"when I woc in the mergen all was blaec through the night had gan and all wolde be blaec after and for all time. a great wind had cum in the night and all was blown then and broc. none had thought a wind lic this colde cum for all was blithe lifan as they always had and who will hiere the gleoman when the tales he tells is blaec who locs at the heofan if it bring him regn who locs in the mere when there seems no end to its deopness"
Paul Kingsnorth's The Wake, published in 2014, was longlisted for the Booker and was part of a very strong shortlist for the, in my view more discerning, Goldsmiths Prize. It won the Gordon Burn prize for "novels which dare to enter history and interrogate the past...literature which challenges perceived notions of genre and makes us think again about just what it is that we are reading" - which is a perfect description of the novel. And also the Bookseller Book of the Year, up against one of the most varied lists I've seen for a book prize e.g. David Walliams's Awful Auntie, H is for Hawk, Piketty's Capital and the vlogger Zoe Gugg's Girl Online.
The Wake tells the story of the Anglo-Saxon "resistance" in the wake of 1066 and the Norman conquest. And most distinctly does so in a language that attempts to replicate the Old English of the time - the language of England that pre-dated the arrival of Norman French.
Although it is not written in Old English ("that would be unreadable to anyone except scholars") but rather a pseudo-language of Kingsnorth's own invention. The effect is striking, authentic, atmospheric, powerful, odd but comprehensible:
"aefry ember of hope gan lic the embers of a fyr brocen in the daegs beginnan brocen by men other than us"
It forced me to read more carefully as I has to sound out the words, at least in my head, in a way that I wouldn't normally do when reading. Indeed a quick trial showed that my 8 year old daughter actually found the book easier than I did, since reading words phonetically was more natural to her. The task certainly gets easier after a few pages as one gets into the swing; I expected it might at the same time get tiresome after 300+ pages, but it didn't.
To give one example, a riddle in Kingsworth's version of Old English:
"my stem is hard he saes in a bed it is standan proud
i is haeric under neath
sum girl she tacs me in her hand she holds me hard she runs her hwit hand along my hard stem and she peels me and she tacs my heafod in her mouth
and lo I will mac that girls eages water"
What am I? Answer - "a leac" (onion).
The novel is narrated by buccmaster of holland "A socman of the blaec fenns a free man of the eald danelaugh"
(socman being a free tenant farmer under the Danelaw in Eastern England) and, unusually in Christian 11th century England, an adherent of the "eald gods of angland" (Wodan, Frigg, Erce) and no friend of Christian priests "before the crist cum our folcs gods was of anglisc wind and water now this ingenga god from ofer the sea this god he tacs from us what we is."
After buccmaster's ham is razed by the French invaders, as punishment for refusing to pay them the demanded gold, he sets out to become one of the green men, a guerilla resistance movement against the Normans. But he doesn't join the established risings of
Eadric, Hereward or the sons of Harald in the North (all real historical figures featured in the novel) but instead takes control of his own small band of motley followers.
Kingsnorth clearly has something of a political axe to grind both historically and in the present day. In an afterword he describes the Norman occupation as "probably the most catastrophic single event in this nation's history" and blames the "Norman Yoke" (which he admits most modern historians sniff at) for many of today's modern ills 1050 years later, such as uneven land distribution ("this is all the more regrettable as the effects of Guillaime's invasion are still with us").
In his non-fiction work, Real England Kingsnorth railed against "a new England: a smoke-free, health-conscious, well-dressed designer nation whose values are those of its new ruling class, the city bourgeoisie. The country is being remodelled and made safe for urban 4x4 drivers, gastropub diners, the owners of investment properties and the wearers of clean wellies". As someone who ticks most of those boxes - except the well-dressed - I'd would call that progress, but for Kingsnorth this is the loss of the "Real England" and, in a link to The Wake, his greatest ire is reserved for the replacement of traditional smoke-filled inns ("the English pub - perhaps the best marker of our national character - English ale from the Saxon ealu") by family-friendly smoke-free gastropubs (again - I'd regard that as a great achievement of modern society).
And he puts similar sentiments into the mouth of the narrator, buccmaster. He hits out at the confiscation of land by the Normans ("as wulmaer theyn was cwelled feohtan under the flag of harald godweison who was thief of the corona of angland his land will be gifen to geeyome cing and with them all lands in his thegnage"), the likely introduction of French words and names into the English language, castle-building, foreigners generally and, as above and despite the fact it predates the French arrival, Christianity.
However, to be fair to KIngsnorth, buccmaster is no hero, except possibly in his own distorted view. Although he claims to have seen and told others what was happening ("why does they not lysten why does they not see"), he refuses to go to fight for harald at Stamford Bridge and then Battle and tries to stop his sons doing so.
After the Conquest he believes himself to be chosen for greatness by the old Gods and great men of England ("i specs for the wilde for the eald gods under the blaec waters in the drencced treows. i is the lands law over men i is eorth not heofon leaf of treow not leaf of boc. i is raedwald i is beowulf i is harald cyng last of the anglisc i sceal be").
But even when he forms his mini-resistance movement he spends much of the time hiding in the woods and the fens. Indeed his delusions extend to an ongoing dialogue, in his mind, with the historical-mythical Weland Smith, who acts as a form of ongoing challenge to him (e.g. asking why he is "weac like a wifman in thy warm hus eatan and sleapan while angland beorns").
And in a disturbing end to the novel, we see both the truth of buccmaster's family history and his real attitude to his small band of followers: "and did they thinc i wolde stand did they thinc i wolde stand and die with them these esols these cwellers of angland these wifmen who has not been triewe to me".
buccmaster is exposed him for what he is, a self-obsessed, delusional, character. And this in turn at least makes one question, if not ultimately reject, his views - a brave authorial choice.
Highly recommended.