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David Garnett Alyse Gregory H. A. Manhood Phyllis Paul Littleton Powys Llewelyn Powys Philippa Powys
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LIFE, BE STILL!

by H A MANHOOD

Price: £14.99  ISBN-13: 978-1-908274-06-9  Book Dimensions: 210 × 148 mm
Hardback with dustjacket    Publication: 2013

Harold Alfred Manhood (1904-91), was a prolific writer of short stories whose work was acclaimed alongside peers such as Graham Greene and Dylan Thomas. However, while Greene and Thomas went on to become literary legends, Manhood gave it all up at the height of his success and disappeared into the Sussex countryside to live in a railway carriage and brew cider. Writer and auctioneer Frank Herrmann, paying tribute to Manhood in the Bookdealer in 1997 and issue 27 (Autumn 2010) of Slightly Foxed, said after the war he began to resent growing editorial interference with his writing and was appalled by the tiny payments he received for his output. So in 1953 he stopped writing, bought more land, started brewing cider and never wrote another word. Shortly before his death aged 87, Manhood sold his life's work to the British Library.

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H. A. Manhood was one of the most highly regarded short story writers of the 1930s. His work was praised by John Galsworthy, Henry Williamson, Hugh Walpole and H. E. Bates, who was to become a good friend. His British and American publishers, Jonathan Cape and Viking respectively, thought so highly of him that they paid him a salary to give him the time and space just to write, a most unusual arrangement which demonstrated their respect for his work. His stories were in demand both from popular papers such as the Evening News and John O’London’s Weekly, and from more literary periodicals such as the London Mercury and the Adelphi. They were included in annual best short story anthologies and in retrospectives of the masterpieces of English Literature.

Yet thirty years later he had all but stopped writing, and had become largely forgotten. This selection of some of his finest stories aims to reintroduce readers to a craftsman-writer with the skill to surprise and delight even the most jaded of readers through the freshness and succinct aptness of his phrasing, and the human insight to present the tenor of entire lives in miniature, in the telling of a single incident.

It was A. E. Coppard who noted that the short story should not be seen as a cut-down version of the novel: it was a different (and older) form with its origins in the folk tale and fairy tale, the fireside yarn, the pub anecdote. These sources influence our expectations: we look for evidence of the universal in the local, of the general lot in the particular fate. At the same time, we also seek to hear of the exception – the curious, the strange, the untoward – because they are an inevitable part of our existence too and perhaps what gives it spice. Coppard understood all this perfectly well in his own work, and so did Manhood. Their themes are ancient and everlasting: love, revenge, lust, peace, envy, generosity. These are seen at work in the lives of well-characterised individuals of the sort we might meet in a country inn, or by the wayside, yet there is still a sense of the timeless and immortal in the telling of these particular incidents. 

(From the Introduction by Mark Valentine)

LIFE, BE STILL and other stories by H.A. Manhood

   With an Introduction by Mark Valentine

h a manhood, life be still, mark valentine, the sundial press

h a manhood, life be still, mark valentineNightseed / Brotherhood /A Simple Tale / The Unbeliever / Apples by Night / The Cough / Devil in Church / Seahouses / Crack of Whips / Three Nails / Fish for Friday / God Came Running / The Rocking Stone / Thirty-Two Teeth / Life, Be Still! / Worm in Oak / The Wooden Uncle / The Uncooked Goose / No Ghosts / Apple Women / The Black Angel / The Human Impossibility / Fine Cider / Shall We Ghost? / Midget on Horseback / Fifty Years Dead / Stars in Daylight

Mark Valentine is the author of a biography of Arthur Machen (1995) and several volumes of short stories, including most recentlyThe Mascarons of the Late Empire & Other Studies (Ex Occidente Press, 2010), The Collected Connoisseur (Tartarus Press, 2010, with John Howard), The Peacock Escritoire (Ex Occidente Press, 2011) and Time, A Falconer: A Study of Sarban (Tartarus Press, 2011). He was a regular contributor to Book & Magazine Collector on neglected authors and has been an admirer of H.A. Manhood's work for over 20 years. He lives in North Yorkshire with his wife Jo and their cat Percy.

To be published: 2013


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JANUARY 2013
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