Fox and Wolf (Pros universe created by Fanny Adams)

From Fanlore
Jump to navigation Jump to search

You may be looking for the Pros created universe of the same name by Jane Carnall.

Fanfiction
Title:
Author(s):
Date(s): 1980s
Length:
Genre(s):
Fandom(s): The Professionals
Relationship(s):
External Links: List of the stories

Click here for related articles on Fanlore.

The Fox and the Wolf universe is a series of slash Professionals stories written by Fanny Adams.

1. For the Time Being (online here)

2. The Way of the Samurai

3. Pas de Deux

4. Master Song (online here)

Reactions/Reviews

1993

... a lovely strange set of stories by Fannie Adams where Bodie spent the years 14-19 as the lover of a Japanese hit man in Japan. Though nominally B/D most of the stories focus on Doyle's ex-lover Eddie and the modern dancer he falls in love with). I got a copy of the last third from [B], and promptly made copies for other friends. I don't know how many steps it had gone through to get to [B], but my copy is already fairly fuzzy. Any chance that you'd be willing to give an electronic copy to me so that I could make it available on e-mail? (I just realized that this presupposes that you did type it on a computer, and looking at the type face in my mind, it looks a lot like it was type written. [1]

1996

After umpty-ump fan stories (especially in B/D) where transferring the heroes to some historical milieu somehow gave them unlimited sexual license even when the setting had restrictive social taboos against homosexuality, I wonder why few writers sent them to Japan instead, where they would have had social license to carry on an open affair. I only recall one who tried it at all, Fanny Adams in her Fox and Wolf series, which, at that, was recalling Samurai traditions for the benefit of the 20th-century Bodie. I gather this aspect of the history was thoroughly buried, at least from English-only readers, until recently? [2]

References

  1. ^ from Sandy Herrold in Strange Bedfellows #3 (November 1993)
  2. ^ from Strange Bedfellows (APA) #12 (Feb 1996)