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Book Details

The Moon of Gomrath

80% complete
1963
Unknown
Never (or unknown...)
Fantastic fiction
Fantasy
Wizards - Juvenile fiction
See 20
1 - The Elves of Sinadon
2 - The Well
3 - Atlendor
4 - The Brollachan
5 - "To a Woman yt was Dumpe"
6 - Old Evil
7 - Old Magic
8 - Shining Tor
9 - The Horsemen of Donn
10 - Lord of the Herlathing
11 - The Dale of Goyt
12 - The Mere
13 - The Bodach
14 - The Wild Hunt
15 - Errwood
16 - The Howl of Ossar
17 - The Witch-brand
18 - The Dolorous Blow
19 - The Children of Danu
20 - The Last Ride
Book Cover
Has a genre Has an extract Want to read In a series 
3046
 Tales of the Alderley*
#2 of 3
Tales of the Alderley*   See series as if on a bookshelf
A series fantasy of books by Alan Garner.

1) The Weirdstone of Brisingamen
2) The Moon of Gomrath
3) Boneland
Copyright © 1963 by Alan Garner
For Ellen
Adam & Katharine
It was bleak on Mottram road under the Edge, the wooded hill of Alderley.
May contain spoilers
And away they rode together across the night, over the waves, and beyond the isles, and the Old Magic was free forever, and the moon was new.
No comments on file
Synopsis not on file
Extract (may contain spoilers)
About half a mile from Highmost Redmanhey, round the shoulder of Clinton hill, there is a disused and flooded quarry.  Where the sides are not cliffs, wooded slopes drop steeply.  A broken wind pump creaks, and a forgotten path runs nowhere into the brambles.  In sunlight it is a forlorn place, forlorn as nothing but deserted machinery can be; but when the sun goes in, the air is charged with a different feeling.  The water is sombre under its brows of cliff, and the trees crowd down to drink, the pump sneers; lonely, green-hued, dark.

But peaceful, thought Susan, and that's something.

There had been no peace at the farm since their return.  Two days of talk from Colin, and the silences made heavy by the Mossocks' uneasiness.  For Bess and Gowther knew of the children's past involvement with magic, and they were as troubled by this mixing of the two worlds as Cadellin had been.

The weather did not help.  The air was still, moist, too warm for the beginning of winter.
Susan had felt that she must go away to relax; so that afternoon she had left Colin and had come to the quarry.  She stood on the edge of a slab of rock that stretched into the water, and lost herself in the grey shadows of fish.  She was there a long time, slowly unwinding the tensions of the days: and then a noise made her look up.

"Hallo.  Who are you?"

A small black pony was standing at the edge of the water on the other side of the quarry.

"What are you doing here?"

The pony tossed its mane, and snorted.

"Come on, then!  Here, boy!"

The pony looked hard at Susan, flicked its tail, then turned and disappeared among the trees.

"Oh, well - I wonder what the time is."  Susan climbed up the slope out of the quarry and into the field.  She walked round to the wood on the far side, and whistled, but nothing happened.  "Here, boy!  Here, boy!  Oh don't, then; I'm - oh!"

The pony was standing right behind her.

"You made me jump!  Where've you been?"

Susan fondled the pony's ears.  It seemed to like that, for it thrust its head into her shoulder, and closed its velvet-black eyes.

"Steady!  You'll knock me over."

For several minutes she stroked its neck, then reluctantly she pushed it away.  "I must go now.  I'll come and see you to-morrow."  The pony trotted after her.  "No, go back.  You can't come."  But the pony followed Susan all the way across the field, butting her gently with its head and nibbling at her ears.  And when she came to climb through the fence into the next field, it put itself between her and the fence, and pushed sideways with its sleek belly.

"What do you want?"

Push.

"I've nothing for you."

Push.

"What is it?"

Push.

"Do you want me to ride?  That's it, isn't it?  Stand still, then.  There.  Good boy.  You have got a long, back, haven't you?  There.  Now - woa!  Steady!"

The moment Susan was astride, the pony wheeled round and set off at full gallop towards the quarry.  Susan grabbed the mane with both hands.

 

Added: 22-Apr-2022
Last Updated: 11-Apr-2024

Publications

 19-Mar-2024
Del Rey
Mass Market Paperback
Order from amazon.comHas a cover imageBook Edition Cover
Date Issued:
19-Mar-2024
Format:
Mass Market Paperback
Pages*:
139
Cover Link(s):
Internal ID:
43547
Publisher:
ISBN:
0-345-29041-0
ISBN-13:
978-0-345-29041-0
Printing:
1
Country:
United States
Language:
English
Credits:
Laurence Schwinger  - Cover Artist
THE OLD MAGIC


A sorcery of beauty and dread, more powerful than wizards or elves, more ancient than good or evil.  To save young Susan from the soul-stealing Brollachan, the old sorcery was wakened - it stirred and grew and called to arcane forces long dead or sleeping. wild and cruel magic lived again, without purpose - and beyond mortal control.

Alan Garner, winner of both the prestigious Carnegie Medal and The Guardian Award, is a master of fantasy.  Hailed by critics on both sides of the Atlantic and adored by readers everywhere, Garner's haunting tales are available from Del Rey Books:
ELIDOR • THE OWL SERVICE
THE WEIRDSTONE OF BRISINGAMEN • THE MOON OF GOMRATH
Cover:
Book CoverBook Back CoverBook Spine
Notes and Comments:
First Ballantine Books Edition: September 1981
First printing assumed

All Covers for this edition of the series

Related

Author(s)

Alan Garner  
Birth: 17 Oct 1934 Congleton, Cheshire, England, UK
Notes:
Alan Garner was born in Congleton, Cheshire October, 17, 1934.  He went to school at Alderley Edge Primary School and Manchester Grammar School and then at Magdalen College, Oxford.  He left before he completed his degree.  At Oxford he met both J.R.R. Tolkien and C.S. Lewis.  He was a Second Lieutenant in the Royal Artillery.  He began his first novel The Weirdstone of Brisingamen at twenty-two. 

Alan Garner continues to live in Cheshire where he continues to write.  He suffers from manic depression.  He has three children from his first marriage: Ellen, Adam and Katherine.  He is married to Griselda, his second wife who is  a teacher, and they have two children: Joseph and Elizabeth. 

He won the Guardian Award and the Carnegie Medal, for The Owl Service and was the first author to win both awards for one book.  He won the Phoenix Award for The Stone Book Quartet.

Awards

No awards found
*
  • I try to maintain page numbers for audiobooks even though obviously there aren't any. I do this to keep track of pages read and I try to use the Kindle version page numbers for this.
  • Synopses marked with an asterisk (*) were generated by an AI. There aren't a lot since this is an iffy way to do it - AI seems to make stuff up.
  • When specific publication dates are unknown (ie prefixed with a "Cir"), I try to get the publication date that is closest to the specific printing that I can.
  • When listing chapters, I only list chapters relevant to the story. I will usually leave off Author Notes, Indices, Acknowledgements, etc unless they are relevant to the story or the book is non-fiction.
  • Page numbers on this site are for the end of the main story. I normally do not include appendices, extra material, and other miscellaneous stuff at the end of the book in the page count.






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Presented: 20-Apr-2024 08:01:48

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