John Thunstone
John Thunstone is a fictional character and the
hero of a series of stories by author
Manly Wade Wellman. Thunstone is a
scholar and
playboy who investigates mysterious
supernatural events. He has the typical attributes of a heroic character being physically large and strong, intelligent, handsome, and wealthy. He is also well-read in
occult matters and has access to several weapons that are especially potent against
vampires,
werewolves and other supernatural creatures.
The name Thunstone is meant to evoke that of
Saint Dunstan, patron saint of silversmiths and a noted opponent of the
Devil. Thunstone has a sword-cane with a
silver blade said to have been forged by the saint. The blade is inscribed with a text from
Judges chapter 5 in the
Vulgate, "Sic pereant omnes inimici tui" — "thus perish all your enemies". [www.newadvent.org/bible/jdg005.htm] The sword-cane had also been used by Wellman's earlier character,
Judge Pursuivant, who passed it on to Thunstone when his advanced age made him too weak to effectively wield it.
In addition to the
ghosts and other traditional supernatural beings, several of Thunstone's enemies are Wellman's unique creations. These include the
shonokins a race of human-like creatures who claim to have ruled
North America before the coming of humans. Thunstone's most persistent foe is a
sorcerer named Rowley Thorne, who appears in a number of the stories. Thorne was loosely based on the real
occultist Aleister Crowley.
Thunstone originally appeared in short stories published in the
pulp magazines. Wellman would later write two novels with Thunstone:
What Dreams May Come (1983) and
The School of Darkness (1985). All his Thunstone short stories have been recently collected in
The Third Cry to Legba and Other Invocations (2000).
In 1988, John Thunstone appeared in an episode, entitled "Rouse Him Not", of the anthology TV series
Monsters. He was played by the actor
Alex Cord.