Short Story:Twenty Pence With Envelope and Seasonal Greetings: Difference between revisions

From Discworld & Terry Pratchett Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Created page with "A short story written in the style of the great Victorian horror writers, like M. R. James or Edgar Allan Poe. A man appears on the writer's doorstep, and tells him a chilling...")
 
(publication, cat)
Line 1: Line 1:
A short story written in the style of the great Victorian horror writers, like M. R. James or Edgar Allan Poe.
A short story written in the style of the great Victorian horror writers, like M. R. James or Edgar Allan Poe.
A man appears on the writer's doorstep, and tells him a chilling tale of a portal to a world filled with horribly large kittens, robins, and festive messaged, scrawled over the night sky. He has been driven mad by the dread images, and can only yell such mystifying messages as ''Merry Christmas From Alan And The Kids'' and, of course, ''Twenty Pence With Envelope and Seasonal Greetings''.
A man appears on the writer's doorstep, and tells him a chilling tale of a portal to a world filled with horribly large kittens, robins, and festive messaged, scrawled over the night sky. He has been driven mad by the dread images, and can only yell such mystifying messages as ''Merry Christmas From Alan And The Kids'' and, of course, ''Twenty Pence With Envelope and Seasonal Greetings''.
Originally published in ''Time Out'' magazine in 1987, the story is reprinted in {{BS}}.
[[Category:Short stories]]

Revision as of 23:26, 26 January 2013

A short story written in the style of the great Victorian horror writers, like M. R. James or Edgar Allan Poe.

A man appears on the writer's doorstep, and tells him a chilling tale of a portal to a world filled with horribly large kittens, robins, and festive messaged, scrawled over the night sky. He has been driven mad by the dread images, and can only yell such mystifying messages as Merry Christmas From Alan And The Kids and, of course, Twenty Pence With Envelope and Seasonal Greetings.

Originally published in Time Out magazine in 1987, the story is reprinted in A Blink of the Screen.