Thursday, July 03, 2025

Favourite Children's Authors: Joan Aiken


Joan Aiken: The Wolves of Willoughby Chase (1963)


Edward Gorey's hand is unmistakable in the cover above. The first, British edition was illustrated throughout by Pat Marriott, whose sketchy, almost Phiz-like graphic style has become almost inextricable from Joan Aiken's children's books, new and old. But there's perhaps something even more appropriate about this juxtaposition with the mad, campy, Gothic spirit of Gorey.

As long as I can remember, I've been reading and collecting Aiken's work. Ever since I first entered her strange alternate universe, an early nineteenth-century world situated somewhere between Jane Austen's home counties and Charles Dickens' London, I've felt at home there. As she explains at the opening of the Wolves of Willoughby Chase:
The action of this book takes place in a period of English history that never happened - shortly after the accession to the throne of Good King James III in 1832. At this time, the Channel Tunnel from Dover to Calais having been recently completed, a great many wolves, driven by severe winters, had migrated through the tunnel from Europe and Russia to the British Isles.
The Wolves Chronicles, her most famous novel-sequence, could, I suppose, be described as proto-steampunk in its obsession with the backwards view of what might have been the great nineteenth century if only King James hadn't been forced to flee from his kingdom in 1688, leaving no Dutch King William to win the Battle of the Boyne.

However things might have turned out, they would at the very least have been different.
From book to book, setting to setting - colonial America in Night Birds in Nantucket; a mythic version of Wales in the The Whispering Mountain; the imaginary "Roman American" realm of New Cumbria in The Stolen Lake - there's never a pause in the madcap pace of these adventures. More to the point, as the series progressed over the decades, Aiken was able to use her licence to rewrite history to critique not only Victorian laissez-faire industrialism, but also the brutal colonialism of that and other times.



    The Wolves Chronicles
    [in - approximate - sequential order]:

    Joan Aiken: The Wolves of Willoughby Chase (1962)

  1. The Wolves of Willoughby Chase (1962)
    • The Wolves of Willoughby Chase. Illustrated by Pat Marriott. 1962. The Wolves Chronicles, 1. A Puffin Book. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1974.
  2. This book, the first to be written, is still the most popular for many readers. It's quite restrained by the standards of what was to come from the depths of Aiken's imagination, but that early scene with a prissy young girl being threatened by wolves in a railway carriage has remained in my memory long after the rest of its somewhat melodramatic plot has faded. Evil governesses, haunted mansions, oppressive orphanages, and the constant threat of lethal violence from human and animal alike all feature as motifs in the story, though not nearly in as fully developed a form as they would eventually attain in the later volumes.

    Joan Aiken: Black Hearts in Battersea (1964)

  3. Black Hearts in Battersea (1964)
    • Black Hearts in Battersea. Illustrated by Pat Marriott. 1965. The Wolves Chronicles, 2. A Puffin Book. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1975.
  4. The fact that in Aiken's world the Protestant "glorious revolution" of 1688 clearly never took place opens up all sorts of plot possibilities. The second book in her roman-fleuve, Black Hearts in Battersea, concerns a cabal of Hanoverian revolutionaries in London, plotting to bring over Bonnie Prince George, the "true" heir to the throne. There are air balloons, bomb-plots, and missing heirs a-plenty. Simon, the ostensible hero, introduced as a mysterious wild boy in The Wolves of Willoughby Chase, turns out (unsurprisingly) to be of noble birth - as well as a dab hand at painting. More to the point, it's this book which introduces the true protagonist of the series, the cheeky and endlessly resourceful Dido Twite.

    Joan Aiken: Night Birds on Nantucket (1966)

  5. Nightbirds on Nantucket (1966)
    • Night Birds on Nantucket. Illustrated by Pat Marriott. 1966. The Wolves Chronicles, 3. A Puffin Book. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1977.
  6. Shifting the scene to America, and providing Dido Twite - missing, presumed drowned, at the end of the previous book - with a ten-month period of hibernation on a whaling ship, provides Aiken with scope to introduce even more material from her stock of nineteenth-century fictional tropes. Moby-Dick is firmly in her cross-hairs (though this time the whale is pink - and friendly), but so is the giant gun from Jules Verne's From the Earth to the Moon. Aiken's cannon is pointed at London, however, and threatens not only to end the Stuart dynasty but - even worse - to propel the island of Nantucket onto the Jersey Shore!

    Joan Aiken: The Whispering Mountain (1968)

  7. The Whispering Mountain (1968)
    • The Whispering Mountain. Illustrated by Pat Marriott. 1968. The Wolves Chronicles, 4. A Puffin Book. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1978.
  8. Though often described as hors-série, given that The Whispering Mountain concerns the doings of Owen Hughes, son of Captain Hughes of the Thrush, the ship which transports Dido Twite from Nantucket to England, it seems only proper to place it here, fourth in the series as well as in order of publication. It can also be seen as the moment when Aiken's somewhat chaotic mélange of styles finally begins to come into balance. Ancient Welsh legends and Bardic lore combine with a race of mysterious dwarfs from Central Asia to tip us from one crisis to another. Only the courage and never-say-die attitude of Owen Hughes and his friend Arabis can save the Harp of Teirtu from the machinations of the callous Marquess of Malyn. It's no surprise that, as well as winning the Guardian Children's Fiction Prize, this book was a runner-up for the Carnegie Medal.

    Joan Aiken: The Stolen Lake (1981)

  9. The Stolen Lake (1981)
    • The Stolen Lake. Illustrated by Pat Marriott. 1981. The Wolves Chronicles, 5. A Puffin Book. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1983.
  10. Twite's long - and frequently interrupted - voyage home to Britain after her sojourn on Nantucket allowed Aiken scope to "follow Dido Twite around the world." The first of these interludes, The Stolen Lake, is:
    set in an imaginary South American country near Hy Brasil, where a Lost Race civilization is nearing meltdown due to the insatiable demands of its ruler, Queen Ginevra (i.e. Guinevere), who has been drinking the blood of virgins to maintain her Immortality; but the coming of King Arthur returns the tale to ethical normalcy.
    - John Clute, "Joan Aiken." Encyclopedia of Science Fiction
    This complex tale resembles The Whispering Mountain in many ways, but the unabashedly supernatural nature of many of the events shows a certain shift in the tone of the series. What Aiken once played largely for laughs has now become rather more serious.

    Joan Aiken: Limbo Lodge (1999)

  11. Limbo Lodge [aka "Dangerous Games"] (1999)
    • Limbo Lodge. 1999. The Wolves Chronicles, 6. London: Red Fox, 2000.
  12. I suppose I had assumed that Aiken's "Wolves" stories might begin to lose their focus as the decades went by, given her creator's decision to leave Dido Twite still caught in essentially the same net of improbabilities that entangled her in the 60s and 70s. Nothing could be further from the truth. It's hard to avoid the suspicion that Aiken had been reading Ursula Le Guin's 1972 Vietnam parable The Word for World is Forest before venturing into the dark thickets of Limbo Lodge. In some ways this is my favourite of all of her works. Her detestation of the gloomy practices and ideologies of colonialism is spiced with a fascinated exploration of the complex world of the forests of Aratu, island of the Pearl Snakes. The references to "Angria," the Brontës' imaginary kingdom in Africa add piquancy to the usual Aikenian phantasmagoria.

    Joan Aiken: The Cuckoo Tree (1971)

  13. The Cuckoo Tree (1971)
    • The Cuckoo Tree. Illustrated by Pat Marriott. 1971. The Wolves Chronicles, 7. A Puffin Book. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1973.
  14. So, to make a long story short, Dido Twite appears to have left Nantucket on the English sloop Thrush, commanded by the "lively, imperturbable" Captain Osbaldeston, who (now styled Osbaldestone with an 'e') was succeeded in Bermuda by the "tall, stern" Captain Hughes (father of Owen, the hero of The Whispering Mountain) who, in his turn, was ordered to set sail for South America, then on to the Pacific in pursuit of the errant Lord Herodsfoot; she then took a side-trip on the Siwara to the island of Aratu, then rejoined the Thrush for the long voyage home to England with the now badly wounded Captain Hughes. Dido seems as imperturbable as ever when confronted by Highwaymen on the road back to London, however. Nor can witches, missing heirs, and hallucinogenic nuts prevent her from once again saving the day for the new king, Richard the IVth.

    Joan Aiken: Dido and Pa (1986)

  15. Dido and Pa (1986)
    • Dido and Pa. Illustrated by Pat Marriott. 1986. The Wolves Chronicles, 8. London: Red Fox, 1992.
  16. This book follows hard on the heels of The Cuckoo Tree. In fact, it begins with the conversation between Simon (now 6th Duke of Battersea) and Dido Twite intimated at the end of the previous book. For anyone weary of Hanoverian plotters, it comes as a bit of a relief to hear of the death of "Bonnie Prince Georgie" over the sea in Germany. Unfortunately he has a successor in the even more ruthless Margrave Wolfgang von Eisengrim, first cousin to the Pretender. A Prisoner of Zenda-like plot follows, with the attempted fabrication of a gullible double for the newly crowned King Richard, and a series of grim and violent adventures, with an even higher body count than usual. It's good to have roving packs of wolves back in the limelight, and particularly pleasing when they devour Dido's callous and duplicitous father Abednego Twite (whose catchy tunes - and more serious music - may, it is hinted, survive him). Once again virtue triumphs: but only just ...

    Joan Aiken: Midnight is a Place (1974)

  17. Midnight is a Place (1974)
    • Midnight is a Place. Illustrated by Pat Marriott. 1974. The Wolves Chronicles, 9. A Puffin Book. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1986.
  18. Like The Whispering Mountain, this book is generally considered hors-série. If it's to be placed anywhere in the sequence, though, it probably has to be here. It's set (for the most part) in the Dickensian industrial town of Blastburn, which played a similar role in The Wolves of Willoughby Chase. We're also given a precise date for once: Lucas Bell's first diary entry is dated 1842. Towards the end of the book Murgatroyd's mill has been bought by Lady Murgatroyd's cousin Lord Holdernesse, who seems to be promising a new era of fairness and justice in its appalling confines. It's certainly a very spirited tale, with a good deal of interesting information about Victorian mudlarks and the whole economic machinery of generating cash from scraps and refuse - a process explored with more symbolic intent in Dickens's Our Mutual Friend.

    Joan Aiken: Is (1992)

  19. Is [aka: Is Underground] (1992)
    • Is. Illustrated by Pat Marriott. 1992. The Wolves Chronicles, 10. London: Red Fox, 1993.
  20. Is ... is set at a time when the north of England has seceded from the south, and a grim gradgrind Dystopia feeds (almost literally) on duped children to fuel its industrial mania.
    - John Clute, "Joan Aiken." Encyclopedia of Science Fiction
    What Clute describes as the "Steampunk atmosphere of this tale" perhaps explains Aiken's choice of Is, Dido's younger sister, first introduced (under the name of "slut") as a lowly, starved servant girl in Dido and Pa, as a more appropriate protagonist than her increasingly high-toned sister. It must come after Midnight is a Place, as its principal setting, Blastburn, "has had its name changed to Holdernesse" [p.34], and Lord Holdernesse was just beginning to buy up the area at the end of the previous book. Since then, however, the whole town has been moved underground, and only the ruins of the old order are left outside its grim gates. With a combination of telepathy, grit, and guile, Is manages to upset the plans of her uncle, Roy Twite (otherwise known as "Gold Kingy"), find her missing cousin Arun - but not, unfortunately, his friend Davie Stuart, the heir to the throne, who died in one of the blast furnaces of the new order. The tidings of his death are so shocking to his father, King Richard, that he promptly dies, leaving the throne to descend to his cousin Simon, Duke of Battersea.

    Joan Aiken: Cold Shoulder Road (1995)

  21. Cold Shoulder Road (1995)
    • Cold Shoulder Road. 1995. The Wolves Chronicles, 11. London: Red Fox, 1996.
  22. Cold Shoulder Road follows straight on from Is. The two cousins, Is and Arun, have gone south in search of the latter's mother, and are promptly swept up in a conspiracy to smuggle goods through the Channel Tunnel by a group called the Merry Gentry. Is's abilities as a telepath, developed during his servitude in the mines in the previous book, are one of the few cards LOMAK [the League of Mothers and Kids] have to play in their struggle against all this negative male energy. Truth and justice do eventually prevail, but at a fearful cost in lost lives.

    Joan Aiken: Midwinter Nightingale (2003)

  23. Midwinter Nightingale (2003)
    • Midwinter Nightingale. The Wolves Chronicles, 12. New York: Delacorte Press, 2003.
  24. Some useful details about Aiken's alternative history were revealed in the previous book: for instance, the fact that Charles I was beheaded in this timeline, too, despite his wife Henrietta Maria's attempts to bolster the cause with a ship full of treasure. Midwinter Nightingale is equally informative about the early days of King Richard IV's reign: for instance, that his son Davie Stuart (who died in the north in Is) was the result of an earlier marriage. His new wife, Adelaide, also has children from a previous union (though this was concealed from the King), a fact which provides the narrative impetus for this new story, which runs more or less in parallel with Cold Shoulder Road. Dido is her usual resourceful self, though this time she has werewolves to contend with as well as the more common would-be usurpers.

    Joan Aiken: The Witch of Clatteringshaws (2005)

  25. The Witch of Clatteringshaws (2005)
    • The Witch of Clatteringshaws. 2005. The Wolves Chronicles, 13. A Yearling Book. New York: Random House Children's Books, 2006.
  26. The dynastic and social details in this, Aiken's final novel, have begun to mount up into a kind of anarchy of warring nations and plotters. The scene has shifted to Scotland, which gives her scope for even more experiments with regional vernacular. Short though it is, it contains enough plot for a much longer novel. The witch herself, and her gossipy letters to her various cousins, are perhaps its strongest point. Beyond that, it's clear that even with a new king on the throne - not Simon, who's mercifully been spared the burden - there'll never be peace in the British Isles at this rate. If a little less than an entirely satisfying conclusion to so long and baroque a narrative odyssey, The Witch of Clatteringshaws is a fine book in itself: though possibly intended for slightly younger readers than some of the earlier titles in the series.


Mary Thaler: My Wolves First Editions (2018)

A Few Notes on Chronology:

To say that the timeline of these books is a bit confusing would be to put it mildly. In the first of them, The Wolves of Willoughby Chase (1962), it's stated that the action "takes place ... shortly after the accession to the throne of Good King James III in 1832."
The next clear set of dates are given at the beginning of Dido and Pa (1986), where the updated "family tree of the Dukes of Battersea" gives 1818 as the birthdates for Simon, the 6th Duke, and his twin sister Sophie. It also gives 1840 as the date of the death of the 5th Duke. However, partway through the same book, Sophie states "Next year when I am eighteen ... my money comes out of trust and the lawyers can't stop me using it." [p.262].
There are various problems here. For a start, if the action of Dido and Pa is taking place in 1835 [1818 + 17 for Simon & Sophie's coming of age "next year"], then that means that "Good King James" only reigned for three years, 1832-35. This doesn't seem to fit in very well with the numerous contextual references to the "old King" and his long reign. Above all, it can't be reconciled with the 5th Duke's, Simon's "Uncle William," having "died of the quinsy last winter" [p.11] - i.e. 1834-35. Yet his death date is clearly given as 1840 in the Battersea family tree.
Midnight is a Place is also firmly dated to 1842 by a note in Lucas Bell's diary. So presumably this is meant to be a little later in the reign of Richard IV - or "Davie Jamie Charlie Neddie Georgie Harry Dick Tudor-Stuart" - heir to the throne in The Whispering Mountain (1968), and crowned at the end of The Cuckoo Tree (1971). He dies of grief at the news of the loss of his son and heir Prince Davie at the end of Is (1992), leaving his cousin Simon to take the throne as King Simon the First.
It's hard to see how any of these royal personages can be reconciled with the actual "Old Pretender" James III (1688-1766), or his son Charles III, "Bonnie Prince Charlie" (1720-1788). James II must presumably have continued his reign long after 1688 (he did, after all, live in exile in our own universe until 1701), and must have been succeeded by various "Tudor-Stuart" kings not named James or Richard - though there could certainly have been a few extra Charleses (perhaps four, to match the four Georges?) to bring us all the way to the 1830s. But there's a rather disconcerting aside on p.123 of The Stolen Lake (1981), where King Arthur's wife Queen Ginevra is described as having "very little chin ... like Queen Victoria." So maybe the latter, too, needs to be folded back into the succession: as a wife rather than a reigning monarch, perhaps?
The opening of the Channel Tunnel also seems to shift around in time. It's stated to have recently taken place at the beginning of The Wolves of Willoughby Chase, but Arun says, at the beginning of Cold Shoulder Road (1995), "They were still digging it when I ran away from home" [p.2], which is confirmed, in context, to be no more than "five years agone". We're still very much in the era of the original Wolves novel, it would appear, despite all these changes of monarch and scene ...
Clearly Joan Aiken wasn't one of those Emily Brontë-like authors who plot out their timelines with precision in an almanac before sitting down to write. On the contrary, she scattered round dates and dynasties with the careless profusion of an Arthur Conan Doyle, whose "Sherlock Holmes" chronology has baffled experts for well over a century. Nevertheless, I'd like to start the ball rolling with something along the following lines:

A Tentative Wolves Timeline:
[firm dates / conjectured dates]

  • 1818 - Hanoverian wars / Simon & Sophie born
  • 1820 - accession of James III to the throne (wrongly dated to 1832)
  • 1830 - opening of the Channel Tunnel
  • 1832 - events of The Wolves of Willoughby Chase
  • 1833 - events of Black Hearts in Battersea
  • 1833 - Dido Twite's ten-month coma aboard a whaling ship
  • 1834 - events of Night Birds on Nantucket
  • 1834 - events of The Whispering Mountain
  • 1834 - Dido Twite starts her voyage home on the Thrush
  • 1834 - events of The Stolen Lake in South America
  • 1834 - events of Limbo Lodge in the Pacific
  • 1834 - Death of William, Duke of Battersea (wrongly dated to 1840)
  • 1835 - Dido Twite returns to England on the Thrush
  • 1835 - events of The Cuckoo Tree / Coronation of Richard IV
  • 1835 - events of Dido and Pa in London
  • late 1830s - secession of the North, East and West from the rest of England
  • 1842 - events of Midnight is a Place in Blastburn
  • 1843 - events of Is in Holdernesse (the new name for Blastburn)
  • 1843 - events of Cold Shoulder Road / Accession of Simon I
  • 1843 - events of Midwinter Nightingale
  • 1844 - events of The Witch of Clatteringshaws / Accession of Piers Ivanhoe le Guichet Crackenthorpe (aka "Woodlouse" or "Cracky Billy") to the throne of England



Giles Gordon, ed.: Shakespeare Stories (1982)
One of Aiken's daughters lives in an old pub nearby - she had to sign a paper saying she wouldn't sell liquor to her guests.
- Elizabeth Bishop to Robert Lowell (July 30th, 1964)
This comment comes in a letter where Bishop is extolling to Lowell the homely atmosphere of the England she's just been visiting: "exactly like being in the pages of a Beatrix Potter book ... all the individual well-known animals, the rabbits playing at evening, all the old characters around."
Everything so minute, and built of flints - looking like soiled ancient hail-stones, to me. But you probably have seen all this long ago.
- Words in Air (2008): 545
Bishop's reference to "Aiken" is (of course) to the poet Conrad Aiken (1889-1973), Joan Aiken's father, now largely forgotten but once a bit of an up-and-comer in the modern poetry stakes, a classmate of T. S. Eliot's at Harvard, and author of Earth Triumphant (1914), along with many other collections of semi-traditional verse.
Aiken married [Canadian poet] Jessie MacDonald in 1912, and the couple moved to England in 1921 with their older two children; John (born 1913) and Jane (born 1917), settling in Rye, East Sussex (where the American novelist Henry James had once lived). The couple's youngest daughter, Joan, was born in Rye in 1924. Conrad Aiken returned to Cambridge, Massachusetts, as a tutor at Harvard from 1927 to 1928.
The couple divorced in 1929. All three of their children became writers, John as a SF writer and editor, Jane Aiken Hodge as a novelist, and Joan as a novelist and children's writer.

This rather checkered heritage does, however, offer certain clues to the distinctly transatlantic flavour of much of the latter's writing. Though born in the English Home Counties, she never seemed quite native to the place - she sounded more like a writer-in-residence than a born-and-bred insider.

Perhaps that's what appealed to me so much about her when I first read her work as a child. She didn't seem to belong - an important attribute for all us deracinated colonials, scattered across the globe by the imperial whims of our forebears.

I remember once, in some anthology in the School Library, running across a story by Joan Aiken about the discovery of a lost play by Shakespeare - a version of "Robin Hood", no less - which came to light in a lumber room and was sold to prevent the demolition of the old stately home it was in. This story delighted me greatly - especially the pieces of incidental pastiche she quoted from "The Tragicall Historie of Robin Hoode."
Act I, Scene I. Sherwood Forest. Enter John Lackland, De Bracy, Sheriff of Nottingham, Knights, Lackeys and attendants.

John L.Good sirs, the occasion of our coming hither
Is, since our worthy brother Coeur de Lion
Far from our isle now wars on Paynim soil,
The apprehension of that recreant knave
Most caitiff outlaw who is known by some
As Robin Locksley; by others Robin Hood;
More, since our coffers gape with idle locks
The forfeiture of his ill-gotten gains.
Thus Locksley's stocks will stock our locks enow
While he treats air beneath the forest bough. ...
I looked for it in vain in the rather po-faced pages of the collection pictured above, Shakespeare Stories, full of rather contorted tales-obliquely-invoking-the-Bard by what was then, half a century ago, considered the cream of the British literary establishment.


Joan Aiken: All But a Few (1974)


I did eventually locate it, though, as "A Room full of Leaves", right at the back of her early book All But a Few. It was worth ten of any of the efforts in the more official volume (though one or two of them weren't so bad, either).


Joan Aiken: The Haunting of Lamb House (1991)


She didn't quite fit - and that was her charm. She wasn't high culture, but she wasn't simply a children's writer, either: there was, after all, that Henry James connection. She even wrote a novel about him:
The Haunting of Lamb House ... set in the actual Lamb House in Rye, exposes two of its real-life inhabitants – Henry James ... and E. F. Benson – to the ghost of an eighteenth-century child who has had to endure the breakup of his family.
Perhaps it did all have something to do with the strange, haunted restlessness of her father Conrad. It's not as if it was unmotivated:
On February 27, 1901, [Conrad's father] William Ford Aiken murdered his wife and then committed suicide. According to his 1952 autobiography, Ushant, Aiken, then 11 years old, heard the two gunshots and discovered the bodies immediately thereafter.
... Though Aiken was reluctant to speak of his early trauma and ensuing psychological problems, he acknowledged that his writings were strongly influenced by his studies of Sigmund Freud, Carl G. Jung, Otto Rank, Ferenczi, Adler, and other depth psychologists. It was not until the publication of his autobiography ... that Aiken revealed the emotional challenges that he had battled for much of his adult life.


It's hard to know just what effect these revelations had on his children - though there may be some clues in Joan's rather sinister novella Voices, set in a haunted house in the imaginary town of Dune, which seems to parallel the role of Rye in her own life (as does the absentee writer father of the narrator).

Fortunately, by then Joan had already begun to carve out her own career as a writer:
Writing stories from an early age, she finished her first full-length novel when she was sixteen and had her first short story for adults accepted for publication when she was seventeen. In 1941 her first children's story was broadcast on the BBC's Children's Hour.
Aiken worked for the United Nations Information Centre (UNIC) in London between 1943 and 1949. In September 1945 she married Ronald George Brown, a journalist who was also working at UNIC. They had two children before he died in 1955.
After her husband's death, Aiken joined the magazine Argosy, where she worked in various editorial capacities and, she later said, learned her trade as a writer. The magazine was one of many in which she published short stories between 1955 and 1960. During this time she also published her first two collections of children's stories and began work on a children's novel, initially titled Bonnie Green, which was later published in 1962 as The Wolves of Willoughby Chase. By then she was able to write full-time from home, producing two or three books a year for the rest of her life ...
Whatever the motivations behind it, Joan Aiken's writing is a joy. I'd feared, when starting to reread it in preparation for this post, that the enchantment might have worn off since I first encountered it. But it doesn't seem at all pinchbeck to me. Maybe you had to be there, but for the bookish child of today, I suspect she could still be a shining star.

Perhaps that great enthusiast John Clute puts it best, in his SFE article:
Throughout her career Aiken generated work of an almost relentless fertility. There is a passionate knowingness in her invention of small details that is clearly a matter of her own satisfaction – few young readers would know, for instance, that the "hobey" played by Dido Twite's father is an oboe, the French hautbois having, in this world, been differently Englished. Her feverishness may derive to some degree from the example of her father, though she maintained strict professional control over even the most exuberant moments; the loving urgency of her depiction of character and landscape and plot seemed an intrinsic gift.
Peace to her ashes. But then, like all true writers, she can't really be said to be dead. Her work will certainly survive her.

Joan Aiken & family in their caravan (1951)
l-to-r: Joan Aiken, Taffy the cat, John & Elizabeth, Ron Brown





Rod Delroy: Joan Aiken

Joan Delano Aiken
(1924-2004)


    Novels:

    The Paget family (1978-82):

  1. The Smile of the Stranger (1978)
  2. The Lightning Tree [aka "The Weeping Ash"] (1980)
  3. The Young Lady from Paris [aka "The Girl from Paris"] (1982)

  4. "Jane Austen" novels (1984-2000):

  5. Mansfield Revisited (1984)
  6. Jane Fairfax: The Secret Story of the Second Heroine in Jane Austen's Emma (1990)
  7. Eliza’s Daughter (1994)
  8. Emma Watson: The Watsons Completed (1996)
  9. The Youngest Miss Ward (1998)
  10. Lady Catherine's Necklace (2000)

  11. Miscellaneous:

  12. The Silence of Herondale (1964)
  13. The Fortune Hunters (1965)
  14. Trouble With Product X [aka "Beware of the Bouquet"] (1966)
  15. Hate Begins at Home [aka "Dark Interval"] (1967)
  16. The Ribs of Death [aka "The Crystal Crow"] (1967)
  17. The Embroidered Sunset (1970)
  18. The Butterfly Picnic [aka "Cluster of Separate Sparks"] (1972)
  19. Died On A Rainy Sunday (1972)
  20. Voices in an Empty House (1975)
  21. Castle Barebane (1976)
  22. The Five-Minute Marriage (1977)
  23. Last Movement (1977)
  24. Foul Matter (1983)
  25. Deception [aka "If I were You"] (1987)
  26. The Haunting of Lamb House (1987)
  27. Blackground (1989)
  28. Morningquest (1992)

  29. Children's Books:

    Wolves Chronicles (1962-2005):

  30. The Wolves of Willoughby Chase (1962)
    • The Wolves of Willoughby Chase. Illustrated by Pat Marriott. 1962. The Wolves Chronicles, 1. A Puffin Book. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1974.
  31. Black Hearts in Battersea (1964)
    • Black Hearts in Battersea. Illustrated by Pat Marriott. 1965. The Wolves Chronicles, 2. A Puffin Book. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1975.
  32. Nightbirds on Nantucket (1966)
    • Night Birds on Nantucket. Illustrated by Pat Marriott. 1966. The Wolves Chronicles, 3. A Puffin Book. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1977.
  33. The Whispering Mountain (1968)
    • The Whispering Mountain. Illustrated by Pat Marriott. The Wolves Chronicles: prequel. 1968. A Puffin Book. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1978.
  34. The Cuckoo Tree (1971)
    • The Cuckoo Tree. Illustrated by Pat Marriott. 1971. The Wolves Chronicles, 6. A Puffin Book. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1973.
  35. Midnight is a Place (1974)
    • Midnight is a Place. Illustrated by Pat Marriott. The Wolves Chronicles: outlier. 1974. A Puffin Book. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1986.
  36. The Stolen Lake (1981)
    • The Stolen Lake. Illustrated by Pat Marriott. 1981. The Wolves Chronicles, 4. A Puffin Book. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1983.
  37. Dido and Pa (1986)
    • Dido and Pa. Illustrated by Pat Marriott. 1986. The Wolves Chronicles, 7. London: Red Fox, 1992.
  38. Is [aka: Is Underground] (1992)
    • Is. Illustrated by Pat Marriott. 1992. The Wolves Chronicles, 8. London: Red Fox, 1993.
  39. Cold Shoulder Road (1995)
    • Cold Shoulder Road. 1995. The Wolves Chronicles, 9. London: Red Fox, 1996.
  40. Limbo Lodge [aka "Dangerous Games"] (1999)
    • Limbo Lodge. 1999. The Wolves Chronicles, 5. London: Red Fox, 2000.
  41. Midwinter Nightingale (2003)
    • Midwinter Nightingale. The Wolves Chronicles, 10. New York: Delacorte Press, 2003.
  42. The Witch of Clatteringshaws (2005)
    • The Witch of Clatteringshaws. 2005. The Wolves Chronicles, 11. A Yearling Book. New York: Random House Children's Books, 2006.

  43. Arabel and Mortimer (1972-95):

  44. Arabel's Raven (1972)
  45. Escaped Black Mamba (1973)
  46. The Bread Bin (1974)
  47. Mortimer's Tie (1976)
  48. Mortimer and the Sword Excalibur (1979)
  49. The Spiral Stair (1979)
  50. The Mystery of Mr Jones's Disappearing Taxi (1982)
  51. Mortimer's Portrait on Glass (1982)
  52. Mortimer's Cross (1983)
  53. Mortimer Says Nothing [stories] (1985)
  54. Arabel and Mortimer (1992)
  55. Mortimer's Mine (1994)
  56. Mayhem in Rumbury (1995)

  57. The Felix trilogy (1978-88):

  58. Go Saddle the Sea (1978)
    • Go Saddle the Sea. Illustrated by Pat Marriott. 1978. A Puffin Book. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1983.
  59. Bridle the Wind (1983)
    • Bridle the Wind. Illustrated by Pat Marriott. 1983. A Puffin Book. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1986.
  60. The Teeth of the Gale (1988)
    • The Teeth of the Gale. Illustrated by Pat Marriott. 1988. A Puffin Book. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1990.

  61. St Ives Series (2000-02):

  62. In Thunder's Pocket. Illustrated by Caroline Crossland (2000)
  63. The Song of Mat and Ben. Illustrated by Caroline Crossland (2000)
  64. Bone and Dream. Illustrated by Caroline Crossland (2002)

  65. Miscellaneous novels:

  66. The Kingdom and the Cave (1960)
  67. Night Fall (1969)
  68. The Shadow Guests (1980)
    • The Shadow Guests. 1980. A Puffin Book. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1982.
  69. The Erl King’s Daughter. Illustrated by Paul Warren (1988)
  70. Voices [aka "Return to Harken House"] (1988)
    • Voices. Hauntings, 3. London: Hippo Books, 1988.
  71. The Shoemaker’s Boy (1991)
  72. The Midnight Moropus (1993)
  73. The Cockatrice Boys (1996)
  74. The Jewel Seed (1997)
  75. The Scream (2001)

  76. Stories:

  77. All You've Ever Wanted and Other Stories (1953)
    • Selected in: All But a Few. Illustrated by Pat Marriott. 1953, 1955, 1971. A Puffin Book. 1974. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1978.
  78. More Than You Bargained For and Other Stories (1955)
    • Selected in: All But a Few. Illustrated by Pat Marriott. 1953, 1955, 1971. A Puffin Book. 1974. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1978.
  79. Armitage, Armitage, Fly Away Home (1968)
  80. A Small Pinch of Weather and Other Stories (1969)
  81. The Windscreen Weepers (1969)
  82. Smoke from Cromwell's Time and Other Stories (1970)
  83. All and More (1971)
    • Selected in: All But a Few. Illustrated by Pat Marriott. 1953, 1955, 1971. A Puffin Book. 1974. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1978.
  84. The Green Flash (1971)
  85. A Harp of Fishbones (1972)
    • A Harp of Fishbones and Other Stories. Illustrated by Pat Marriott. 1972. A Puffin Book. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1975.
  86. All But a Few [aka "Not What You Expected"] (1974)
    • All But a Few. Illustrated by Pat Marriott. 1953, 1955, 1971. A Puffin Book. 1974. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1978.
  87. A Bundle of Nerves (1976)
    • A Bundle of Nerves: Stories of Horror, Suspense & Fantasy. 1976. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1978.
  88. The Faithless Lollybird and Other Stories (1977)
  89. The Far Forests (1977)
  90. A Touch of Chill (1979)
  91. A Touch of Chill: Tales for Sleepless Nights (1980)
  92. Up the Chimney Down (1984)
  93. A Goose on Your Grave (1987)
  94. Deception [aka "If I Were You"] (1988)
  95. Return to Harken House (1988)
  96. A Foot in the Grave (1989)
  97. Give Yourself a Fright (1989)
  98. Shadows & Moonshine (1990)
  99. A Fit of Shivers (1990)
  100. The Winter Sleepwalker. Illustrated by Quentin Blake (1991)
  101. A Creepy Company (1993)
    • A Creepy Company. 1993. A Puffin Book. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1995.
  102. A Handful of Gold. Illustrated by Quentin Blake (1995)
  103. Dead Man's Lane (1995)
    • Included in: A Creepy Company. 1993. A Puffin Book. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1995.
  104. Moon Cake and Other Stories (1998)
  105. Ghostly Beasts (2002)
  106. Snow Horse and Other Stories (2004)
  107. Serial Garden: The Complete Armitage Family Stories [Virago Modern Classics] (2008)
  108. The Monkey's Wedding and Other Stories (2011)
  109. The Gift Giving [Virago Modern Classics]. Illustrated by Peter Bailey (2016)
  110. The People in the Castle: Selected Strange Stories (2016)
  111. Stoneywish and Other Chilling Stories (2020)
  112. A Ghostly Gallery and Fantastic Fables [E-book]. Cover illustration by Pat Marriott (2023)
  113. Siren Stories & Weather Witches and Wise Women [E-book]. Cover illustration by Pat Marriott (2023)
  114. Tales of London Town. Illustrated by Annabel Pearl (2024)

  115. Picture Books:

  116. A Necklace of Raindrops (1968)
    • A Necklace of Raindrops and Other Stories. Pictures by Jan Pienkowski. 1968. A Puffin Book. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1978.
  117. The Kingdom Under the Sea and Other Stories (1971)
    • The Kingdom Under the Sea and Other Stories. Pictures by Jan Pienkowski. 1971. A Puffin Book. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1974.
  118. Mice and Mendelson. Illustrated by Babette Cole (1974)
  119. Tale of a One-Way Street. Illustrated by Jan Pienkowski (1978)
  120. The Kitchen Warriors (1983)
  121. Fog Hounds Wind Cat Sea Mice [aka "Fog Hounds and Other Stories"] (1984)
  122. The Last Slice of Rainbow and Other Stories (1985)
  123. Past Eight O'Clock. Illustrated by Jan Pienkowski (1986)
  124. The Moon's Revenge. Illustrated by Alan Lee (1986)
  125. Helena and the Wild Man [Oxford Reader] (2000)
  126. Serve Me Stefan [Oxford Reader] (2000)
  127. Wise Girl [Oxford Reader] (2000)
  128. Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. Illustrated by Belinda Downes (2002)
  129. The Wooden Dragon. Illustrated by Bee Willey (2004)

  130. Plays:

  131. Winterthing & The Mooncusser’s Daughter (1972 & 1973)
    • Winterthing & The Mooncusser’s Daughter: Two Plays for Children. Music by John Sebastian Brown. 1972 & 1973. A Puffin Book. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1975.
  132. Street (1978)
  133. The Tinker’s Curse (1978)
  134. Moon Mill (1982)
  135. Hatching Trouble (BBC: 1991)

  136. Poetry:

  137. The Skin Spinners (1976)

  138. Non-fiction:

  139. The Way to Write for Children (1982)
  140. [with John & Jane Aiken Hodge] Conrad Aiken Remembered (1989)

  141. Translation:

  142. The Angel Inn [Translated from the Comtesse de Ségur] (1976)


Lizza Aiken: Joan Aiken's books (2024)





Friday, June 27, 2025

Fifty Years after the Fall of Saigon


Tim O'Brien: If I Die in a Combat Zone (1973)


The other day I bought a copy of Tim O'Brien's classic Vietnam war memoir from a Hospice Shop. It felt strange, very strange, to reread it - to revisit the atmosphere of those times. It was, after all, first published while the war was still going on, after the withdrawal of American troops, but before the ultimate humiliation of the fall of Saigon.

O'Brien is probably better known, now, for his National Book Award-winning Vietnam novel Going After Cacciato (1978), together with the linked stories in The Things They Carried (1990), but it's worth remembering that this memoir, whose original title was If I Die in a Combat Zone, Box Me Up and Ship Me Home was named the Outstanding Book of 1973 by the New York Times.

Why? I guess because O'Brien tried to cover all the bases: he was honest about his own internal debate about the "morality" of the war, but also admitted that it was largely by chance that he failed to run away to Sweden rather than being shipped off to Vietnam with his unit.

He turned out, again by chance, to be serving in the same region where the infamous My Lai massacre had taken place the year before. He records the casual killings and cruelty which were part of everyday life as an occupying force. But he also explains the constant fear of being killed or maimed by mines or mortar fire which gnawed away at most soldiers - apart from the occasional hero (or psychopath) - from day 1 to day 365 of their tours.


James Fenton: All the Wrong Places (1988)


Mind you, if you want to draw any actual parallels between present day geopolitics and the fall of Saigon on on 30 April 1975, you'll have to look elsewhere. One place to go might be English poet and roving war correspondent James Fenton's classic All The Wrong Places: Adrift In The Politics Of Southeast Asia.

Fenton is still, perhaps, most famous - or notorious - for hitching a ride on a North Vietnamese tank just before it broke into the compound of the Saigon Presidential Palace. You can read some of his own thoughts on the matter in "The Fall of Saigon," from Granta 15 (1985).

And here are a few lines from one of his strangely Kiplingesque war poems, "Out of the East":
... it's a far cry from the temple yard
To the map of the general staff
From the grease pen to the gasping men
To the wind that blows the soul like chaff
And it's a far cry from the paddy track
To the palace of the king
And many go
Before they know
It's a far cry.
It's a war cry.
Cry for the war that has done this thing.

Stanley Karnow: Vietnam: A History (1983)


As usual, there are Academic histories a-plenty. Stanley Karnow's Vietnam: A History, billed in its later editions as "the first complete account of Vietnam at war," is the one that I dutifully read from cover to cover when I had to teach The Things They Carried in a Modern Novel course at Auckland Uni in the early 1990s.

I must admit, though, to a preference for the shorter and more focussed Vietnam: The Ten Thousand Day War, based on Michael Maclear's epic 1980 26-part Canadian TV documentary about the Vietnam War.


Michael Maclear: Vietnam: The Ten Thousand Day War (1981)


Even further back than that, when all these "old, unhappy far-off things" seemed considerably closer to us in time, I was asked to review an essay collection called Tell Me Lies About Vietnam: Cultural Battles for the Meaning of the War. Here's a quote from what I had to say about the subject then, in 1989:


Alf Louvre & Jeffrey Walsh, ed.: Tell Me Lies About Vietnam (1988)


... the fact that one has compiled and classified a series of responses to Vietnam in different media does not add up to a consistent view from which one can generalize. The war was appropriated by various interest groups ... but the infinite suffering and death that was inflicted on Indo-China by the Americans and their allies seems to me to be a fact which somewhat outweighs the importance, in the final analysis, of yet another spate of Narcissistic films and books about ‘the end of American innocence’. The virtues of this book lie in its particularity – its emphasis on individual artists (Ralph Steadman, Tim Page, Susan Sontag) and popular media (cartoons, comic books, rock music). Its errors reside in the assumption that some over-view of the falsification of the war can be deduced from all this – an attitude which is, in itself, as dangerous a ‘lie’ about Vietnam as any of those which the contributors expose.
I might say it rather differently now - talk about over-complex, Grad School-inflected, run-on sentences! - but I still agree with that remark that "the infinite suffering and death ... inflicted on Indo-China by the Americans and their allies seems to me to be a fact which somewhat outweighs the importance ... of Narcissistic films and books about ‘the end of American innocence’." It's really just a question of proportion.


Grethe Cammermeyer: Visiting Vietnam (2019)
A 2008 study by the British Medical Journal came up with a ... toll of 3,812,000 dead in Vietnam between 1955 and 2002.
The Wikipedia article from which I took these figures estimates 58,098 American casualties overall. Even if you dispute the BMJ's analysis - and some do - you still have a discrepancy of literally millions of military and civilian casualties inflicted in Vietnam by two foreign armies - the French and the Americans - neither of whom suffered even a tenth of this death toll themselves.

North Vietnamese Spring offensive (13 December 1974 – 30 April 1975)


And yet, despite all that fire power and overwhelming military might - on paper - they still didn't win. The French were driven out by the Viet Minh, and a treaty of partition between North and South Vietnam was signed in Geneva on July 21, 1954. But the Americans insisted on reenacting the whole conflict on a larger scale, only to sign their own "Peace Accord" in Paris on January 27, 1973, officially ending their direct involvement in the Vietnam War.


Hubert van Es: Evacuating Saigon (29 April 1975)


A year later North Vietnamese forces toppled President Thieu's regime without any significant response from the U.S. The war had become too unpopular for anyone in power there to wish to resume it, and so the last pictures of what was then America's longest war were those disgraceful sauve-qui-peut scenes of America's friends and allies clamouring desperately for space on the last helicopters out.

It did take some time after that debacle for the old adage to be forgotten: "Never get into a land war in Asia". Just as it took Europe 25 years after 1914 to nerve itself up for another world war, so it took 25 years after 1975 before the Americans again decided to get into a quick war in Afghanistan to punish a few "fanatical extremists" - oddly enough, the same extremists (then referred to as the mujahideen) they'd been funding for decades, ever since the Soviet invasion in 1979.


Taliban offensive (1 May – 15 August 2021)


Twenty years later, in 2021, the Americans withdrew in even more disgraceful circumstances than in 1975, having achieved far less, and leaving even larger crowds of those who had helped them at the mercy of the vengeful Taliban.

The parallels seem too obvious to be stressed, but maybe they still don't seem real to those who don't remember 1975, and may not have been born when the post-9/11 invasion of Afghanistan took place. Wars, however, are very real. They have a horrible way of coming home to you in unexpected ways: when a bomb goes off next to you for some obscure geopolitical reason, for instance.

I just wish we could show some signs of learning a few lessons from all this ancient history. For instance, that humiliating an entire country, not just their rulers - as Donald Trump has just done in Iran - is sowing the wind to reap the whirlwind. All empires crumble, and the fact that they tend to flex their muscles most ostentatiously just before their fall ought to remind the "great powers" that a return to the arts of peace and diplomacy is not necessarily a sign of weakness.

It's tempting, too, to remark that if the armies of the "free world" could learn to stop stomping around other people's backyards, their health services might end up having to deal with far fewer cases of PTSD. But the Forever War (as Noam Chomsky and others have called it) continues: sometimes it's Iraquis who are the enemy, sometimes Iranians, occasionally even Russians, but there's always got to be someone to machine-gun and bomb in the name of "liberal democracy".






Tim O'Brien (2023)

Tim O'Brien
(1946- )

    Fiction:

  1. "Where Have You Gone, Charming Billy?" (1975)
  2. Northern Lights (1975)
    • Northern Lights. 1975. Flamingo. London: HarperCollins Publishers, 1998.
  3. Going After Cacciato (1978)
    • Going After Cacciato. 1978. Flamingo. London: HarperCollins Publishers, 1998.
  4. The Nuclear Age (1985)
  5. The Things They Carried (1990)
    • The Things They Carried. 1990. Flamingo. London: HarperCollins Publishers, 1991.
  6. In the Lake of the Woods (1994)
  7. Tomcat in Love (1998)
  8. July, July (2002)
  9. America Fantastica (2023)

  10. Non-fiction:

  11. If I Die in a Combat Zone, Box Me Up and Ship Me Home (1973)
    • If I Die in a Combat Zone. 1973. Flamingo Modern Classics. London: HarperCollins Publishers, 1995.
  12. Dad's Maybe Book (2019)

  13. Secondary:

  14. Greene, Graham. The Quiet American: Text and Criticism. 1955. Ed. John Clark Pratt. The Viking Critical Library. New York: Penguin, 1996.
  15. Herr, Michael. Dispatches. 1977. Introduction by David Leitch. Textplus. London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1989.
  16. Karnow, Stanley. Vietnam: A History. 1983. Rev. ed. London: Pimlico, 1990.
  17. Louvre, Alf & Jeffrey Walsh, ed. Tell Me Lies About Vietnam: Cultural Battles for the Meaning of the War. Milton Keynes: Open University Press, 1988.
  18. Maclear, Michael. Vietnam: The Ten Thousand Day War. 1981. London: Thames / Methuen, 1982.
  19. Sheehan, Neil. A Bright Shining Lie: John Paul Vann and America in Vietnam. 1988. London: Guild Publishing, by arrangement with Jonathan Cape, Ltd., 1989.




Tim O'Brien: The Things They Carried (1990)


Tuesday, June 17, 2025

Jack Ross: Stories


Simon Creasey: Coromandel (2005)

Preface

'Talking against death'! yep that sums our craft up
in three brutal words
..."
- Tracey Slaughter. Email to Jack Ross (14/2/2024)


While I was in the early stages of compiling the pieces which would eventually turn into my latest book of stories, Haunts (2024), I decided to try to straighten out all the myriad drafts I'd accumulated by pasting them up online.

As it turned out, that didn't help me much (if at all), but it did provide the kernel for a larger Stories site which has now grown to include the texts of all my published short fiction to date - with the exception of my three novels, each of which already has one (or more) websites dedicated to it.

Like the earlier Poems site, then, to which this is intended as a companion,

contains the texts of all three novellas and four short fiction collections I've published so far. It's almost a year since Haunts was launched for sale online (well in advance of the actual physical booklaunch on Saturday, 5th October), so it seems like an appropriate time to share its contents with any of you who'd like to sample the text before buying a copy.

Before outlining the content of the site, though, I thought I'd better say some more about its structure.


The first thing you see, if you click on this link, will be the warning above.

After you've clicked on the orange "I understand and I wish to continue" button, you'll be taken to the following page:


This should give you full access to the site.

The reason for all this is because some of the stories do contain swear words and sexually explicit material, and I've found in the past that this tends to attract the attention of roving web editors, who red flag and - in some cases - simply take down any pages which offend in this way.

I've therefore decided to mark both this and my Poems site - as well with those devoted to the three novels in my R.E.M. trilogy - as containing "Adult content":

    Jack Ross: Nights with Giordano Bruno (2000)


  1. Nights with Giordano Bruno. ISBN 0-9582225-0-9. Wellington: Bumper Books, 2000. [xii] + 224.


  2. The Imaginary Museum of Atlantis. ISBN 0-9582586-8-6 . Auckland: Titus Books, 2006. 164 pp.
    1. Who am I? Automatic Writing
    2. Where am I? Cuttings

  3. Jack Ross: E M O (2008)


  4. E M O. ISBN 978-1-877441-07-3. Auckland: Titus Books, 2008. [vi] + 258 pp.
    1. EVA AVE
    2. Moons of Mars
    3. Ovid in Otherworld
This "sensitive content" gateway will, unfortunately, have to be renegotiated every time you access any of these sites. No doubt this will have the effect of reducing the number of visits to each of them, but it also increases the level of dedication needed to get there - not in itself a bad thing. Bona fide readers are always welcome.

Here, then, is a breakdown of the contents of my new fiction website. At present it contains 59 stories, ranging in length from novellas to flash fictions, taken from seven books:




    Jack Ross: Monkey Miss Her Now (2004)


  1. Monkey Miss Her Now & Everything a Teenage Girl Should Know. ISBN 0-476-00182-X. Auckland: Danger Publishing, 2004. 138 pp. [13 short stories]

  2. Jack Ross: Trouble in Mind (2005)


  3. Trouble in Mind. ISBN 0-9582586-1-9. Auckland: Titus Books, 2005. [ii] + 102 pp. [single novella]

  4. Jack Ross: Kingdom of Alt (2010)


  5. Kingdom of Alt. ISBN 978-1-877441-15-8. Auckland: Titus Books, 2010. [iv] + 240 pp. [8 short stories]


  6. The Annotated Tree Worship: Draft Research Portfolio. ISBN 978-0-473-41328-6. Paper Table Novellas. Auckland: Paper Table, 2017. iv + 88 pp. [first of 2 novellas]


  7. The Annotated Tree Worship: List of Topoi. ISBN 978-0-473-41329-3. Paper Table Novellas. Auckland: Paper Table, 2017. iv + 94 pp. [second of 2 novellas]

  8. Jack Ross: Ghost Stories (2019)


  9. Ghost Stories. ISBN 978-0-9951165-5-9. 99% Press. Auckland: Lasavia Publishing, 2019. 140 pp. [12 short stories]

  10. Jack Ross: Haunts (2024)


  11. Haunts. ISBN 978-1-991083-17-3. 99% Press. Auckland: Lasavia Publishing, 2024. 202 pp. [13 short stories]






Jack Ross: Stories (1996- )


Along with my Opinions site ("Essays, Interviews, Introductions & Reviews - 1987 to the present"), and the already available Poems, this showcases pretty much all of the work I've published to date. Enjoy!