‘unco’ uncanny’ as they felt they wished to be.

The novelist, West Country essayist, and historian GMW Wemyss returns us to the dark, deep woods of Wiltshire at night, older than Stonehenge, where dark deeds are afoot – until interrupted by the well-loved ensemble cast of his Village Tales series, led as ever by the indomitable (and exasperating) duke of Taunton and the Muscular Christianity of the Rector, Fr Noel Paddick. (Apparently, a case of possession can, actually, be stopped by a brilliant throw in to the wicket. Sometimes....)

And Markham Shaw Pyle, the historian and critic, then takes us out ‘West of One-Hundredth’, to the Big Empty of rural Texas, where anything might happen: and does happen, posing a problem of law and ethics, and the howling question, ‘When does the beast crowd out the man?’

From the Eve of All Hallows to Christmas of the Dickensian ghost stories, this is the season of the uncanny and the strange; and this volume is as near to a gift as the authors can contrive, in hopes that their loyal readers ‘may be, for a moment, if no more, diverted and amused with what is, after all, the merest trifle … as they await more substantial fare, quite soon’.

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Crafts and Assaults: Two Uncanny Tales for the Season

Crafts and Assaults: Two Uncanny Tales for the Season

by GMW Wemyss
Crafts and Assaults: Two Uncanny Tales for the Season

Crafts and Assaults: Two Uncanny Tales for the Season

by GMW Wemyss

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Overview

It’s ‘the time of year when the English-speaking peoples, not without an assist from their Celtic connexions, tend invariably towards the haunted and the grotesque in their tales and anecdotes’; and rather than allow that season to pass without something to offer our readers from the very beginning of it, Mr Pyle and Mr Wemyss made a wager on the Saturday before All Hallows’ Eve: a story apiece, as ‘unco’ uncanny’ as they felt they wished to be.

The novelist, West Country essayist, and historian GMW Wemyss returns us to the dark, deep woods of Wiltshire at night, older than Stonehenge, where dark deeds are afoot – until interrupted by the well-loved ensemble cast of his Village Tales series, led as ever by the indomitable (and exasperating) duke of Taunton and the Muscular Christianity of the Rector, Fr Noel Paddick. (Apparently, a case of possession can, actually, be stopped by a brilliant throw in to the wicket. Sometimes....)

And Markham Shaw Pyle, the historian and critic, then takes us out ‘West of One-Hundredth’, to the Big Empty of rural Texas, where anything might happen: and does happen, posing a problem of law and ethics, and the howling question, ‘When does the beast crowd out the man?’

From the Eve of All Hallows to Christmas of the Dickensian ghost stories, this is the season of the uncanny and the strange; and this volume is as near to a gift as the authors can contrive, in hopes that their loyal readers ‘may be, for a moment, if no more, diverted and amused with what is, after all, the merest trifle … as they await more substantial fare, quite soon’.


Product Details

BN ID: 2940046376678
Publisher: Bapton Books
Publication date: 10/28/2014
Sold by: Smashwords
Format: eBook
File size: 130 KB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Parliamentary historian, chronicler of Titanic’s sinking and Churchill’s ascent, annotator of Kipling and of Kenneth Grahame: GMW Wemyss lives and writes, wisely pseudonymously, in Wilts. Having, by invoking the protective colouration of tweeds, cricket (he was a dry bob at school), and country matters, somehow evaded immersion in Mercury whilst up at University, he survived to become the West Country’s beloved essayist; author or co-author of histories of the Narvik Debate, the fall of Chamberlain and the rise of Churchill, of 1937 – that year of portent – and of the UK and US enquiries into the sinking of Titanic; and co-editor and co-annotator of Kipling’s Mowgli stories and Kenneth Grahame.

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