6.1.18

The Dark Is Rising

A terrible muddy image, but the only one I could find of my beloved copy of Susan Cooper's The Dark Is Rising books in one volume. I reckon I haven't read The Dark Is Rising for about thirty years, though it always occupied a treasured place in my reading memory. But then I was alerted to a special event taking place on Twitter, and all at once I was catapulted back into the snowy, enchanted world, menacing and strange, of Will Stanton, Merriman Lyon, the Signs and the Old Ones, and the Rising of the Dark.

Late last year, Rob MacFarlane and Julia Bird decided to host a communal reading event via Twitter: The Dark Is Rising, read in 'real time' (is there any such thing?) over the days when the action of the book itself occurs, from Midwinter Eve to Twelfth Night. This idea snowballed into a wondrous collective reading experience, #TheDarkIsReading, with readers sharing their own insights, favourite moments, quotes and memories. A parallel group spontaneously sprang up to accompany the reading, #TheArtIsRising, where people posted artworks, drawings, paintings and photographs which beautifully expanded the reading experience. Spookily, the weather in England began to echo the events of the book, with unusually heavy snowfalls, storms and floods appearing as if on cue. And as we shared our immersion in this wonderful fantasy, it was as if a circle of Old Ones joined hands around the world to recreate our own magic and drive back the Dark together.

Though I am far from the cold and snow of this quintessentially wintry story, I was pulled back into the atmosphere of a northern-hemisphere Christmas -- a wonderful, magical way to end one year and begin the next.

4 comments:

  1. I followed this too - I enjoyed all the artwork and photos that readers posted. And now they're asking for suggestions for the next read-along!

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    1. It was wonderful, wasn't it! I loved seeing all the snowy photos, which amplified the descriptions in the book perfectly. I'd love to do an Alan Garner book next, maybe The Owl Service or Red Shift. So much material there.

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  2. I followed the discussion, or some of it, seem to hVe missed a bit. I didn’t know about the art thread, maybe I can look it up, even if too late to discuss. Did you see the lively letter Susan Cooper wrote in response?

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    1. Yes, I saw Susan Cooper's letter -- what a perfect addition. It's lovely to think she was able to see and appreciate all the love for her work.

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