Manly Wade Wellman: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
prefix>Import Bot
(Import from TV Tropes TVT:Main.ManlyWadeWellman 2012-07-01, editor history TVTH:Main.ManlyWadeWellman, CC-BY-SA 3.0 Unported license)
 
m (Mass update links)
Line 13: Line 13:
* [[Brother Chuck]]: Evadare is not heard from again in any of the short stories after "Trill Coster's Burden". However, in the novels ''The Old Gods Waken'' and ''After Dark'', John mentions that Evadare is staying with friends while he gathers up money so they can start a homestead and get married. Also she appears in the novel ''The Hanging Stones''.
* [[Brother Chuck]]: Evadare is not heard from again in any of the short stories after "Trill Coster's Burden". However, in the novels ''The Old Gods Waken'' and ''After Dark'', John mentions that Evadare is staying with friends while he gathers up money so they can start a homestead and get married. Also she appears in the novel ''The Hanging Stones''.
* [[Celibate Hero]]: John, until he weds Evadare
* [[Celibate Hero]]: John, until he weds Evadare
* [[Did You Just Scam Cthulhu]]: John's good at this, though sometimes he takes [[Eldritch Abominations]] down more [[Did You Just Punch Out Cthulhu|physically.]]
* [[Did You Just Scam Cthulhu]]: John's good at this, though sometimes he takes [[Eldritch Abominations]] down more [[Did You Just Punch Out Cthulhu?|physically.]]
* [[Evil Counterpart]]: One story pits John against another musician with an ebony fiddle, who seems to have gotten his skills from a [[Rock Me Asmodeus|less holy source]].
* [[Evil Counterpart]]: One story pits John against another musician with an ebony fiddle, who seems to have gotten his skills from a [[Rock Me, Asmodeus|less holy source]].
* [[Fearsome Critters of American Folklore]]: A whole flock of them appear at the climax of "The Desrick on Yandro".
* [[Fearsome Critters of American Folklore]]: A whole flock of them appear at the climax of "The Desrick on Yandro".
* [[Funetik Aksent]]
* [[Funetik Aksent]]
* [[God Was My Co Pilot]]: in "Over the Hills and Everywhere"
* [[God Was My Co-Pilot]]: in "Over the Hills and Everywhere"
* [[Improbable Weapon User]]: John's silver-strung guitar is sometimes the only thing standing between him and death or worse.
* [[Improbable Weapon User]]: John's silver-strung guitar is sometimes the only thing standing between him and death or worse.
* [[Literary Allusion Title]]: More than one of his Silver John stories was inspired by/named after an Appalachian folk song.
* [[Literary Allusion Title]]: More than one of his Silver John stories was inspired by/named after an Appalachian folk song.

Revision as of 04:02, 9 January 2014

Manly Wade Wellman (1903-1986) was a prolific American writer who worked in practically every genre, but best known for his dark fantasy stories about a traveling musician named John who frequently finds himself battling supernatural menaces in the deep backwoods of Appalachia. Wellman had already written other Occult Detective stories, demonstrating a talent for weirdness and a quirky sense of humour, but the "Silver John" stories (so-called for disambiguation, although their protagonist is always just plain John) are additionally enlivened by Wellman's enduring interest in the folklore and folk music of backwoods America.

Wellman's short stories were adapted as episodes of The Twilight Zone ("The Valley Was Still"; the adaptation is retitled "Still Valley"), Night Gallery ("The Devil Is Not Mocked") and Monsters ("Rouse Him Not"). Far less successfully, a movie was made based on some of the John stories, The Legend of Hillbilly John.

On a completely different note, his other works include Sherlock Holmes's War of the Worlds.


His works provide examples of: