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The weirdstone of brisingamen review
The weirdstone of brisingamen review









In 2010 HarperCollins brought out a special 50th anniversary issue of the book, containing a new preface by Garner and praise from various other figures involved in children's literature, while 2011 saw BBC Radio 4 produce a radio adaptation. Although it fell out of critical approval it was adapted in the late 1970s as a musical that was staged in Manchester and Essex. For the 1963 reprint Garner also made several changes to the original text and by the late 1960s he came to reject The Weirdstone of Brisingamen as "a fairly bad book". Growing to dislike the main characters, Garner decided not to write the envisioned third part of the trilogy.

the weirdstone of brisingamen review the weirdstone of brisingamen review

The novel met with critical praise and led to a sequel, The Moon of Gomrath, published in 1963.

the weirdstone of brisingamen review

Along the way Colin and Susan are aided by the wizard Cadellin Silverbrow and his dwarf companions. The children also have to compete with the wicked shape-shifting sorceress Selina Place and the evil wizard Grimnir, each of whom wishes to possess the weirdstone. Its nature is revealed when the children are hunted by the minions of the dark spirit Nastrond who, centuries before, had been defeated and banished by a powerful king. Susan possesses a small tear-shaped jewel held in a bracelet: unknown to her, this is the weirdstone of the title. The novel, set in and around Macclesfield and Alderley Edge in Cheshire, tells the story of two children, Colin and Susan, who are staying with some old friends of their mother while their parents are overseas. Upon completion the book was picked up by Sir William Collins who released it through his publishing company Collins in 1960.

the weirdstone of brisingamen review

The story, which took the local legend of The Wizard of the Edge as a partial basis for the novel's plot, was influenced by the folklore and landscape of neighbouring Alderley Edge where he had grown up. Garner began work on the novel, his literary debut, in 1957, after he moved into the late medieval house, Toad Hall, in Blackden, Cheshire. The Weirdstone of Brisingamen: A Tale of Alderley is a children's fantasy novel by English author Alan Garner.











The weirdstone of brisingamen review