Another exceptional book by T. F. Powys. Outside of Mr. Weston's Good Wine, this may be the best thing I have read by him. His style and imagination are well suited to the fable and the short story. These are strange, macabre, humorous, melancholy, and at times puzzling tales. They zig when you expect them to zag, they often have sudden and surprising endings, and they will be well served by multiple readings. Some of my favorites off hand include "Mr Pim and the Holy Crumb," The Seaweed and the Cuckoo-Clock," "John Pardy and the Waves," "The Dog and the Lantern," "Darkness and Nathaniel" (maybe my favorite), and "The Corpse and the Flea." Still, all of them were fairly memorable. The themes are various, but seem to me to center around God (who can become anything, and appears as everything: a holy crumb, a mouse, a mysterious personage, or a raging fire) and death (many of the stories involve sudden violence, rotting corpses, suicide, and the graveyard). And yet, from those seemingly simple themes, Powys has weaved wonderfully complex and opaque tales, that don't always have any simple or didactic meaning. A truly haunting collection of fables, proving once again that Powys is the true master of Christian allegory.