There are 14 short stories in Lord Dunsany's 1912 collection The Book of
Wonder. He is credited with having a significant influence on the works
of J. R. R. Tolkien, H. P. Lovecraft, Ursula K. Le Guin, and other
authors.The first short story, The Bride of the Man-Horse, is about a
centaur who journeys into the outside world for unknown but seemingly
natural reasons.The famous thief Slith and his two criminal friends set
out to steal a golden box believed to hold the most beautiful writings
ever considered by man in Probable Adventure of the Three Literary Men.
The story follows the three thieves' journey, the strange dangers they
dodge, and finally, their final strategy for stealing the golden
box.Only the final two stories-"Chu-Bu and Sheemish" and "The Wonderful
Window"-were not based on a Sime drawing.The stories are a tapestry of
language, conjuring images of people, and places and are short and full
of wonder.Although they are written in an almost fairytale or
allegorical form, Dunsany's stories don't usually have happy endings,
and these are no exception. Instead, each of them has a sad, vengeful,
or even insane edge to it.