Thursbitch
Thursbitch is a novel by Alan Garner. It's also a place- an isolated valley in the Cheshire Peak district - with a ruined farmhouse in it- and one or two other things. It has an evil reputation. Thursbitch is old English and means Valley of the Demon. I walked in there this afternoon.
There are a lot of monoliths lying around- some of them built into walls or re-used as gateposts. A number seem to have been carved to look like phalluses. They could possibly be neolithic.
To find out more about the mythos read this fascinating article- and to find out even more read the book.



As I left the valley a heron rose from the stream below me and wheeled off overhead.
This church- Jenkin Chapel- built in 1733- also features in the bookl.

And so does this stone, which marks the death, by exposure, of the jagger (or pedlar) John Turner.

On one side it reads: Here John Turner was cast away in a heavy snow storm in the night in or about the year 1756
On the other side it reads: The print of a woman's shoe was found by his side in the snow where he lay dead.
There are a lot of monoliths lying around- some of them built into walls or re-used as gateposts. A number seem to have been carved to look like phalluses. They could possibly be neolithic.
To find out more about the mythos read this fascinating article- and to find out even more read the book.
As I left the valley a heron rose from the stream below me and wheeled off overhead.
This church- Jenkin Chapel- built in 1733- also features in the bookl.
And so does this stone, which marks the death, by exposure, of the jagger (or pedlar) John Turner.
On one side it reads: Here John Turner was cast away in a heavy snow storm in the night in or about the year 1756
On the other side it reads: The print of a woman's shoe was found by his side in the snow where he lay dead.
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As I was peering at the memorial stone to John Turner, my daughter came up behind me and said, "That looks like a weird stone." A very Garnerish moment!
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Nine
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Does Garner's novel offer a satisfactory explanation of what's going on?
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Garner spent decades researching the book. He had all this disparate material that seemed to be linked in some fashion, but he couldn't see how. In the end I think he ties it together admirably.
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One puzzling question is why no one in the archaeologicl community seems interested in Thursbitch, if Garner's discoveries have the significance he believes them to have.
I found another article about Garner and his work:
http://www.common-ground.org.uk/2010/03/unriddling-the-world/
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I believe the answer to most things in archaeology- in particular why one site gets dug and another doesn't- is funding.
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Thursbitch is, I think, the only novel by Garner I've never read—there wasn't a copy in the house when I was growing up and I never see it in used book stores. I will track it down.
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What a bizarre memorial stone - and what's with the woman's shoe???
Weird...
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As for the shoe, who knows...
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It's that cool windy time of year when I pile up my ghost books and make hot tea.
I've recently read Uncle Silas by LeFanu. How claustrophobic and spooky his writing is--this book isn't exactly a ghost story, but it's scarier than some I've read (his "Judge's House" is one of my favorite stories).
Hope you and Ailz are well.
My grandchildren now have two black rabbits! I told them about yours.
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He's good, isn't he! I recommend The House by the Churchyard.
We're fine. Going on holiday in a couple of days. It's good to have you back.