This blog is devoted to fantasy, supernatural and decadent literature. It was begun by Douglas A. Anderson and Mark Valentine, and joined by friends including James Doig and Jim Rockhill, to present relevant news and information.
Wednesday, July 1, 2015
VAUGHAN WILKINS
Earlier, we looked at Fanfaronade, a timeslip story. Timeslips, and resonances across time, are also found in the novels of the curiously forgotten mid-20th century author Vaughan Wilkins (1890-1959). His books, with strikingly designed dustwrappers, were nearly all issued by Cape. They are mostly historical fictions, with a rather Dickensian air, full of rumbustious characters and picturesque incidents. He seems to have been particularly interested in Victorian times, and wrote a textbook on the Industrial Revolution.
An exception is Valley Beyond Time (1955), a fantasy in which a legendary island appears off the coast of South West Wales. This is lyrically described and the book has a lightly-touched mystical dimension. The American tycoon in the story is a bit too much of a conventional casting, but Wilkins is not the only author to have used this improbable stock figure. Otherwise, the young family caught up in the miraculous geography are freshly and appealingly drawn. His other fantasy work includes City of Frozen Fire (1950), a lost race novel.
Once Upon A Time, An Adventure (1949), is an historical fantasy described on the dustjacket flap (illustrated here) as “this most exuberant and eventful of all Mr Vaughan’s books”. It certainly crams in a great deal of invention, starting with a secret discovered in the Prince Consort’s study by the newly acclaimed King Edward VII. It then moves to contemporary times (the Forties) where Warrack, described as “a sort of Robin Hood” and “a sort of Scarlet Pimpernel as well”, the leader of a gang of European outlaws, is in pursuit of the lost treasure of the Grand Duchy of Ehrenburg and is up against renegade Nazis as well as the police.
Until recently, even the bare facts of Wilkins’ life were not easily discovered. But a reading group connected with “Reading 1900-1950”, the Sheffield Hallam University special collection of popular fiction, tackled his work in November 2013, and one of their number researched his background. This revealed that Wilkins was not, it seems, Welsh, despite the Welsh settings of some of his books, and his Welsh-sounding name.
The official sources say he was born in Camberwell (London) in 1890. His father, a parson, was born in Nottingham and his mother, a singer and music teacher, was born in London. Wilkins seems to have been a working journalist most of his life, and his novels did not begin until his maturer years, when he was 47. It's not clear why his books have fallen from view. They may have seemed somewhat older than their time when they were published: quite long, with a strong delight in storytelling for its own sake, full of the unlikely and extravagant,and mostly romantic adventures. Has anyone else read him: which of his books do you recommend?
A CHECKLIST OF BOOKS BY VAUGHAN WILKINS
Sidelights on Industrial Revolution (Jarrolds, 1925)
And So – Victoria (Cape, 1937)
Endless Prelude (Routledge, 1937)
Looking Back To See Straight (Individualist Bookshop,1942)
Seven Tempest (Cape, 1942)
Being Met Together (Cape, 1944)
After Bath, or, if you prefer, the Remarkable case of the flying hat… (Cape, 1945)
Once Upon A Time, An Adventure (Cape, 1949)
The City of Frozen Fire (Cape, 1950)
[Introduces] Hermsprong; or, Man as he is not…by Robert Bage (Turnstile Press, 1951)
A King Reluctant (Cape, 1952)
Crown Without Sceptre (Cape, 1952)
Fanfare for a Witch (Cape, 1954)
Valley Beyond Time (Cape, 1955)
And So – Victoria (Revised edition, Pan, 1956)
Lady of Paris (Cape, 1956)
Dangerous Exile (Retitled film tie-in edition of A King Reluctant, Pan, 1957)
Husband for Victoria (Cape, 1958)
A much loved copy of "After Bath," has been passed down in my family since it was purchased in Foyle's(owing to the bookseller label on the rear pastedown) in the 1940's. I was fascinated by this book as a child, especially by the pirate stories. This was when Harry Potter was becoming a household name and, looking back, I am quite pleased that I had such obscure old favourites to enjoy. My grandparents often read Walter de la Mare aloud to us as children and for some reason I always thought "After Bath" was one of his books so I am quite pleased to be reminded of this book and now want to search for others by Wilkins.
ReplyDeleteThank you, and how good to hear a Vaughan Wilkins book has become an heirloom! You were certainly fortunate to have de la Mare read aloud to you too. Mark
ReplyDeleteI read nearly all Vaughan Wilkins's novels as a youngster and still live them. Try "And So Victoria" and "Seven Tempest" - dastardly plots against and by the Hanoverians, Dickensian characters, spirited heroines.
ReplyDeleteJust found this site! I've loved Vaughan Wilkins's books most of my life and my elder daughter was named Amelia because I was particularly taken with the story of Princess Amelia in And So - Victoria.
ReplyDeleteThank you, it's good to find VW does indeed have some keen readers. Mark
DeleteI first read "Fanfare for a Witch" when I was ten years old.I loved the hero Javan Tearce and vowed to call any son that.
ReplyDeleteI had a son-but my husband didn't fancy the name,alas.
Thank you, it's nice to hear from another keen VW reader.
ReplyDeleteMark
Only read 'city of frozen fire' - in dutch translation I'm afraid. My parents bought it back in the fifties, but I have re-read the book several times. Thanks to Amazon I now have the english original and ordered some other of his books too.
ReplyDelete