Thunder Oak, Castle Storm, Windjammer Run, Gaslight Geezers, Vampire Voles, Heastward Ho!
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Author | Garry Kilworth |
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Cover artist | John Howe |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Genre | Children's literature Fantasy |
Publisher | Random House UK |
Published | 1997-2003 |
Media type |
Welkin Weasels is a series of fantasy novels by British author Garry Kilworth. As of 2003, it consists of six books, all published by Random House's Corgi Juvenile imprint.
Contents |
Years after all the humans mysteriously vanished from the island of Welkin, a group of outlaw weasels set out to find them in hopes of restoring the crumbling sea walls that surround the island.
Following the clue found in Thunder Oak, the weasels journey to a city inhabited by quarreling squirrels.
Sylver and his outlaws set sail for the Island of Dorma, where the humans are reputed to be in a perpetual sleep.
Years after the return of the humans, the weasel detective Montegu Sylver attempts to solve the disappearance of a foreign dignitary while preventing his cousin from setting off explosives in the city.
Monty and his friends battle the swarms of vampiric voles invading the capital city.
Monty and friends travel to the eastern empire of Far Kathay to find the stolen jade shoes of the Green Idol of Ommm.
The animals featuring in the series are primarily species native to England, though more exotic species are occasionally mentioned. The first book explains that in the years following the disappearance of all humans, the animals of Welkin, both those wild and once domesticated, made their way into the abandoned castles and villages, using what the humans had left behind. Gradually the animals learned to speak human language and, to an extent, use human tools. While some of the animals were content to live in the forest, the mustelids in particular adapted to a more civilized way of living. The otters and mink took to the riverways; the badgers kept to the subterranean territories; the pine martens stayed in the trees; of the remaining weasels, stoats, and now-feral ferrets, the stoats were the most ambitious and aggressive, and took control of Welkin.
The island of Welkin is populated not only by animals, but statues created by humans that have since come to life. The statues have the ability to talk, but most do so rather poorly and have only limited intelligence. All statues wander Welkin constantly in search of their "First and Last Resting Place," that being the quarry from which the stones they were sculpted from were cut, or the forest from which the trees used to carve them were grown.
The comedic elements of the series rely heavily on the use of puns and literary references, including allusions to Shakespearean and Biblical stories.