It could be said that Crow Moon was influenced by every book
I ever read. I know that there are books that I’ve read over and over again
that have little or nothing to do with witches, or Cornwall, or any other
thematic elements of the Greenworld trilogy – but they’ve probably had a huge
impact on my prose writing style. Some novels I’ve reread so frequently that
their rhythms, language use, even their style of punctuation have infiltrated
my brain, like Dracula, Rebecca, Stephen Kings’s Firestarter and The Running
Man, Annie Proulx’s The Shipping News, Alias Grace, Lady Oracle by Margaret
Atwood, The World According to Garp, The Story of San Michele, 1984, Brave New
World. As well, there’s a raft of poetry collections and short stories that I
love – being a poet as well as a YA writer. Film and TV too – nothing was ever
the same in my brain after The X Files, Buffy The Vampire Slayer, Alien, Battlestar,
Twin Peaks and Star Wars.
However, Crow Moon has some particular influences which I
thought it might be fun to share with you here.
1. Woman on the Edge of Time – Marge Piercy
I first read this 1970s second wave feminist utopia/dystopia
novel for my A Level extended essay in 1995 (God I’m so old) and reread it many
times since; it is always thought-provoking. The story is of a woman undergoing
psychiatric treatment in a hospital that starts to “visit” a strange utopian
land. As the reader you are unsure whether it is real somehow or delusional.
The utopia is a free and anti-capitalist community based on love and sharing.
Romantic relationships are open, unheteronormative and for pleasure; parenting
happens within the community rather than in the traditional family unit; the
community are self sufficient and organic. By contrast, in the “real” world,
the main character suffers within an entirely repressive and dystopian
contemporary society which treats her unstated mental illness harshly; she is a
poor woman of colour that is exploited by an all-too-familiar patriarchal,
capitalist medical culture.
The utopia/dystopia juxtaposition and the feminist nature of
the utopian land fed into the Greenworld and the Redworld. The Greenworld
shares much of Piercy’s anti-capitalist, organic and environmental focus, as
well as its community emphasis. However, as it is a “real” society and not
(potentially) a fantasy or vision, it had to have downsides and people that
lived within it that weren’t happy with things. Similarly, the Redworld has
many bad elements – pollution, corruption etc, which is explored more in books
2 and 3, but it’s not all bad. It’s short sighted and unrealistic to paint one
side all good and the other all bad – nothing is ever that way in life, after all.
And as Arthur C Clarke said “Utopia
was here at last: its novelty had not yet been assailed by the supreme enemy of
all Utopias—boredom.”
So I had to introduce this actually quite wonderful green
feminist nature-loving, woman-centred utopia through the eyes of a disaffected
teenage boy within it, partly because when you’re a teen, whatever your parents
do, even if they’re rock musicians or Nobel Prizewinners or heart surgeons or
astronauts, you think they’re totally boring and uncool. And partly so that
Danny could show us the chinks in the armour of this apparently wonderful place
– partly because nothing is perfect – the Greenworld witches are human, and
therefore subject to human weaknesses – and partly so that conflict could
occur. There would be no story if everything was perfect in the Greenworld. For
me, the ultimate message about both cultures – the Green and the Red – are that
they can learn from each other. There’s a fair amount of thought on my part in
the books about the relationship between magic, spirituality and science and
technology too, and how, in my view, the way forward is to learn from each
other and not persist in this false idea that they are opposites.
2. The Sea Priestess – Dion Fortune
This book is a beautiful, readable fiction novel underpinned
with a great deal of witchcraft practice, kind of in the same way that the
Narnia books have Christian mysticism at their core. Dion Fortune was a great
mystic and her work was one of the important precursors of the development of
modern Wicca and paganism in the 1950s. In The Sea Priestess, a man suffering
from severe asthma recuperates by the sea where he meets a mysterious woman
that teaches him about connecting with the natural energies of the sea. It is a
beautiful book, full of mystery, imagery and symbolism of the wild magic of water
and of the strong connections of the Goddess principle to tides, water and the
moon.
I deliberately set Crow Moon in Cornwall because of the
intense magic in the landscape and the drama of the North Cornwall coast at
Tintagel. I wanted to explore a sense of the natural power that comes from the
waves crashing against rocks and sucking into the caves; I knew also that
Tintagel and Boscastle, just next door, are traditionally very witchy places,
not least because of the Witchcraft Museum and the King Arthur myth. Cornwall
has a strong tradition of natural magic, wise women, herbalists and healers. It
really was the case not that long ago that each village did have its own witch.
So I started thinking – what would happen if each village had one again (some
of them still do – there’s lots of traditional and modern witches in Cornwall
and Devon still, and all over the UK) but they had the ultimate power, instead
of being an outsider or whatever? And what if the culture was like 1970s
feminism/goddess religion had won and taken over?
3. Oryx and Crake/The Year of the Flood –
Margaret Atwood
Possibly one of my favourite fictional worlds ever, the Oryx
and Crake series has been a strong influence on the Greenworld books. I mean,
I’m a massive Atwood fan anyway. In this world, you have genetic engineering
gone so astray that ultimately it wipes out the planet and a few survivors have
to start again – and some of those survivors are Gods Gardeners, a kind of
semi-pagan environmentalist group. I loved how the Gods Gardeners had made
their own mythos, to some degree, about foreseeing a mass extinction event like
the biblical Flood, and in its wake, canonising real people from the pre-Flood
world as saints (my favourite is St Diane Fossey). Gods Gardeners also have the
skills to survive the chemical-induced end of humanity – permaculture, beekeeping, wilderness
survival etc – and the foresight to hole up until the worst is over. In
MADDADDAM, ultimately, it’s ecology, wilderness survival and a respect for the
natural world that wins out over science (which brought the world as we know it
to an end) and technology. I also liked Atwood’s pre-Flood polarised society,
where the rich and priveliged live in gated communities and the poor live in
the crime- and filth-ridden “pleeblands” – but that the rich and priveliged
live under close watch by a ruthless government and military and the poor are,
at least, freer in some ways.
4. 1984 – George Orwell
As for many people, 1984 is the classic fictional dystopia
that provides a horrifying and dark inspiration – the effect of absolute power
upon an initially utopian ideology. Sadly, in some ways and as I get older, it
feels like 1984 is closer upon us than ever, with government surveillance
increasing, the capitalist-driven media and growing gap between the super rich
and the poor. The Redworld is not as deeply propagandist as 1984, but it is a
dark world of suffering and corruption where only the super rich have access to
an extremely limited supply of fuel and the “proles” are repressed by ever more
violent means. However, the Greenworld too is increasingly in danger of moving
away from its beautiful ideals and towards a less tolerant stance.
5. Anthem of a Reluctant Prophet – Joanne
Proulx
I don’t hear as much as I’d like about this great Canadian
YA title, but I read it around 2009 and the voice of the main boy teen
character inspired Danny. Like a lot of YA it’s 1st person POV and I
just loved Luke’s disengaged, apathetic approach. The book has a slightly
paranormal theme, in that Luke appears to be able to predict people’s deaths,
but it is absolutely not a classic paranormal story. The story is completely
rooted in real life and the boring town Luke lives in; about being a teenage
boy, having a crush on someone, hanging out with your friends, swearing,
smoking and music.
6. How I Live Now – Meg Rosoff
HILN was probably the book that made me want to write for
young people. I was (and still am) so impressed by its sparseness (Crow Moon is
nowhere near as sparse) and emotional punch. Again, the “I” point of view works
brilliantly; there’s a strong character voice and the coming-of-age and self
realisation themes against a wider social conflict really stood out for me.
7. Glastonbury: Avalon of the Heart – Dion
Fortune
I’m from the west country and it is a huge part of who I am.
For me and many others, Glastonbury (the location of some of book 2) is the
spiritual heart of this wonderful country we live in. The UK has a rich pagan
history and our ancestors had a deep connection to the land, as is demonstrated
by the many stone circles, burial mounds and sacred wells you can find in most
regions. We are lucky to have these things. It makes me sad that more people
don’t visit them more often and connect to the land we live in; take comfort
from it, respect it and learn its history and the history of the people that
once lived here.
This book looks at the spiritual history of Glastonbury and
speculates what the Tor might once have been; it charts the development of the
town into its current incarnation as a new age mecca and considers the King
Arthur connection to Glastonbury as Avalon. For me, it’s a book that really
exemplifies the importance of the sacred UK landscape, which is very important
in Crow Moon. It’s important because it’s full of magic, but also because it is
our natural environment that sustains us, and it’s being threatened by
pollution, fracking and rampant, unchecked consumerism. Which needs to stop.
8. A Witch Alone - Marian Green
When I was thinking about the magic and the style of
witchcraft the Greenworld would use, I knew it had to be particularly the
nature-based part of Wicca and the general environment-loving element of
paganism. I think most people think instantly of spells and potions when they
think about witches, real or caricature, but the thing that is key about real witchcraft is
that it’s a nature religion. One observes and appreciates the elements, and the
Earth as a living source of wonder. All pagans and witches, then, are basically
environmentalists. If Nature is your God, you want to look after it.
Marian Green is the poster-woman-witch for the Greenworld,
in that case. Her books (nonfiction) are all about how to become in tune with
the natural world around you and work with it to effect change in your own
life and generally make the world awesome around you. In the Greenworld, everyone is deeply in tune with the rhythms of the
earth. They notice the phases of the moon, the calls of the birds; they know
the energies of plants; they mark each passing season with the old, traditional
festivals.
9. Celtic Lore & Spellcraft of the Dark Goddess: Invoking
the Morrigan - Stephanie Woodfield
The central belief system in the Greenworld is a Celtic
pagan one, drawing on the ancient myths and legends of Ireland which is just as
present in Cornwall as a Celtic region. There are a lot of Irish, Welsh and
Scottish gods and goddesses, so for Crow Moon I had to simplify and focus on a
trinity of Brighid, Morrigan and Lugh as three deities from the Celtic belief
system. I knew of Brighid and Lugh already – Brighid, the Irish goddess of
heavenly cleansing fire and inspiration, poetry, farming (she is represented by
a cow – cows were important then. Still are) and Lugh, a sun god and warrior. I
was not so knowledgeable about The Morrigan, though.
I learned, though, that
the Morrigan is the Irish goddess of battle, death and rebirth, sex (wooh!) and
is a protectress of the land, and it was that element of her in particular that
made her appropriate for Crow Moon. Crows, ravens, horses, cows and eels are her animals. Brighid, the lovely light goddess of
agriculture, poetry and fire, sea and earth made a good general Goddess for
Greenworlders to worship, but the Morrigan’s feistier environmental warrior
aspect that really came to power the book along, and into book 2. She also fit
well with the feisty Melz character, as Brighid fit with her more pleasing
sister Saba.
10. The Vanishing Face of Gaia – James Lovelock
Kind of massive downer, this book, but it needs to be heeded:
the message is that we can expect huge environmental collapse quite soon.
Lovelock reckons that we currently have about 20 years to enjoy ourselves
before an energy crisis/global warming turns all the lights out and vast areas
of land are flooded, leaving our poor largely-capitalist butts in the midst of
basic survival without power, thousands/millions displaced, resources stretched
and basically if you do still have your house to live in, be prepared to
protect it from looters or worse.
We are as a society so poorly prepared for
the reasonably likely consequences of global warming, even just as one part of
a huge brewing cocktail of chaos that Gaia (the living, breathing world) is
about to unleash on us, the irritating fleas on her back which have got out of
control, that the future really is likely to turn into a dystopian epic unless
something really quite major happens now. According to Lovelock, even if we did
stop doing all the bad stuff right now it would still happen anyway. I mean,
think about it. Look what happens if we have a heavy snow. What would happen if East Anglia and Cornwall flooded? Permanently? We’re not
prepared.
In the Redworld there’s an energy crisis and a pointless war
to try and get whatever tiny bit of fuel there is left. Rather than prepare for
an existence with less or no power and empower its citizens with Greenworld
agricultural and survival skills, The Redworld chooses to use its remaining
resources to fight each other. Hmmmm.
1 comment:
That's such a great selection, Anna! Can see the influences of at least some of those in Crow Moon...
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