The Lost and the Lurking

by Manly Wade Wellman

John the Balladeer (3)

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Country folk, especially backcountry folk, are like to be a mite suspicious of strangers. But a plain man with a civil manner and no highfalutin airs can count on a neighborly reception from simple, decent people, so when the natives of Wolver looked to be fixing to whale on Silver John, he reckoned maybe it wasn't the sleepy little hamlet it seemed. But then, if it was, he had no business there anyhow. The man who picked the guitar with the silver strings had seen some doings in this show more mountain country, and had a reputation with some almighty powerful souls, not all of them flesh and blood. So when the government got curious about the goings-on in Wolver, it wasn't so strange that they should have asked Silver John to see what he could see, nor at all peculiar that the wanderer had shouldered his pack and his guitar and hiked up the trace of a road to take a gander. Wolver had a desolated look, from the smoking trash piles outside the town to the tumbledown ruined church. The children in the grimy yards stared at him dully, while their elders ignored him or watched him with undisguised hostility. John had no quarrel with them, but it sure looked like they were set on picking one with him... show less

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3 reviews
My first Silver John story, this book had me enthralled from the beginning. I eagerly tore through it, despite the main character's disorienting mountain-speak. Similar to how reading a good book from another era proves rewarding but challenging, Silver John's colloquialisms slowed my progress, but I couldn't put the book down because I just loved everything about the story from the tone, the characters, the setting, and the plot.

Then I came to the end. And that's what happened...the book just ended. No snappy twist, no "ah ha" moment, Wellman just stopped the action. I would have given this book at least four stars except for the very disappointing ending. Still, Wellman's writing impressed me enough to check out another Silver John show more book. I hope the next one I read ends better. show less
½
Ralph Roberts, a book publisher and local celebrity on URTV (a public broadcasting station here in Asheville) first turned me on to Wellman. I have since been collecting him in a varied number of genres. I was very much pleased with this novel which plays out in the Appalachian Mountains--my home. The setting was quite real to me, and yes, even a bit disturbing, as I personally have come across sacrificial sites in these woods. Silver John--who takes his name and aspect from John the Baptist--carries a silver strung guitar into his adventures in the isolated mountainous regions of the Eastern United States. I would describe Wellman's novel as a sort of Clark Ashton Smith, Robert E. Howard approach to sorceress adventure, all within the show more tones of mountain culture--it's a trip to hear Silver John repeatedly use such Southern words as "air", "naught" and "reckon". Wellman's knowledge of the Occult comes from quite classical references--it's obvious he was very well read. You may find yourself looking a few books up. I too, like Silver John, have been witness to the Esoteric keeper's face--you should know what I'm talking about from the cover. Take notice that Witches' Sabbats include nude persons. show less
A Silver John novel. Silver John is sent by a shadowy "government man" to discover what is going on in the small Appalachian town of Wolver. He finds an active occult group has taken over the town. John is clearly depicted as Christian so this could almost be considered a religious clash.

re-read 6/26/2023

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Witchy Fiction
253 works; 126 members

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278+ Works 3,999 Members

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Common Knowledge

Original publication date
1981
People/Characters
Silver John; Tiphaine; Lute Baylor; Ottom Orcutt; Quill Norbury; Eula Jarboe (show all 7); Simon Latchney
Important places
Wolver; Southern Appalachia
Epigraph
Horatio: O day and night,but this is wondrous strange!

Hamlet: And therefore as a stranger give it welcome.

--Hamlet, Price of Denmark, ACT I, SCENE 5
Dedication
for Kirby McCauley who got me to write it
First words
I'd been told to look out for three trees on the west side of the highway, three tall tulip poplars bunched up like a green bouquet for some big giant girl.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)And I saw all the stars, a-shining down on us in their faithful beauty.

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Fantasy, Horror
DDC/MDS
813.54Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-19991945-1999
LCC
PS3545 .E52858 .L6Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1900-1960

Statistics

Members
204
Popularity
159,675
Reviews
3
Rating
(3.95)
Languages
English
Media
Paper
ISBNs
2
ASINs
5