The Moon of Gomrath
by Alan Garner
Buy on AmazonWith the help of the wizard Cadellin, Colin and Susan struggle to contain the forces of evil unleashed by the inadvertent awakening of the band of ancient horsemen known as the Wild Hunt. Sequel to "The weirdstone of Brisingamen."
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"You haven’t read The Moon of Gomrath ? Now I feel really old! OK…this is a children’s novel. You really need to start with the first in the series, The Weirdstone of Brisingamen . These are the first books Alan Garner wrote: Weirdstone came out in 1957, three years after Lord of the Rings was first published. The Moon of Gomrath came out in 1963. I hadn’t read Lord of the Rings when I came across these, so this was my introduction to elves and dwarves and magic. I think they are much better than Lord of the Rings— though I realise I’m probably alone in this. Certainly they are much shorter, so easier to read if you’re less than ten years old, which I was. I’m going to talk about both books. But The Moon of Gomrath is the book that is clearly eco; the core narrative arc centres on the elves who are dying as a result of industrial smog. It’s set in Alderley Edge in Cheshire in an undefined time—post-war rationing is still happening. Colin and Susan are children whose parents have gone away. They’ve been left with family or friends in a farming community and as is the way of children’s books, they go off on their own and discover an old man, a Merlin/Gandalf figure who recognises Susan’s silver bracelet—which she has inherited from a long family line—as a magical key. That’s probably all I need to tell you. The bad guys want to destroy this artifact and the good guys want it back. It’s a children-in-danger thriller. I read it when I was nine, but it’s quite frightening. There’s the Brollachan, a thing that turns into a pony with red eyes that is clearly deeply evil. I was a little girl who loved ponies, so that was super-scary. And there are elves, who basically despise people but can be prevailed upon to help if you ask right. Garner’s writing is truly awe-inspiring, totally anchored in Cheshire with a weaving of the old myths that brings them alive and offers rhythms of syllables and language that is still some of the best I’ve ever read."
The Best Eco Thrillers · fivebooks.com