Hi Everyone!
It’s May, which means it’s once again time to participate in one of my favorite blogging events throughout the years. You guessed it: WYRD AND WONDER!!!
If you’re not familiar with #WyrdAndWonder, let me just quickly plagiarize my intro from last year:
It’s essentially a blogging / social media event, in which folks around the internet celebrate their love of the Fantasy genre by posting different themed content around the subject (during the month of May). Leading this extraordinary charge are a few amazing folks at various places and blogs. In 2026 we have: Ariana over at The Book Nook, Annemieke of A Dance With Books, Jorie from Jorie Loves A Story, Lisa of Dear Geek Place and Imyril of There’s Always Room For One More.
I’ve been an on-again / off-again participant over the years, sometimes posting a lot, but usually only posting a little (and in 2024 not at all). Looking back, it appears I first climbed aboard in 2021, and did some posting in 2022, 2023, and 2025. Much like #Blaugust, the event has prompted me (pushed me) to get a little more creative, often resulting in some of my favorite posts here on A&A.
This year, it appears that the theme is:
Or as Imyril lays out in Wyrd And Wonderful Plans:
“This year’s event coincides with two full moons so we’ll also be honouring the changing faces of the moon in fantasy from lunar deities and natural magic to shapeshifters and places you can only reach in the right season.”
There’s a whole month of lunar prompts to be explored, but the planets aligned so that the first one I could howl about was for the second day: WEREWOLF.
I’ll admit there’s been a bit of a dearth of werewolf fiction discussed on this blog, although an early 2013 review of Dead Man’s Hand at least mentions a werewolf (it’s a bit of catalyst for that story).
In any case, with the first change fast approaching — and a tradition of lycanthropy leading back at least as far as Ancient Greece — I wondered just where the hell I should start. I stumbled upon an anthology of werewolf fiction specializing in short wolfy tales from the Victorian Era. It’s called Terrifying Transformations: An Anthology of Victorian Werewolf Fiction 1838-1896, and it seemed as good a place to start as any. The collection contains tales from Arthur Conan Doyle, Rudyard Kipling, William Butler Yeats, and Bram Stoker. I hope to be able to go back and explore these tales, and indeed the whole rest of the anthology at some point, but for my quick stay in Victorian Werewolf land, I wanted to explore the work of an author I’d never heard of.
I landed on Clemence Housman’s The Were-Wolf. I hadn’t heard of Housman before (try saying that ten times fast), but after a little research, I know her to be an author, illustrator, engraver, and leading figure in the woman’s suffrage movement.
As for her story, The Were-Wolf, I found it to be a strangely alluring piece. Published in 1896, it hardly resembles anything we might read today, werewolf related or not. The first several pages follow around a little boy — who can’t be more than three years old — as he toddles around a workshop of some kind, until finally a strange voice upon the wind begs to be let inside. Then the tale reads somewhat like a ghost story until finally a woman arrives wearing white robes and carrying an axe. Everyone is immediately taken with her except one character, Christian, who saw wolf tracks in the snow.
The only part of the story that got a little out of hand, is towards the end when Christian hunts the woman, called White Fell, and the two run for hours, one seemingly only a step behind the other. As chase scenes go, it’s actually pretty compelling except for the fact that they’re running. Now actual wolves can sprint for miles at a time, so it kinda makes sense that White Fell might be able to do this, but Christian?
There is a reference to Ovid’s Metamorphoses which an annotation in the text helpfully pointed out, regarding the race of Hippomenes and Atalanta. Perhaps this was the main influence for this scene? Still, this was either the slowest highspeed chase ever or . . . I missed something else entirely.
Something else which stood out to me, was Housman’s conception of the werewolf myth, and how it contrasted with our own modern tellings. In Housman’s milieu, werewolves can be killed with holy water, and must return to their wolf-form by midnight. There’s no mention of the full moon and actually several occasions point out that there is no moon at all. There are, of course, no mentions of silver bullets, or hot vampires (shucks!).
I’m a little bit fascinated with this, and curious what common knowledge of “werewolf lore” might have looked like during the Victorian Era, so as to see where Housman departs from convention (of the time), and where she stays in line. And how all that differs from what we know today. I think some of this will be revealed as I continue to read the anthology, but it is also worth noting that the anthology was released in 2013, so even the norms at the time of this book’s release, will probably be very different than those of 2026.
Finally, the end of the story is pretty heavily loaded with Christian imagery (not to mention that’s the literal name of one of the characters), which I could see being a bit off-putting for modern readers, however, it didn’t really bother me too much. Perhaps there is a whole heap of stuff to talk about regarding these themes, I just don’t have the knowledge of history, or religion, to effectively do so.
Give Clemence Housman’s The Were-Wolf a read?
Sure! If you’re interested in werewolf fiction and don’t mind an older style of storytelling, The Were-Wolf is a great place to start!
What’s your favorite werewolf tale? What’s your favorite Victorian story? As always, please leave your thoughts and insights in the comments! I look forward to talking about this one!
Until next time!



















