Welkin Weasels: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Hellish Horse]]: The dreaded [[Incredibly Lame Pun|manless horsehead]] of [[Shout-Out|Sleepless Hallow]].
* [[Hellish Horse]]: The dreaded [[Incredibly Lame Pun|manless horsehead]] of [[Shout-Out|Sleepless Hallow]].
* [[High-Class Glass]]: Lord Hannover Haukin's monocle.
* [[High-Class Glass]]: Lord Hannover Haukin's monocle.
* [[Humans Are Bastards]]
* [[Humans Are the Real Monsters]]
* [[Impaled with Extreme Prejudice]]: {{spoiler|Magellan, Count Flistagga.}}
* [[Impaled with Extreme Prejudice]]: {{spoiler|Magellan, Count Flistagga.}}
* [[Inept Mage]]: Wodehed. Not that he doesn't actually have magical abilities, but he can't use them with any consistency. He does get a great moment in the third book {{spoiler|by calling the Kraken.}}
* [[Inept Mage]]: Wodehed. Not that he doesn't actually have magical abilities, but he can't use them with any consistency. He does get a great moment in the third book {{spoiler|by calling the Kraken.}}

Latest revision as of 20:00, 14 October 2016

A series of Talking Animal children's books by Garry Kilworth, which has been compared favourably to Redwall and is often read by the same target audience.

The series originally consisted of a trilogy, showcasing the adventures of the outlaw weasel Sylver and his band of followers as they battled against the unjust rule of the villainous stoat Prince Poynt and his corrupt sheriff Falshed, in a generically medieval milieu. Kilworth later wrote a second trilogy, set in a Victorian-inspired era, about the descendants of four of the original band and some of their enemies.

The most obvious trope demonstrated in the books is the Shout-Out. Many, many references to popular culture are made, including movies, books, poems and Real Life English history.

Tropes used in Welkin Weasels include: