![]() More can be found out about Sarban here and all of his most significant writings have been kept alive by Tartarus Press.įirst published in ‘Ringstones and Other Curious Tales’ – Peter Davis, London, 1951. Written in 1947, A Christmas story was one of the author’s earliest literary ventures and by 1951 Sarban seems to have ceased writing altogether. He remains as little known today as he was in his own lifetime but his works are worthy of exploration. ![]() Sarban (which means “Caravan-driver” in Persian) was the pen name of the Yorkshire writer John William Wall, himself a diplomat based in the Near East for many years. It was a large piece of meat, purplish, like beef, you understand, but there was a piece of skin on it, and on the skin some hair, and that hair was long and woolly and reddish in colour… ![]() ![]() What is eventually revealed in this story remains partially hidden, half-glimpsed, a mysterious symbol and a paradox as repulsive and as welcome as Christmas Day itself. Thawed by a bottle of vodka which, due to its catalytic branding, propels the story onward in a particular direction through the frozen Siberian Taiga where images of starvation and salvation morph in and out of step with those of Good King Wenceslas. ![]() I will tell it as Alexander Andreievitch Masseyev told it me in his little house outside the walls of Jedda years ago one hot, damp Christmas Eve.Ī traditional story within a story then, thawed from the mind of a weary Russian diplomat in the desert. ![]()
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