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The Arrival of Missives (2016)

par Aliya Whiteley

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"In the aftermath of the Great War, Shirley Fearn dreams of challenging the conventions of rural England, where is life is as predictable as the changing of the seasons. The scarred veteran Mr. Tiller, left disfigured by an impossible accident on the battlefields of France, brings with him a message: part prophecy, part warning. Will it prevent her mastering her own destiny? As the village prepares for the annual May Day celebrations, where a new queen will be crowned and the future will be reborn again, Shirley must choose: change or renewal?"--Page [4] of cover.… (plus d'informations)
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In The Arrival of Missives by Aliya Whiteley, the author continues to stun me with her expert wordcraft. Transitioning from the previous short work of New Weird fiction, The Beauty, Ms. Whiteley easily feels at home in the historical/science fiction genre. It was a solid short story, which I thoroughly enjoyed, however, I could not give it higher stars since I did end up feeling a little cheated towards the end. Perhaps it is because Ms. Whiteley is such a great author, I wanted more out of The Arrival of Missives. Literally, more — I wanted the story to continue.

I went into Missives not knowing what to expect. I thought, at first, that it was perhaps going to be a bit Pride and Prejudice-y, which had me confused since that would be remarkably different from Ms. Whiteley’s work in the past. We have our protagonist Shirley, completely smitten with a battle-scarred professor returned from war, a professor who seems to have his own agenda, and a local boy every assumes will marry Shirley. Seems pretty simple. And then, BAM! Professor goes topless and we discover the truth. What truth? Won’t talk about it here because I don’t want to spoil it, but look for a spoiler vlog about it Saturday!

The turn it took at the end, with the professor, really threw me for a loop. I guess, in the end, I felt a lot like Shirley did. Angry, confused, and determined to do something (which obviously I could not as a mere reader). The writing was infallible, pacing was great, character development (for such a short story) was fantastic. My complaint was simply that it ended too soon! I wanted to know more, to follow Shirley on her mission/adventure! But seriously, if you’re looking for a short, kinda weird kinda sci-fi story to pick up, give The Arrival of Missives by Aliya Whiteley a look.


// I received this title for free in exchange for an honest review // ( )
  heylu | Jan 8, 2020 |
In post-WWI rural England Shirley is an ambitious seventeen-year-old: she wants to become a fêted schoolteacher. There are simply not enough men around any more to fill all the jobs, and she intends to grow beyond the stifling limits of her tiny farming village and their pre-war standards. On the other hand, she seems naive enough to think that her infatuation with her teacher, a newcomer in her community called Mr Tiller, will translate directly into assistance with her career as well as a marriage. It turns out, though, that Tiller is an outsider in more than one respect, and that he has plans for Shirley. She believes she is magnanimous enough to accept his war injuries for what they are, even though they have earned him the reputation of being “not a real man”. This being Weird Fiction, of course, Shirley will be thrown into unexpected and mind-bending emergencies.

I liked this one, quite a bit. The body horror is fairly minimal, and the fantastical elements are sfnal and out of left field, but this novella compensates by taking a very different approach to what Weird Fiction usually tastes like: The arrival of missives is definitely a female flavour of Weird, and uses its post-war setting quite effectively. It’s also very well written: Shirley’s voice is one of the book’s best features. ( )
1 voter Petroglyph | Jun 26, 2019 |
Reading weird and dark fiction at the rate that I normally do can sometimes inspire a kind of tunnel vision. While stories may differ greatly in subject matter, setting, or voice, the one element that has always remained the same in my experience is tone. Each story, no matter how diverse the prose, generally fluctuates between inspiring feelings of terror or awe. To put it another way, my resulting state of mind come the story’s end is generally the same. Weird is the weird fiction that doesn’t presume to upset the balance of reality or point out our human insignificance within the grand scheme. I think it’s for this reason that I struggled with The Arrival of Missives, Aliya Whiteley’s new novella from Unsung Stories. For nearly its entire length it refused to fit into the parameters that I had subconsciously built for it, humbling me by revealing the blinders that I had been wearing during this literary journey.


When one considers Shirley Fearn, the heroine of our tale—I blanche at the notion of calling her “plucky,” as she’d likely detest the word—this resistance makes all the more sense. Shirley is an adolescent girl growing up in Somerset, a peaceable British hamlet mainly comprised of farmers and tradesmen, but this world of narrow fortunes holds no appeal for her whatsoever. Shirley desires to become a schoolteacher, a wish that coincides with the romantic feelings that she not-so-secretly harbors for her own instructor, Mr. Tiller. She has designs to leave the family property, gain an education in Taunton, and return home to become Mrs. Shirley Tiller. Throughout the story, Shirley’s dreams are never viewed through a condescending or rose-tinted lens. Whiteley presents Shirley as a self-serious girl whose budding into womanhood does nothing to distract her from what she sees as her ultimate goal. Though she seems to keep everyone at an arm’s distance, Shirley is still someone with whom we can sympathize and feel close.

Mr. Tiller, a veteran of the Great War only two years in the distance, acts as embodiment of the town’s latent fears of invasion and the overturning of Old Ways. His position is made physically literal by the “scars” he has returned with from the battlefield, a strange porous rock embedded in the flesh of his torso. Shirley spies her instructor’s condition one evening and, using her teacher’s secret as leverage in a bid to gain his confidence and get closer to him, is enlisted in Tiller’s amorphous mission whose success will ensure the prevention of some great catastrophe on the horizon.

Horror and the Weird being kissing cousins as they are, a great deal of fiction from the latter camp tends to place an emphasis on unsettling the reader and slowly constructing a sense of foreboding that gradually builds toward a moment of crisis. Whiteley really isn’t interested in that approach at all. The Arrival of Missives reads more like a prosaic British novel of the kind that frequent college courses, unfolding at a leisurely pace that will come as a small shock to those more accustomed to snappier thrills. Her style encourages patience, and come the tale’s end that patience is satisfactorily rewarded.

Reading Whiteley’s novella is a process akin to a dance to which only the author knows the steps; just when we think we have anticipated the story’s next turn, Whiteley elegantly sidesteps us. We become like Shirley, head-strong children who believe that their conception of the world is whole and true and that they remain the masters of their own fate while faceless puppeteers commandeer the strings with quiet assurance. Because for all her careful planning and determination, Shirley eventually discovers that not every Rasputin has a beard, that sometimes it’s okay to like the person that everyone says you should, and that the ashes of incinerated dreams can serve as the cradle of new ones. It’s a veritable laundry list of Life’s Big Lessons, but White communicates them with a delicacy and unadorned beauty that invigorates their impact and allows us to greet them with unjaundiced eyes. One particularly magnificent scene involves Shirley’s first sexual encounter following her reign as queen of the village’s May Day festivities. The way that Whiteley grounds Shirley’s heightened romantic sensations in the mundanity of the physical act is rather masterful, a moment that rings unerringly true with regards to our own virginal spirit projections where we remained vaguely in tune with the pleasures of the flesh but found our minds caught in a racing stream of endless questions and wishes and disappointments.

Reading The Arrival of Missives is not a passive experience. Some narratives are built for mild engagement and entertainment, but not Whiteley’s. The reader will wrestle with every injustice and ponder the unanswerable questions right alongside Shirley Fearn, coming away from the novella with the assurance that sentient rocks and interdimensional beings hold only a dim candle to all the intricacies of human relationships we bear within our own reality. It’s a new but entirely welcome impression to have upon completing a work of literary Weird fiction. The field should be thankful for having someone like Aliya Whiteley in its corner. ( )
  JoseCruz223 | Nov 13, 2017 |
I’d been keen to read something by Whitely after a tweet had named half a dozen or so under-appreciated genre authors including Nina Allan, myself and Whiteley, among others; and given that’d read a lot of Allan’s fiction and found it good, I wanted to try Whiteley. I read this on the train on the way back from Scarborough – a surprisingly pleasant journey, given the shocking state of our railways. The Arrival of Missives is set immediately after the First World War, in a small village that has suffered its fair share of casualties. Most of those in the novella, however, are children – or at least were too young to fight. Shirley Fearn, a teenager, dreams of a life outside the small village in which she lives, although her father wants her to marry a local lad who can then inherit the farm. Shirley also has a crush on the new village school teacher, Mr Tiller, a veteran of the war. She makes plans to attend teacher training in a nearby town, and insinuates herself into Tiller’s life… only to discover that his torso has a largew piece of rock embedded in it, large enough that he should not be alive as it occupies the space where his organs should be. At this point, The Arrival of Missives takes this piece of weirdness and runs with it. The stone was sent back in time by humans from the distant future, and is one of many such “missives” – this one happened to find Tiller near-death and caught up on some barbed wire in No Man’s Land. It makes for a weird disconnect – a detailed story of post-WWI life in a small village, almost Lawrentian in tone, and this science-fictional idea, which has no rational support or narrative scaffolding. But that, I guess, is what New Weird is. And yet The Arrival of Missives works because the writing is so good. Shirley is a compelling narrator, and her concerns are well-handled. The “missive” adds an odd flavour to the novella, which most will like more than I did… but I suspect this is still a contender for a BSFA or BFS Award next year. ( )
  iansales | Oct 19, 2016 |
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"In the aftermath of the Great War, Shirley Fearn dreams of challenging the conventions of rural England, where is life is as predictable as the changing of the seasons. The scarred veteran Mr. Tiller, left disfigured by an impossible accident on the battlefields of France, brings with him a message: part prophecy, part warning. Will it prevent her mastering her own destiny? As the village prepares for the annual May Day celebrations, where a new queen will be crowned and the future will be reborn again, Shirley must choose: change or renewal?"--Page [4] of cover.

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