Like many readers, I only knew A. A. Milne (1882–1956) for his Winnie-the-Pooh stories and had no idea of how much he wrote for adults: novels, plays, journalism, screenplays, and yes, short stories. This doorstopper of a collection includes some never-before-published material – undated and fragmentary stories. The stories span virtually his entire career, from 1914 to 1953.
I was daunted by the heft of the book when it arrived so got in touch with Simon Thomas (Stuck in a Book) because I remembered that Milne is his favourite author. With his direction, I decided to focus on the later stories originally published in the volume The Birthday Party and Other Stories (some of which originally had different titles).
Even within this subset, I found a lot of variety. One of my favourites was “In Vino Veritas,” a tricksy mystery story for fans of classic crime whether Sherlock Holmes, Agatha Christie or Raymond Chandler. The narrator is a writer of detective stories which are often inspired by cases recounted to him by his police superintendent friend Frederick Mortimer. Mortimer tells him of a murder accomplished using a poisoned bottle of wine. But “I could almost feel the murderer behind us, pushing us along the way he wanted us to go,” Mortimer says. The evidence seemed almost too neat, and a replication plus a couple of switchbacks reveal that everything was not as it appeared for the superintendent, or for our narrator.

Milne plays with genre and history here. “The Secret” is a skewed fairy tale that even opens with “Once upon a time.” “The Lost Diary of Shakespeare” turns the authorship controversy on its head. “The General Takes off his Helmet” inhabits the time of Hannibal. “A.V. and R.V.” has a little girl distressed at a biblical account of mass death and her mother parroting an unsatisfactory mainline interpretation about punishment for sin and the need for faith; then we parachute into King David’s court and see him conspiring to blame it all on a woman.
But the stand-out for me was “The Birthday Party.” William Henry Baker, brimming with emotion after the birth of his first child, David Alistair Shawn, early one April morning, sets off by train for his office in the City. His wife has told him to have a good dinner and drink to the baby’s health, so after keeping his happy secret from his colleagues all day, he heads to the Savoy for a blowout meal. Just as he’s worried that he won’t be able to pay the large bill, a pair of diners takes him under their wing to form part of a harmless deception. He’s carried out Maggie’s instructions, but perhaps not in the way she might have imagined. Setting aside the injustice of his shell-shocked wife having to stay at home with an infant while he gets on with his normal life and has a luxurious meal (it was 1948, after all), this was a sweet straight-man-in-bizarre-circumstances story, the kind that might spark a screwball comedy.
There’s so much to discover just in this volume, and five other Milne titles have also been reissued in the last year or so. Soon adult readers will be saying, Winnie the who?
With thanks to Random Things Tours and Farrago (Duckworth Books) for the free copy for review.
Buy The Complete Short Stories of A. A. Milne from Bookshop.org [affiliate link]
I was happy to be part of the blog tour for the release of this book. See below for details of where other reviews have appeared or will be appearing soon.

Well, what fun. I’ll certainly look out for this one.
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I wonder if your library system will have it. I’d be tempted to try one of his novels for adults.
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Me too. Haven’t checked yet.
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Our system just has one collection of his short stories – The Sunny Side. I’ll bar it in mind, but today I have to collect 5 – five – books from my reservations list. That’ll keep me out of mischief.
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I know how much Simon loves Milne—he didn’t steer you wrong with the suggestion of which stories to focus on! I like the sound of “AV and RV” and “The Birthday Party” in particular.
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Well, of course he thought I should just read them all 😉 But I saw that this subset was one he particularly admired. I was truly aghast by the size of the book that arrived, though I ought to have known what I was getting into with a “Complete” stories volume. (It was originally a smaller affair but they kept finding more unpublished material and expanding it.)
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Naturally! I’m a little surprised the book was *that* big, too. Is it even on Goodreads? I noticed you ended up making your review just of The Birthday Party collection on GR. (Smart as that’s the one you read!)
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I searched and found a skeleton record, so added in some more details: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/209768694-the-complete-short-stories-of-a-a-milne
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Thanks for the blog tour support x
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You’re most welcome!
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Everything here is great and then they go and stick that purple patch on the front cover, please tell me it isn’t printed on. . .
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Yes, that’s a printed-on glossy circle…
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that is my biggest bugbear, so annoying!
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I didn’t know that he wrote stuff for adults! I recently found a signed copy of his son’s book
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So many of us only knew Winnie the Pooh!
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I’m so glad to see AAM getting more notice for his non-Pooh works, and excited to revisit these – from your review, I am dimly reminded of the stories but definitely have forgotten a lot. I’m also pleased that the stories from Secret are in here, as that little collection has been prohibitively expensive – mostly because he seems to have signed every copy.
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I read his “Red House Mystery” and have a copy of a play of his on my classics club spin, but these sound lovely, despite the daunting amount of them!
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I also had no idea that he wrote for adults, and now I’m intrigued!
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Hahaha Winnie the Who indeed! I’ve had an old pocketbook of one of his novels for adults since I was a girl (super boring, no pictures, said younger-reading-me) and of course this does make me wish I’d picked it up by now. But, at least I still have it!
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I saw vintage copies of two of his adult works in the charity warehouse the other day.
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And WHERE is the photo of your purchases? /drumsfingers
Or are you planning to post about them here, in time?
🙂
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On Instagram!
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Lovely! I’m so glad Simon was able to point you in the right direction!
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