News from the Duchy by Arthur Quiller-Couch

(8 User reviews)   1279
By Susan Romano Posted on May 6, 2026
In Category - The Open Shelf
Quiller-Couch, Arthur, 1863-1944 Quiller-Couch, Arthur, 1863-1944
English
Imagine a place where the past feels like it’s still breathing—where Cornwall’s ancient cobblestones and sea mist hide stories of mystery, love, and a little magic. Arthur Quiller-Couch’s *News from the Duchy* isn’t just a collection of stories; it’s a time machine to a quirky world where a ghost sues a farmer over a wall gap, a clever faker gets caught, and a noble’s secret changes everything. The main conflict here isn’t one big enemy—it’s life’s little lies and legends that make you wonder what’s real and what’s just a good tale. Think of it buried in 1910s gossip, weird wills, and a man who can’t sell his mother’s pies because a hunk is stuck in the thorne. If you like *The Living Dead*? Actually, it’s lighter than that—like *The Wright’s Charmish*? Sorry—this is about two doctors duking it out over a surgery gone wrong, or a comedy of neighbor dogs and fences. For readers who grew up on local ghost stories or family secrets felt in sunny cafés, *News from the Duchy* is a charming maze you’ll want to wander forever.
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The Story

*News from the Duchy* is a short story collection, not one plot, but think of it weaving through Cornwall’s countryside. One tale centers on a noisy lawsuit by a ghost over a wall—yes, a ghost with legal papers. Another sticks with a barber-turned-groundskeeper who faces a dare hiding a pet under a plane of peat. There’s a doctor’s maze of pride and a trick sale, mystery in a farmer ignored by gossip who survives (sort of), and the aftermath of a wrong surgery that feels like a bitter comedy dance between words and wits. You also meet a man with a pot of funds and a crazy log lady? Wait, I need focus—these snapshots of Duchy life feel straightforward: little secrets unravel, some romantic sparks fly into a marriage vow, maybe thieves fix a boat or cure burnt cake despair. The only real heartbeat thread is the narrator’s awe at each regional truth that strains mundane facts to fantastic, where the talk is sly and roots are deep. No single grand conflict—instead, it’s all microscopic, like explaining a theft with a book or a will’s final mean laugh.

Why You Should Read It

Honestly, read this because you need a real-world quiet vacation. The characters feel like you know them—the sharp old lady hiding gold, the pair of chirping cows, the minister ignoring late feud bread. It’s comfortable but keen; we want you doing everyday detective work—like, ‘Who let that smuggler pay with songs exactly?’ Insights leap at you softly about human greed and forgiveness. Details— how a hat or peat ditch is described—gives you tickles reading any line meant by Quiller-Couch’s genuine charm. At age, old feels actually light—or how few fail us each update. Since he was known as Q, a sweet professor-collected fable folk. But be warned, if you crave hi-speed endings, this may clash with quiet tone wisdoms.

Final Verdict

*News from the Duchy* for closed library-cozy readers—those who sit longer with Old French-like chat over ‘heart last novel.’ Perfect for readers of W. Somerset Maugham or E. F. Benson with a twist of fantasy myths. Avoid only if you seek anger pulses from thrill action race you here imagine— slow it’s to admire word time with pipe near sea. Lovers of 1900 hidden pockets should come quickening pages with a careful hush. The dialogue goes long, but the joy stays, like wry notes after a country-curable night. This review loves smaller! This volume won't abandon your nightstand–a worthy repeat test.



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Karen Thomas
2 years ago

A must-have for graduate-level students in this discipline.

Paul Jackson
4 months ago

Thought-provoking and well-organized content.

Linda Hernandez
2 years ago

Exactly what I was looking for, thanks!

Susan Moore
1 year ago

One of the most comprehensive guides I've read this year.

Thomas Smith
9 months ago

The layout of the digital version made it easy to start immediately, the visual layout and supporting data make the reading experience very smooth. I'll be recommending this to my students and colleagues alike.

5
5 out of 5 (8 User reviews )

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