Though labelled as 'general fiction' Finlay is considered to be a horror writer.
There are four parts, each about a different period, all set
in and around Gosport, each prefaced with a relevant map.
The first concerns about thirty Scandinavian conquerors who
settle by the Solent around early 400s AD. Their chieftain was ‘a hard man, but
weary of the restless years behind him.’
Though they found peace and rich land to till, there was the occasional
conflict, notably with the Meonwara (present-day Meon Valley, I guess).
Young virile Stoc
became the new chieftain in 480. Throughout the writing is never less than
eloquent, with good imagery, for example at the chieftain’s funeral pyre: ‘The
call to Woden died in the throats of the men and they listened, the hair rising
on their skin and the blood standing cold in their bodies.’ (p18) And: ‘When
the sun crept out of the mantle of morning mist, there remained only the
funeral guards, still as stone in their trance-like vigil over the little hill
with its crown of smoking, sweet-smelling ash.’ (p19) Stock took to wife Moanh
who gave him much pleasure and two sons: ‘The joy of lying with Moanh and
basking in the warmth and strength of hr response to him filled his waking
thoughts.’ (p21)
One day Stoc joined the
hunt of a wounded wild boar which finally put up a tremendous fight, killing
one of the hunters. Stoc took a tusk from the dead boar and carved an pendant
resembling two boars and presented it to his wife.
The pendant seems to
possess a dark power which subsequently affects the two sons… Brigid weds Bran,
one of the boys, so the genes will be passed on…Ultimately, tragedy stalks them,
and the pendant survives…
The second part is
set in the time of the English Civil War. Polycarpus Miller and his wife
Elizabeth had twin daughters, Becky and Biddy, and on their tenth birthday they
were presented with a pendant each, one a copy of the original. Becky owned the
original and sensed its fell influence on her… And Biddy’s beautiful daughter
Prue becomes involved in spying on the governor of neighbouring Portsmouth, for
he was loyal to the king while Gosport was allied with Cromwell. When villagers
suspect Becky of witchcraft, she is sent abroad to America with her beau
Richard Gardenar (in readiness for the sequel, The Edge of Tomorrow, 1979).
The third part takes
place in 1783 when American and French prisoners are being held in floating
hulks in Portsmouth Harbour. The conditions in the hulks are grim. One of those
incarcerated on the vessel Royal Oak is Richard Gardenar. Tom Long works on
Gardenar’s hulk and recognises the likeness of their ancestor from a portrait
of the 1600s. He determines to arrange for an escape… The night trek across the
mudflats is tense and well told. Daughter Brigid wears the handed-down boar
pendant and coincidentally the rescued Richard possesses the other, passed on
from Becky…
The fourth part is
set during the Second World War. Two elderly brothers, Bran and Wayland, live
together. This is a particularly dark episode. Wayland is not a pleasant man, a
follower of the satanist Aleister Crowley. The area is suffering from frequent
rape-murders of local women. Wayland is jealous of Bran’s attachment Mavis. And
they both possess the pendant heirlooms… for a final reckoning…
D. G. Finlay set
herself a mammoth task and has done a great deal of research and supplies two
pages of reference works. She manages to evoke each time period and cleverly
names of characters are reinvented for later generations.
The local references
are many: the sinking of Henry VIII’s ship the Mary Rose; Titchfield; Privett
Farm; St Mary’s Church, Stoke – our church in the 1980s; Fareham; Southsea
Castle; Peel Common; Stokes Bay – where we often walked; the Five Alls pub –
which I frequented often in the mid-1960s; Spring Garden Lane; Grove Road; the
Queen Charlotte pub – where we played skittles; HMS St Vincent, a training
brick ship, my first draft in the RN; Brickwood’s Best Bitter; the Gosport War
Memorial Hospital – which has been in the news a lot recently; ‘the Asylum out
in the country near Wickham’ – presumably Netley, which is now a newish housing
complex.
A thought-provoking
read with, be warned, a down-beat ending.
Coincidence: there
is an uncanny echo from the previous book I read, Deep Purple: ‘... let the bitter-sweet melody of “Deep Purple” flow
through him…’ (p256) The book also features a Harry Gardener, a close spelling
to Gardenar!
Another coincidence: Dione Gordon Finlay was living in Malta when she wrote this book and its sequel. Jennifer and I lived in Malta a few years earlier, 1974-75.
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