The Black Dog, and Other Stories by A. E. Coppard

(8 User reviews)   1654
By Samuel Smirnov Posted on Apr 1, 2026
In Category - Western Fiction
Coppard, A. E. (Alfred Edgar), 1878-1957 Coppard, A. E. (Alfred Edgar), 1878-1957
English
Hey, have you ever stumbled across a book that feels like finding a forgotten box of old photographs? That's what reading A. E. Coppard's 'The Black Dog, and Other Stories' is like. This isn't your typical collection of neat, tidy tales. It's a series of snapshots from rural England a century ago, where the line between the everyday and the eerie is paper-thin. The title story, 'The Black Dog,' starts with a simple premise: a man finds a stray dog. But in Coppard's hands, this simple act becomes something strange and unsettling. Is the dog just a dog, or is it a shadow from the man's past, or maybe a sign of something worse to come? Coppard doesn't give you easy answers. He paints these vivid, often beautiful, pictures of country life—the pubs, the fields, the village gossip—and then he lets something quietly strange or deeply human slip in. It's not horror, exactly. It's more like a chill on a sunny day. If you're tired of predictable plots and love stories that sit with you, making you wonder about the quiet mysteries of ordinary people, you need to pick this up. It’s a quiet, masterful collection from a writer who deserves to be remembered.
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First published in 1923, A. E. Coppard's collection feels both timeless and distinctly of its era. These stories are set in a pre-modern England of village greens, winding lanes, and country inns. The characters are shepherds, publicans, traveling men, and ordinary folk whose inner lives are anything but ordinary.

The Story

There isn't one single plot, but a mood that ties the stories together. In 'The Black Dog,' a solitary man's act of kindness towards a stray becomes a haunting meditation on loneliness and obsession. 'Arabesque: The Mouse' finds a musician grappling with a late-night visitor that challenges his sense of peace. Other tales, like 'The Field of Mustard,' explore the raw, often painful, dynamics of love and family among rural workers. Coppard has a incredible eye for the telling detail—the way light falls in a dusty room, the specific sound of a footstep on gravel—that makes these worlds feel completely real. The 'conflict' is often internal: a character wrestling with a memory, a fear, or a sudden, unsettling realization about their own life.

Why You Should Read It

I fell for Coppard's writing because it's so deceptively simple. He doesn't shout; he whispers. His prose is clean and vivid, but it carries a tremendous emotional weight. He treats his rural characters with immense dignity and depth, never making them into caricatures. The 'otherness' here isn't supernatural monsters, but the strange shapes of human desire, regret, and isolation. Reading these stories is like listening to a master storyteller by a fireside. You get drawn into these small, precise moments that somehow open up into big questions about life.

Final Verdict

This book is perfect for readers who love atmospheric short stories and classics that fly under the radar. If you're a fan of Thomas Hardy's sense of place, or the subtle unease in early M.R. James, but want something focused on everyday people, you'll connect with Coppard. It's also a great pick for writers, as a study in how to build mood and character with incredible economy. Fair warning: it's not a fast-paced, action-packed read. It's a slow, rich, immersive one. Pour a cup of tea, settle in, and let Coppard's beautifully observed, quietly haunting world swallow you up for a few hours.



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Anthony Ramirez
1 year ago

Used this for my thesis, incredibly useful.

Anthony Johnson
10 months ago

Based on the summary, I decided to read it and the content flows smoothly from one chapter to the next. A true masterpiece.

Dorothy Wright
1 year ago

I had low expectations initially, however the arguments are well-supported by credible references. Exactly what I needed.

Lisa Flores
2 months ago

Solid story.

Jennifer Jones
7 months ago

Not bad at all.

4
4 out of 5 (8 User reviews )

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