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The Ash-Tree Press Hardback. 199
ISBN
1 899562 72 9
£25.00
List
of stories
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The Binscombe Tales are set in John Whitbourn's
ancestral homeland, in southern England's "Downs Country', wherein
ten generations (at least) of Whitbourns have lived out blameless yeoman
lives. Aiding and abetting him there are his wife and three children
(generation eleven!). Please consider their crying need for toys and
treats and buy this book.
The second of a two-volume set that collects all the tales in the saga,
it contains twelve stories, five of which are published here for the
first time. There is also an introduction by the author, and a lengthy
afterword in which he discusses plots and ideas for several Binscombe
Tales which will never, alas, be written.
THE
BLURB
The charters of Æthelbad . . .
confirm Bede's statement about the extent of his powers. An original,
dated 736, describes him as 'king not only of the Mercians but also of
all provinces which are called by the general name Sutangli, that
is South English .
What could be more appropriate
than that the continuing chronicles of Binscombe, that most English of
English towns in the south of the country, should be published on the
National Day—St George's Day [1999] ?
Binscombe has a long and
well-documented past. John Whitbourn's stories, however, concern another
Binscombe: one which is a slightly sinister, far less reassuring place
than its real counterpart. In this Binscombe, things are seldom what
they seem, and people should not be taken at face value.
No one has learned this lesson
more thoroughly than Mr Oakley, a relative newcomer to the area whose
family has long had roots there. It is through his eyes that we see life
in Binscombe, and encounter the decidedly strange people and events
contributing to everyday life in this most singular of towns. It is a
place where a trip to the seaside is not always the innocent, fun-filled
affair it may seem; where the simple act of buying a desk is fraught
with danger; and where Oliver Cromwell is much more than simply a name
from the history books.
Most mysterious of all,
perhaps, is the identity of Mr Disvan, Oakley's guide to life in
Binscombe. It is an identity which is finally revealed in the final
story, 'Up from the Cellar' or 'England Expects!', which concludes
(possibly) the Binscombe Tales and proves the truth of the local saying
that 'They always come back'.
More
Binscombe Tales: Sinister Sutangli Stories—a
companion to 1998's Binscombe Tales: Sinister Saxon Stories—contains
the final twelve stories in the Binscombe saga, five of which are
published here for the first time. There is also an introduction by the
author, and a lengthy afterword in which he discusses plots and ideas
for several Binscombe Tales which will never, alas, be written.
Contents: Foreword; 'An
Overview and Cheerio, or A Sutangli Speaks!' by John Whitbourn; 'It Has
Been Said . . .'; 'No Truce With Kings'; 'Let the Train Take the
Strain'; 'Rollover Night'; 'Yankee Go Home'; 'Canterbury's Dilemma';
'Every Little Breeze . . .'; 'Oh, I Do Like to be Beside the Seaside
(Within Reason)'; 'But After This, the Judgement'; 'It'll All be Over by
Christmas'; 'I Could a Tale Unfold'; 'Up from the Cellar, or, England
Expects!'; 'Stories I'll Never Get Round to Writing'.
Jacket art by Alan Hunter.
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