
Elidor by Alan Garner,
illustrated by Charles Keeping.
Collins, 2002 (1965).
“‘The darkness grew,’ said Malebron. ‘It is always there. We did not watch, and the power of night closed on Elidor. We had so much of ease that we did not mark the signs — a crop blighted, a spring failed, a man killed. Then it was too late — war, and siege, and betrayal, and the dying of the light.'”
Much of the fantasy written for children in the sixties and seventies by British writers – Penelope Farmer, Susan Cooper, Alan Garner, Joan Aiken and Catherine Storr among others – was dark, with precious little light relief.
Even while there was a hope-filled resurgence and confidence in popular music, fashion and the like the postwar legacy of bombed sites and slum clearance combined with the uncertainties of the Cold War seemed to evoke a response in children’s literature somewhat akin to that met with in adult kitchen sink drama.
Alan Garner’s early novels, beginning with The Weirdstone of Brisingamen (1960), The Moon of Gomrath (1963) and then Elidor in 1965, all carry this mood of melancholy and menace, the sense of an imminent loss encapsulated in the phrase made familiar by Dylan Thomas, “the dying of the light”, and cited here by the mysterious figure of Malebron.
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