While I’ve given up any pretence of trying to catch up with the readalong of the wonderful Dark is Rising sequence hosted by Annabelle at AnnaBookBel, I am of course continuing to read the books, which I am enjoying very much. This will however, be the last of the books I will be able to review this year.
Greenwitch (1974), the third of the five books in the sequence, brings the threads from the previous two books together as Drew children and Will Stanton, the last of the ‘old ones’ work with each other (even if the former don’t quite know it) to recover some treasures from the Dark. In Over Sea, Under Stone, the three Drew children, Simon, Jane and Barney while on holiday in Trewissick, a fictional Cornish village had come across a strange manuscript in the Grey House, where they were staying, and with help from their Great Uncle Merry had recovered a grail, one of the Things of Power that the forces of Light must use in their fight against the Dark. In The Dark is Rising, we met Will Stanton, the seventh son of a seventh son, who discovers on his eleventh birthday, that he is no ordinary boy but the last of the ‘old ones’ charged with finding the six signs of Light and thereafter has a role in the fight against the Dark.
As Greenwitch opens, we learn that the grail that the Drew children had recovered and donated to the British Museum has been stolen. The children are naturally upset, but then are pleased to learn from Great Uncle Merry that they will spend a week again at Trewissick and attempt to recover it. Alongside, Will Stanton’s uncle who is on a visit from the United States, invites Will to spend a week with him and his wife at Cornwall—there they will be staying with his friend Merriman Lyon and his nephews and niece. And so it happens that the Drew children and Will Stanton come to stay in twin cottages at Trewissick. The Drews aren’t too pleased with Will’s presence, and Simon and Barney at least plan to get rid of him while Jane wishes to at least be polite. The Drews aren’t to be told who Will really is, but Jane soon begins to catch on. Meanwhile at Trewissick, an annual ritual, the night of the Greenwitch is to be celebrated. The tradition involves a ‘Greenwitch’ woven out of leaves and stems by only the women of the village and then sent ‘home’ to the sea by the menfolk the next morning. Jane alone can attend, being the only girl among them, and Uncle Merry asks her to pay special attention. But a strange dark-haired artist is hanging around in the village making attractive paintings but ones which give out powerful and sinister vibes. He, it seems, also doesn’t want the children (or the old ones) to approach the Greenwitch who is holding a secret they must access. The Drew children with limited knowledge, and Merriman, Will and another of the old ones, Captain Toms, must battle this representative of the Dark and also face greater and more dangerous powers as they attempt to recover the grail and uncover the secret of the Greenwitch.
Greenwitch is an enjoyable and interesting entry in the sequence, a quest story with elements of fantasy, magic, mythology, folklore and legend. The story takes us between fantasy and ‘reality’, part of it also unfolding in a dreamy space, where time isn’t flowing in its usual course, and past and present blend.
In the book while Simon, Jane and Barney are ordinary humans, who are in a sense ‘protected’ from the truth of the old ones, and the full extent of the fight being Dark and Light, they all play important roles without which even the Light can’t defeat the Dark. Simon uses his memory and wits while Barney has powers that even he isn’t himself aware of, besides his artistic skills, now emerging. But of the three Jane, perhaps, surprises us the most. She is the first one who is able to see that Will isn’t quite the 11-year-old boy he appears to be (and even before this, it is her first who wants to be kind to him, where the others simply wish to avoid him) and it is her compassion, sensitivity and kind heart that do what no one else can.
The Greenwitch herself, is however, the most intriguing character in the book—compelling, complex; ostensibly just a figure woven out of branches and leaves, an offering of sorts to the sea, she is one that defies definition or categorization. She is unique, ‘hypnotic … (with) no she quality … unclassifiable, like a rock or a tree’, and also extremely powerful
this silent image held within it more power than she had ever sensed before in any creature or thing. Thunder and storms and earthquakes were there, and all the force of the earth and sea. It was outside Time, boundless, ageless, beyond any line drawn between good and evil.
And yet, an unhappy figure with a home at sea may be, but also without anyone or thing she sees as her own; everyone only wanting something from her. And it is this strange, vulnerable, yet mighty figure whose secret the old ones need; and the key lies in unexpected quarters indeed.
Compared to the previous two books, the feeling of danger in this one isn’t ever present, yet we certainly have unsettling moments—be it in the strange artist’s curious paintings that have unexpected power as does the art decorating his caravan, to the uncanny image of the Greenwitch and the feeling it inspires, or the formidable forces even the old ones must face as they carry out their quest. And then there are the eerie elements, a dreamy space where time isn’t quite stable and also spaces or rather periods of time where magic is at work and its objects unaware they have even been touched.
Thoroughly enjoying my first visit of this wonderfully written and engrossing fantasy series!
4.5 stars