Readings Newsletter
Become a Readings Member to make your shopping experience even easier.
Sign in or sign up for free!
You’re not far away from qualifying for FREE standard shipping within Australia
You’ve qualified for FREE standard shipping within Australia
The cart is loading…
Percival Christopher Wren is best known as a novelist, publishing twenty-eight novels from 1912 to 1941, the most famous of which being Beau Geste (1924). Wren also published seven short story collections: Stepsons of France (1917), The Young Stagers (1917), Good Gestes (1929), Flawed Blades (1933), Port o’ Missing Men (1934), Rough Shooting (1938), and Odd-But Even So (1941). These short story collections contained a total of 116 stories. There were also two omnibus collections published, Stories of the Foreign Legion (1947) and Dead Men’s Boots (1949), containing stories taken from Stepsons of France, Good Gestes, Flawed Blades, and Port o’ Missing Men. In addition to the 116 stories published in Wren’s short story collections there are some additional items in The Collected Short Stories. At Oxford: Innocent Ernest and Artful Eintz is a short story originally published in 1919 in an obscure fiction magazine. The Romantic Regiment and Twenty-Four Hours in the Foreign Legion are factual articles originally published in magazines. Wonderful Egypt is an article (more a photographic essay) originally published in The Strand Magazine. The article I Saw a Vision! originally appeared in a rare psychic magazine, Prediction. There is also an article found in an Australian newspaper, Meaning of Dreams , where Wren relates a couple of dreams he had experienced. Finally there is Broken Glass , an unpublished short story. Each story has introductory comments by the editor, John L. Espley. Volume two of The Collected Short Stories contains eighteen short stories and two non-fiction articles originally published between 1928 and 1933. Twelve of the eighteen stories come from the collection, Good Gestes (1929), and the remaining six from Flawed Blades (1933). One of the articles was originally published in a fiction magazine, Soldiers of Fortune (December 1931), and the other article first appeared as a BBC radio broadcast.
$9.00 standard shipping within Australia
FREE standard shipping within Australia for orders over $100.00
Express & International shipping calculated at checkout
Percival Christopher Wren is best known as a novelist, publishing twenty-eight novels from 1912 to 1941, the most famous of which being Beau Geste (1924). Wren also published seven short story collections: Stepsons of France (1917), The Young Stagers (1917), Good Gestes (1929), Flawed Blades (1933), Port o’ Missing Men (1934), Rough Shooting (1938), and Odd-But Even So (1941). These short story collections contained a total of 116 stories. There were also two omnibus collections published, Stories of the Foreign Legion (1947) and Dead Men’s Boots (1949), containing stories taken from Stepsons of France, Good Gestes, Flawed Blades, and Port o’ Missing Men. In addition to the 116 stories published in Wren’s short story collections there are some additional items in The Collected Short Stories. At Oxford: Innocent Ernest and Artful Eintz is a short story originally published in 1919 in an obscure fiction magazine. The Romantic Regiment and Twenty-Four Hours in the Foreign Legion are factual articles originally published in magazines. Wonderful Egypt is an article (more a photographic essay) originally published in The Strand Magazine. The article I Saw a Vision! originally appeared in a rare psychic magazine, Prediction. There is also an article found in an Australian newspaper, Meaning of Dreams , where Wren relates a couple of dreams he had experienced. Finally there is Broken Glass , an unpublished short story. Each story has introductory comments by the editor, John L. Espley. Volume two of The Collected Short Stories contains eighteen short stories and two non-fiction articles originally published between 1928 and 1933. Twelve of the eighteen stories come from the collection, Good Gestes (1929), and the remaining six from Flawed Blades (1933). One of the articles was originally published in a fiction magazine, Soldiers of Fortune (December 1931), and the other article first appeared as a BBC radio broadcast.