Friday, 10 April 2026

3 Wyrd Things: Alex Older

For '3 Wyrd Things' I ask various creative people whose work I admire to tell us about three oddly, wonderfully, weirdly British things that have been an influence on them and their work:
- a book or author,
- a film or TV show,
- a piece of music or a musician.

Author Alex Older tells Wyrd Britain about his 3 Wyrd Things.
This month: Alex Older

Alex first came to my attention via an Instagram post by David Tibet enthusing about his novel 'The Animals Praise the Antichrist', which proved to be a fabulously strange love story revolving around two music obsessed teen outsiders.   

Since that first book Alex has produced short stories for the publishers Zagava Books, Nightjar Press & Nepenthe Press and poetry for Aswirl Zine.  He is currently working on his second novel.

You can find updates on Alex and his writing via his  Instagram feed @alex.older

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Author Alex Older tells Wyrd Britain about his 3 Wyrd Things.
Book
Jocelyn Brooke - The Image of a Drawn Sword

Where to start with this neglected jewel of a novel? If you like Kafka, Arthur Machen, surrealism, mid-century gay writing, books with atmospheres both weird and eerie, time slips, paranoia, descriptions of the English countryside that are by turns lyrical and nightmarish, then this may be a novel for you.

It’s a great shame that The Image of a Drawn Sword isn’t a Penguin Classic, that it’s only available second-hand or via print-on-demand. It ought to be better known. In rural Kent, not long after the end of the Second World War, a solitary bank clerk named Reynard Langrish is drawn into an opaque world of mysterious army operations which are taking place in the countryside around his home. He’s recruited, ambiguously, by an elusive man, Captain Roy Archer, who remains vague about what his unit is up to. Is another war imminent? Is Britain already secretly at war again? Or is a civil conflict brewing? Langrish isn’t sure. Moreover, he’s preoccupied with his own inner struggles – a burdensome ennui, a growing sense of unreality, a teetering on the verge of personal dissolution. His perceptions and his memory seem unreliable, his understanding of his own situation somewhat limited. As the novel unfolds, it becomes apparent that time is not behaving normally and that identities are uncertain and unstable. Characters age at different rates, facial features alter and become indecipherable. Langrish may be attracted to Archer’s world in part because he finds soldiering – training, gymnastics, boxing – erotic, but it is never stated to what extent he realises this about himself. In a Machenesque touch, a Roman earthworks, perhaps of dubious authenticity, is a crucial site in the novel. Brooke had certainly read and admired Machen. A skilled botanist, he is capable of writing about the English countryside with an evocative skill reminiscent of Machen’s descriptions of Wales. But menace and fear and sexual anxiety hang over everything; there is little respite from the condition of existential dread, not even in rural Kent. This is also true in another of Brooke’s novels, The Scapegoat, a short work of fiction that is never explicitly supernatural, but that has an oppressive atmosphere and a theme of ritual sacrifice fans of folk horror might enjoy.

Author Alex Older tells Wyrd Britain about his 3 Wyrd Things.
Despite its cosy trappings, its cottages and pubs, Brooke’s Kent is one that is rendered truly strange by latent violence, and by a mystifying military bureaucracy. At times, the sights and sounds of war intrude weirdly into the supposedly peaceful Garden of England; on other occasions, Langrish’s fruitless searches for the unaccountable Archer and his enigmatic troops happen in a landscape grown silent and eerie. And the restless Langrish cannot reconcile himself to either of these states. At the end of the novel, a literal fog descends, but metaphorically it’s been there all along.

I’ve been thinking about The Image of a Drawn Sword a great deal recently. Aspects of the novel are very much of its time, but it remains contemporary as well. This is true most especially in relation to the unspecified “Emergency” that forms the novel’s backdrop. The origins and the nature of this Emergency are hard to fathom and never spelled out, which seems, sadly, all too familiar. Then, too, the disoriented protagonist of Image repeatedly searches for an answer to a troubling question: Are we at war? As I write this, it is an unfortunate fact that I know exactly how he feels.


Author Alex Older tells Wyrd Britain about his 3 Wyrd Things.
Music
The Cure - Charlotte Sometimes

War, time slips, and splintered personalities haunt my music choice as well.

I’ve loved this song ever since I was a teen: it’s four minutes of gothic perfection. I like the way it was never an album track, it only enhances the sense I have of “Charlotte Sometimes” being a hermetic sound world with its own special atmosphere. It’s like a sunless aural space I can walk into at any time. And I do walk into it quite often. In fact, I often feel I have been living inside this song – living within its gloomy precincts – for most of my life.

So, for me the song is a kind of portal, a portal into a particular grey and doleful place. But the song is itself about portals. Robert Smith’s inspiration for “Charlotte Sometimes” is the 1969 children’s novel of the same name by Penelope Farmer. It’s a book about a girl at a English boarding school named Charlotte who finds that her dormitory bed acts as a portal into the past. While she sleeps she exchanges places with a girl named Clare who slept in the same bed decades ago. Clare was at the school during the First World War, and she and Charlotte keep swapping places between the war years and the 1950s.

If this sounds like an opportunity for exciting adventures, then it really doesn’t turn out that way. Charlotte Sometimes is nothing like a children’s book of today. There are no heroics, and identities are not affirmed – on the contrary, they are always under threat of disintegration (the b-side to “Charlotte Sometimes”, also inspired by the novel, is called “Splintered In Her Head”). It’s such a monochrome, mournful book, shaped by war, disease, death, and grief. The Cure captured its muted melancholy very well. Indeed, some of the song’s lyrics are lifted more or less directly from the novel. Grief and loss are subjects that have reoccured in my writing frequently: there is often an absent other shaping my stories. I’ve been preoccupied with these themes since childhood. Robert Smith has touched upon them repeatedly too: the most recent album by The Cure, Songs of a Lost World, is manifestly a work about grief.


Author Alex Older tells Wyrd Britain about his 3 Wyrd Things.
Film
The Company of Wolves 

After all that grey, we need some bold colours. My film choice is also about a girl who, whilst in bed, passes through a portal of sorts: the portal of her dreams.

Again, this work is a lifelong love of mine. The earliest dream I can recollect, from when I was very small, is an Alice-style nightmare of tumbling down a hole in the earth into a strange, flickering black-and-white room. For that reason, and perhaps for reasons to do with childhood loss, I’ve always been obsessed with the notion of children passing from one world into another. These stories often focus on young girls, and The Company of Wolves, adapted from Angela Carter’s stories in The Bloody Chamber, is one such film.

In the film, a young girl, Rosaleen, is sleeping in her artfully cluttered room in an English country house (if you look closely you can see a picture of The Cure on her wall). The objects in her room, and her sister and parents, are all woven into her fantastical dreams of a fairytale-like world of forests and wolves, folklore, and a wise old grandmother, played brilliantly by Angela Lansbury. Essentially, the film is a gothic retelling of “Little Red Riding Hood”, but with a number of embedded stories along the way, stories of wronged women, wolves, and even the Devil driving in the forest in his white Rolls-Royce.

Director Neil Jordan is Irish, but The Company of Wolves is a certainly a British film, made here, and very much shaped by the magnificent imagination of Angela Carter, who co-wrote the script. That said, one of the things I adore about it is how un-British it is. British films are rarely allowed to be this sumptuously symbolic – especially when the symbolism is mostly about sex and desire and reproduction. It’s all dark pathways, werewolves, hair, blood, flowers, eggs, mirrors: a veritable forest of Freudianism. It was made on a tight budget, which shows sometimes, but nonetheless it manages to be wonderfully overripe and extravagant. There isn’t enough of that in Britain, I sometimes feel. We could do with more artistic opulence and profusion. I first saw The Company of Wolves when I was very young, and I think I learned from it that sometimes you just have to set your imagination running free.

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Monday, 6 April 2026

Possessed

Wyrd Britain reviews 'Possessed' by Rosalie & Edward Synton published as part of the British Library Tales of the Weird imprint.
Rosalie & Edward Synton
British Library

John Travers has been hanged for the murder of his mother-in-law Helga, but to those who knew him something is amiss. Driven by justice and a sense of uncanny forces at work, John’s friend Doctor Toogood recounts a haunting tale of love and jealousy under the fell influence of a shadowy and implacable evil. First published in 1927, this novel by husband-and-wife writing duo Rosalie and Edward Synton (real surname Corse-Scott) has been lost for nearly a century and returns now from the Library collections to deliver its occult thrills anew.

A newly rediscovered novel of the occult unearthed by the venerable Johnny Mains and presented here by the British Library's Tales of the Weird imprint, a most fitting home.

The Syntons, pen-names of Rosalie & Edward Corse-Scott, the former a teacher, the latter a soldier and farmer, tell an occult story of murder and manipulation across three perspectives, with the first doing most of the heavy lifting.

Sometime in the 1920s, in the aftermath of WWI, John Travers is hanged for the murder of his mother-in-law, Helga. Telling his story is his friend, and fellow Helga-hater, Dr Toogood who reveals her devious, manipulative and possibly supernatural nature as he relates the effect she had on his friend and the actions taken.  The novel's second part is provided by Travers as he awaits execution before the book ends with the maleficent mother-in-law herself.

I was really quite pleasantly surprised by this one.  Admittedly, it drags in parts but generally it's a nippy little tale with an unusual premise and an unexpected denouement. 

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Thursday, 2 April 2026

The New Abnormal

Wyrd Britain reviews 'The New Abnormal' from KEK-W.
KEK-W
The Bicameral Press

WELCOME TO THE NEW ABNORMAL! Award-nominated writer, KEK-W, presents a sextet of weird tales that blend Horror and Absurdism with the banal strangeness of Post-War British Science Fiction, summoning up a future-past that is fantastical and disturbing, yet oddly familiar. 

The enigmatic KEK-W is a West Country based author most notable for his work on 'The Galaxy's Greatest Comic' on 'Judge Dredd', 'Rogue Trooper' and 'Dark Judges: Fall of Deadworld'.  This engaging little prose collection however is available from his own Bandcamp page and showcases a different side of his imagination.

Here we have six short weird tales that put me in mind of the likes of M. John Harrison and Joel Lane.  The stories range from Prisoner style dystopian spy-fi - which I could very happily have kept reading for the entire book; through hermitic territory wars; dadaist, Kafkaesque bureaucratic hellscapes and half-remembered books to a techno-apocalypse and the Dreamtime.

Altogether it made for an entirely fascinating read and one that held the potential for more extraordinary excursions to come. 

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Tuesday, 31 March 2026

Bruce Lacey: The Preservation Man

Filmed by Ken Russell in 1962, one of the 21 films he made for the BBC arts programme, 'Monitor', 'The Preservation Man' is an affectionate short about the artist, performer and great British eccentric, Bruce Lacey.

Lacey was a techno-pagan shaman; a painter; a film-maker; a creator of kinetic sculptures; a performance artist (before the phrase was even coined); a member of the surrealist comedy troupe, 'The Alberts'; collaborator with the likes of Spike Milligan, Peter Sellers, Michael Bentine and Ivor Cutler; inspiration to the Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band; George Harrison's flautist gardener in 'Help!'; the subject of the Fairport Convention song that bears his name and which features the sounds of some of his creations, and improvising avant-garde electronic musician as documented on the Trunk Records release, 'The Spacey Bruce Lacey'.  

'The Preservation Man' captures Lacey in full creative flow and it's not a stretch to view this as almost a companion piece to 'The Lonely Shore'.  In that earlier 'Monitor' film the post-apocalypse archeologists make conjectures about the ephemera of our day to day world whilst here, one rejects work-a-day knowledge and instead reappropriates, reconfigures and reinterprets with an infectious abandon.

NOTE:  The film is muted, from 8:15 to 9:06. a transcript of the missing section where Lacey discusses dressing as a policeman and crashing parties can be found in the comments of the video. 
 

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Wednesday, 18 March 2026

The Out

Wyrd Britain reviews 'The Out' by Dan Abnett and Mark Harrison from 2000AD / Rebellion.
Dan Abnett
Mark Harrison
2000AD / Rebellion

The furthest edge of the universe, far into the future. Cyd Finlea is photojournalist working for the publishers Global Neographic, travelling deep into outer space — otherwise known as THE OUT — and cataloguing the sights and alien societies that she encounters. She’s been doing this for so long, she can’t remember how far she is now from Earth, but regardless she keeps going — just her and her camera...

I'd been fancying giving this series a go for a little while now mostly thanks to spotting an image for the next book that features the main character hitching a lift from a passing spaceship.  The story tells of Cyd Finlea, a photo-journalist travelling 'The Out', the deepest regions of deep space. So deep in fact that she has no way of knowing where Earth is anymore.  On her travels she experiences war, death and rebirth as she searches for adventures, parties, other ex-pats and one other thing, the most important thing.

Wyrd Britain reviews 'The Out' by Dan Abnett and Mark Harrison from 2000AD / Rebellion.
It's a really fun trip and a nice change for me to see Abnett in a more playful mien away from the grim and grimy wars of his 40k playground where he excels.  Harrison has been a regular on the Galaxy's greatest for a long time and have to admit to having never been particularly enamoured of his art - or painted comic art in general.  It's vibrant and imaginative, and when he's doing splash pages it's borderline sublime, but a full page of panels is just too hazy and busy for my tired old eyes - oh and his mouths are really distracting - but I stress this as a purely personal preference, the man can definitely draw.

I'm very glad I took the plunge.  Of the very few graphic novels I buy these days most are 2000AD related and I'm rarely disappointed and this turned out to be a very fun read and I'll definitely come back for more when Vol. 2 appears.

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Monday, 16 March 2026

NEWS: A Year in the Country publish 'Ghost Signals: The Shadowlands of British Analogue Television 1968-1995'.

NEWS: A Year in the Country publish 'Ghost Signals: The Shadowlands of British Analogue Television 1968-1995'.
Our fellow explorer in wyrd territories Stephen Prince of the 'A Year in the Country' blog has another of his fascinating collections available as of today, 'Ghost Signals: The Shadowlands of British Analogue Television 1968-1995', an examination of pre-digital wyrd TV. 

From the release blurb...
Before the ubiquity of streaming, British television was a landscape with room for strange experiments, folk-horror nightmares, and “wyrd” transmissions. Today, many of these programmes have vanished from official channels, leaving behind only “ghost signals“: a shadowland of terrestrial TV hidden in plain sight across the unmediated and unmarketed corners of the internet.

GHOST SIGNALS maps this territory from 1968 – the foundational “wyrd” year of acid folk and iconic folk horror – to 1995, the dawn of the digital revolution. The book delves into a unique era where public funding met social experimentation, creating a “broad diet” of television that was often as challenging as it was chilling.

This landscape invited viewers to encounter the seasonal hauntings of A GHOST STORY FOR CHRISTMAS, the suburban occult of SCORPION TALES: GREAT ALBERT, and the layered mythologies of THE MOON STALLION. It was a time that embraced the edgeland quiet horror of UNNATURAL CAUSES: LOST PROPERTY, the prescient virtual worlds of PLAY FOR TOMORROW: SHADES, and the metatextual timeslip satire of SCREENPLAY: THE BLACK AND BLUE LAMP. From the paranormal pathways of LEAP IN THE DARK: JACK BE NIMBLE to the non-horror folk horror of PLAY FOR TODAY: THE LONELY MAN’S LOVER, these broadcasts pushed the boundaries of the terrestrial signal.

The book is available in paperback and ebook from:
ayearinthecountry.co.uk/ghost-signals-the-shadowlands-of-british-analogue-television-1968-1995-paperback-and-ebook/

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If you enjoy what we do here on Wyrd Britain and would like to help us continue then we would very much welcome a donation towards keeping the blog going - paypal.me/wyrdbritain

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Sunday, 15 March 2026

The Man Who Hated Children

Wyrd Britain reviews 'The Man Who Hated Children' from the third and final series of 'Shadows' (1978).
By it's third and final series, the ITV anthology 'Shadows' was running out of both scares and steam and was delving into the realms of fantasy with stories about Merlin, magic lands and, in this instance, Peter Pan.

At it's centre and hamming it up horribly is future 'Grange Hill' caretaker George A Cooper as the curmudgeonly councillor 'Higgs', determined to bring the wrath of the law down on the heads of the two kids, 'Willie' (Paul Watson) & 'Tom' (William Smoker) who've been bedevilling him.  Recruiting fellow councillor 'Sliggs' (Brian Wilde - 'Porridge', 'Last of the Summer Wine'), he begins to enact a plan that unwittingly pits him against literature’s perpetually prepubescent prankster and brings him to a particularly odd ending.

To my mind this episode has very little to recommend it, Cooper is in full on pantomime villain mode and Wilde is still essentially playing 'Mr Barrowclough', a role he'd only left the previous year, but, right in the middle, there is one rather magical little scene that makes it all worth while but which will leave you wondering why the rest of the story couldn't have been like that.

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If you enjoy what we do here on Wyrd Britain and would like to help us continue then we would very much welcome a donation towards keeping the blog going - paypal.me/wyrdbritain

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Friday, 13 March 2026

NEWS: Two lost Doctor Who episodes have been found.

Two of the missing Doctor Who episodes, 'The Nightmare Begins' and 'Devil’s Planet', from the Terry Nation and Dennis Spooner scripted, First Doctor (William Hartnell) serial 'The Daleks’ Master Plan', have been found by the amazing folk at Film is Fabulous! - "a charitable trust run by film collectors, cinema lovers and vintage television enthusiasts. It has a primary objective, to advance, educate, and encourage public interest in film as a medium, and its role within British culture."

At 12 episodes, 'The Daleks’ Master Plan' is one of the longest Doctor Who serials and with most of the episodes still missing you have to hope more are still out there, somewhere. 

The episodes will be added to the BBC iPlayer Doctor Who library this Easter.

More info here...

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c4g7kwq1k11o

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If you enjoy what we do here on Wyrd Britain and would like to help us continue then we would very much welcome a donation towards keeping the blog going - paypal.me/wyrdbritain

Affiliate links are provided for your convenience and to help mitigate running costs.

Tuesday, 10 March 2026

3 Wyrd Things: Nina Antonia

For '3 Wyrd Things' I ask various creative people whose work I admire to tell us about three oddly, wonderfully, weirdly British things that have been an influence on them and their work:
- a book or author,
- a film or TV show,
- a piece of music or a musician.

Nina Antonia writes about her '3 Wyrd Things' for wyrdbritain.co.uk
Image courtesy of Romi 
This month: Nina Antonia

Nina Antonia is a chronicler of the decadent, a former music journalist renowned for biographies of Johnny Thunders & the New York Dolls.  More recently however, she has gained acclaim for her uncanny authorship, penning articles for that venerable journal of the strange, 'Fortean Times', for which she has written three cover stories.

Her books include 'Incurable' a collection of writings by fin-de-siècle poet Lionel Johnson featuring a biographical introduction by Antonia which 'The Gay & Lesbian Review' described as "gorgeously written", plus occult explorations of Oscar Wilde in 'A Purple Thread: The Supernatural Doom of Oscar Wilde' & 'Dancing With Salomé – Courting the Uncanny with Oscar Wilde & Friends'. 

Lionel Johnson returns in ghostly form in Nina's first novel, 'The Greenwood Faun.' Inspired by Arthur Machen, the novel is a decadent evocation of Pan let loose in Victorian London, originally published by Egaeus Press and now available again in a very limited deluxe edition on the Snuggly Books imprint, PurpleBeardedUncle, with a paperback edition following at the end of April from Snuggly.  She has also contributed strange stories to anthologies published by Swan River Press, Nepenthe Press, Egaeus & Hellebore

You can follow Nina's work at...
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Image courtesy of Tartarus Press 
Book

Arthur Machen – ‘The Hill of Dreams’

Though it is a rare occurrence, some books can alter your consciousness if not your life. I cannot remember exactly when David Tibet gave me a copy of ‘The Hill of Dreams’ by Arthur Machen but it was to have a profound effect on my perception of literature and my own isolated journey as an author. It’s unfortunate that the use of the word ‘magical’ has become cheapened by overuse, much like ‘enchantment’ until we forget their transformative and oft precarious essence. Few writers have transcended the page like the mystical Welsh author Arthur Machen (1863 -1947). His work teeters between reality and vision, opening the doorway to an ineffable vista of primal evil, esoteric enticement, ancient magic, arcane secrets, incipient sorcery and disturbing beauty. Machen believed that great literature should induce an ecstatic rapture, intoxication redolent of mythic rites and revelries. To read his work is to drink deep of the wine proffered by Pan. That he was descended from a long line of Welsh clergy is discernible in his portrayal of good and evil and the certainty of the unseen. The wild countryside of Gwent which so enchanted him as a child acted as an initiation into legends of Celtic Lore and the mystery of Roman ruins, themes he would often return to in his writing. He would later describe this numinous yearning as the ‘faint echoes of the inexpressive song that the beloved land always sang to me and still sings across all the waste of weary years.’ However as much as he loved the intangible music of his surroundings, like Lucian Taylor, the doomed author in the semi-autobiographical novel ‘The Hill of Dreams’, Arthur moved to London to pursue a literary life. As vulnerable as his fictional character might have been to poverty and loneliness, Machen was never destined to become a garret specter, unlike Lucian Taylor.

.Arthur Machen arrived in the city at a pivotal moment. As the Victorian age waned, a sublime turn of the century phenomenon occurred in English art and literature which is usually typified by the work of Oscar Wilde and Aubrey Beardsley, although they did not bloom in isolation. From this decadent tumult ‘The Picture of Dorian Gray’ germinated as did ‘The Hill of Dreams’. They are of course very different books yet both feature the dissipation of the central character and possess an exquisite morbidity. Lucian Taylor is seduced by a beatific pagan revelation whilst Dorian Gray succumbs to the gorgeous phantoms of profanity. However, Machen was never part of the Decadent milieu and gravitated towards intellectual bohemianism and the pursuit of esoteric knowledge. The 1890’s were an extraordinary time, the uncertainty of what lay ahead creating a creative and psychic frisson that saw an occult revival running parallel to the Decadent’s perverse romanticism. As well as taking a job cataloguing arcane manuscripts, Arthur joined the Golden Dawn, which is still regarded as the most significant magical order the U.K. has ever produced. Fellow Golden Dawn luminaries included his close friend, the mystical scholar, A.E. Waite, W.B. Yeats and Algernon Blackwood. Although these occult intersections do not define Arthur Machen’s work, they are still integral to it, an indefinable shadow of otherness. I have wondered too if he learned to protect himself, psychically, in a way that the hapless faun-like Lucian Taylor was unable to do, as he is pulled into a nightmarish vision where he discovers that ‘All London was one grey temple of an awful rite, ring within ring of wizard stones, circled about some central place, every circle was an initiation, every initiation eternal loss.’

Ultimately, Lucian Taylor dies at his writing desk, surrounded by sheaves of an illegible manuscript in a shabby, damp little room from what appears to be an overdose of laudanum – opium in alcohol – or an equivalent fatal potion. He has perished in pursuit of a phantasmagorical idyll. As if pursued by Lucian’s struggle, ‘The Hill of Dreams’ although written between 1895-1897 wasn’t published until 1907. Personally, I consider it to be Arthur Machen’s finest creation but it is the more lurid ‘The Great God Pan’ that is his most referenced work. My own novel ‘The Greenwood Faun’ begins with the rediscovery of Lucian Taylor’s manuscript. Once deciphered, ten copies are made up of a book capable of altering the very filaments of the recipient’s soul. ‘Whilst content, sympathetic font and attractive design are vital, these ingredients alone do not imbue a tome with magic or mischief. Metamorphosis requires the persuasion of other realms and elements. A transcendent alchemy brushed ‘The Greenwood Faun’ reawakening Lucian Taylor’s voice in the very fabric of the pages….’

TV

Lost Hearts

M.R. James was as unsparing of his child protagonists as he was of the adults who find themselves at the mercy of malevolent supernatural forces. The high rates of Victorian child mortality probably influenced his writing although there is a distinct lack of sentimentality, so prevalent in an era saturated by images of angels carrying tots heavenwards. In ‘The Residence At Whitminster the youngsters are dispatched after looking into an evil scrying glass. Frank, the fortunate child dies aged 12, with the certainty of a blessed reception whilst the accursed Lord Saul, 16 and unnaturally pale, returns as a particularly wretched spirit eternally pursued by demonic entities. Of all the children in M.R. James stories, only the orphaned 12 year old Stephen Elliot in ‘Lost Hearts’ manages to survive, helped by the ghosts of Phoebe and Giovanni, who are about the same age as him. The story itself is brief but chilling, set in the grand surrounds of Aswarby Hall, Lincolnshire which belongs to Stephen’s older cousin the reclusive Mr. Abney, who in an apparent act of charity takes the boy in. To add credence to the tale, Aswarby Hall did actually exist and matched the author’s description of it. Sadly, it was demolished in 1951.

In his introduction to ‘Ghosts and Marvels’ (1924) M.R. James loosely sets out the principles for writing haunting tales ‘Let us then be introduced to the actors in a placid way; let us see them going about their ordinary business, undisturbed by forebodings, pleased with their surroundings; and into this calm environment let the ominous thing put out its head, unobtrusively at first, and then more insistently until it holds the stage….’ Using this subtle formula, Stephen’s first few months, his settling in period at Aswarby is quite idyllic. At Mr. Abney’s instructions, the elderly affable housekeeper, Mrs. Bunch feeds the lad well and offers kindly advice. In the housekeepers cozy quarters we learn of Stephen’s ragamuffin predecessors, Phoebe Stanley possibly a gypsy girl and Giovanni Paoli, a Hudy-Gurdy playing Italian tinker, both of whom have mysteriously vanished. ‘Lost Hearts’ first aired on December 23rd, 1973, as the first in a BBC series of ‘Ghost Stories for Christmas’. The majority of literary adaptations fail to do justice to the original however the televised version of ‘Lost Hearts’ heightens the presence of the ghost children to terrifying effect. Bathed in blue light, it appears that all of their blood has been quite literally drained from them. By suggestion, dream, vision and the sound of faint laughter, the ghastly wraiths make themselves known to Stephen, gradually revealing their terrible fate.

Our own perceptions always intrude on how we receive information. Although watching the same production or reading the same book, each person will filter it according to their own experiences. I saw ‘Lost Hearts’ when it was first shown at the age of 13, aligning with Phoebe, Giovanni and Stephen. As a child I was particularly isolated and emotionally estranged from my parents. Needless to say, ‘Lost Hearts’ petrified me, although I understood nothing of Abney’s esoteric interests, I knew that adults were capable of being monstrous. For the longest time I couldn’t walk up the staircase without recalling the ghost children gliding towards the study, their long twisted fingernails on the banisters, poor bloodless creatures whose hearts had been torn from their chests so that Abney could harness the occult powers of Simon Magus and Hermes Trismegistus. As well as being a classic ghost story, in modern terms it is also a tale of child abuse. My own heart had been torn out, metaphorically, by my parents. Sinking into early depression, I thought more on death than was probably usual. But the haunted realm became a refuge and eventually a way of diffusing trauma that would later influence my writing.

Music

The Rolling Stones - Child of the Moon

‘Child of the Moon’ which was released as the B/side of ‘Jumpin’ Jack Flash’ in May 1968, is a crepuscular lilt in the Rolling Stone’s esoteric alignment that would culminate with ‘Sympathy for the Devil.’ If the band seemed insular & no wonder with all of the drug busts they were forced to endure at this juncture, Mick Jagger remained as canny as a conjuror when it came to absorbing the currents of the counter-culture & creatively reincarnating them. As he told Melody Maker journalist Roy Carr ‘You can’t play or write outside the mood of the times, unless you live on a mountain.’ Magic was in the incense plumed air and The Stones found themselves at the fashionably dangerous epicenter of an epoch deemed to be the dawning of the Age of Aquarius. When Keith Richard’s house, Redlands, was raided in February 1967, it transpired that Marianne Faithfull’s book of choice was ‘The Great God Pan’ by Arthur Machen. The glimmer, the glow, the glittering show of the Stone’s glamour drew pop Warlock’s, including Crowley acolyte and film maker Kenneth Anger into their fantastical constellation. At Anger’s behest, Mick agreed to create the soundtrack via his new moog synthesizer for the short if powerful flick ‘Invocation of my Demon Brother.’ Despite telling writer David Dalton that the Stone’s were ‘dilettante’ when it came to magic, Anger described both Anita Pallenberg and Brian Jones as ‘witches’. He also had Richards and Jagger in mind for the leading roles in his cinematic satanic opus ‘Lucifer Rising.’ The film-maker envisaged Keith as the dark prince, Lord of the Flies, Beelzebub, to Mick’s Lucifer. Genuinely sinister, Kenneth Anger was not a man to be trifled with. Another au courant film maker with dark leanings, Donald Cammell, was also enamored with the Stones. After all, if you film someone do you not capture something of their soul? Kenneth Anger regarded Donald Cammell as Aleister Crowley’s ‘Magickal Son’ and not without good reason. Residing in gentle, leafy Richmond upon Thames, Donald’s father, Charles, had embarked upon a book about ‘The Great Beast’, a.k.a Aleister Crowley who had conveniently moved into a nearby flat. Aleister would occasionally visit for dinner, leading Donald Cammell to claim that as a child he had sat upon Crowley’s knee and grown up in a household immersed in ‘Magick.’

Does whatever we intuit have ramifications? The shadows hadn’t yet converged on the Stone’s destiny when they recorded ‘Child of the Moon’. I often wondered if the song was a nod to Anita Pallenberg, with her flaxen halo of hair and feral crescent shaped smile. If any woman was capable of casting a spell, it was Anita who had bewitched both Brian Jones and Keith Richards. Of course, the song’s title evokes Aleister Crowley’s 1917 novel ‘Moonchild’ in which an attempt is made to create a semi human entity via magical intent and astrological planning. The reverse of the abrasive, driving ‘Jumpin’ Jack Flash’, ‘Child of The Moon’ endeavors to capture the ineffable, a luminescent vision at the end of a mythical highway whilst the music and Jagger’s vocals are strangely drawn out as if they are trying to reach us from a faraway shore. Anticipating the age of the video, director Michael Lindsay Hogg was enlisted to shoot a short promo film of ‘Child of The Moon’ featuring the Stones. Hogg had established his reputation as the director of pioneering pop TV show ‘Ready Steady Go!’ The promo as if by sleight of hand demonstrates the growing separation of the Stones from Brian Jones who arrived late to the shoot at a farm in Enfield and had to be filmed separately. If there is a story to be told, it is the addition of three female figures – a child, a startled woman played by Eileen Atkins and Sylvia Coleridge who portrays the eldest of the female trinity. One is tempted to wonder if they are portraying the ‘Maid, The Mother and The Crone’ the triple Goddesses in Celtic mythology who are intrinsically linked to the phases of the moon. It is only the older woman who breaks through the Stone’s semi circle comprising of Mick, Keith, Charlie and Bill, walking towards a white horse, another transformative mystical symbol. Brian Jones meanwhile, is seen peeking like a nervous sprite from a hollow tree before retiring into darkness.

It is easy to decode the promo film of ‘Child of The Moon’ as a series of cinematic auguries, particularly the death of Brian Jones on July 3rd 1969. The Stones had ‘Drawn Down The Moon’ or in pagan terms summoned ‘The Goddess’ though I suspect it had more to do with the spirit of the times than any conscious working. The song captures the Rolling Stones on the cusp of darkness and light, barely a month later they would record ‘Sympathy for The Devil’. Of course some might find this a fanciful reckoning but the storm was gathering that would culminate at the Altamont Speedway Free festival on December 6th, 1969, in Tracy, California. The unfortunate decision to have the Hell’s Angel act as security as well as the distribution of badly manufactured LSD combined with the unseasonably cold weather at a bleak location lacking toilet facilities, medical aid or tents was to have serious ramifications resulting in a largely traumatized crowd and several fatalities. At Woodstock, 4 months earlier, there was birth, at Altamont, death. The dreadful spectacle was captured by the Maysles Brothers in the documentary ‘Gimme Shelter’ peaking with The Stone’s performance. Now joined by Jone’s replacement, the brilliant Mick Taylor, the Rolling Stones are vividly menacing until it becomes evident they are presiding over a feast for the flies. During ‘Sympathy for the Devil’ a young man high on methamphetamine, Meredith Hunter, waves a revolver and is stabbed by one of the Angels, who then stomp on his body. No one least of all the Rolling Stones would have wished for such a grievous outcome.

The Stones brief flirtation with the left hand path faded along with the decade. Kenneth Anger did eventually make ‘Lucifer Rising’ minus Mick and Keith although Marianne Faithfull appeared in it as Lilith whilst Donald Cammell was cast as Osiris, Egyptian god of the Underworld. It all tallies, as Marianne had once described Cammell as ‘The Dracula of The Scene’ and he did indeed vamp off Jagger in the indescribably grimy glory of ‘Performance’ undoubtedly the greatest cinematic invocation of the 1960’s. As the last of the sickly sweet scent of incense lingered over Notting Hill sunset, Jagger – the changeling prince- reinvented himself as an international social butterfly. In May 1971, he married his reflection Bianca Perez-Mora Macias in a Catholic ceremony in St. Tropez. Pictures of the couple show Mick Jagger sporting a large gold crucifix.


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Sunday, 8 March 2026

The Rocking Horse Winner

Wyrd Britain reviews the short film, 'The Rocking Horse Winner', adapted from the D.H. Lawrence story of the same name.
In a probably vain, and certainly doomed, attempt at satisfying his avaricious and disillusioned mother (Angela Thorne - 'To The Manor Born'), young Paul (Nigel Rhodes - 'The Tomorrow People') embarks on a campaign to quell her worries and silence the whispers he hears around the house by rescuing the family's finances.  In order to do so he enrolls the help of the gardener, Bassett (Chris Harris - 'Into The Labyrinth'), and Uncle David (Kenneth More - 'Reach For The Sky') and a rocking horse that he furiously rides for hours until he enters a visionary trance in which the winners of upcoming horse races are revealed to him.

Wyrd Britain reviews the short film, 'The Rocking Horse Winner', adapted from the D.H. Lawrence story of the same name.
"More money."

Adapted from the D.H. Lawrence short story of the same name, this is a perfectly proportioned tale of greed, class, callous contempt, parental neglect and the love of a child for it's mother.  Director Peter Medak ('The Changeling', 'The Krays') and screenwriter Julian Bond ('The Ferryman'), with the help of their impressive cast - 'Yes, Prime Minister' regular Peter Cellier is in there too - manage to instill a dislocated sadness and a real sense of futility to the proceedings as Paul drives himself to desperate exhaustion while the adults, too wrapped up in themselves, fail to appreciate what's happening.  

The limited runtime means much of the subtlety of Lawrence's story has been lost and for a more complete adaptation one should perhaps seek out the earlier film version starring John Mills, but it's still an immersive treat, although, to modern eyes, perhaps Medak should have been cautioned away from including a scene that features a young boy rocking wildly while yelling "Take me!", over the sound of a whip.

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Wednesday, 4 March 2026

A Curious Case of Black Magic in Norfolk

Wyrd Britain watches '1964: A Curious Case of Black Magic in Norfolk' from BBC Archive.
For the 19th February 1964 episode of the current affairs programme, 'Tonight',  the BBC sent it's reporter to look at 3 possible instances of magic practices in rural Norfolk.

From the video description...

"Chris Brasher reports on three incidents involving what appears to black magic rituals in Norfolk. The incidents occured at three separate locations; the ruins of Castle Rising - where two human effigies and a sheep's heart were nailed to the door; Bawsey Church, where a sheep's heart and a black candle was discovered; and at Babingley Church, where another human effigy, a sheep's heart and a black candle, were discovered. In all three instances, strange symbols were marked in the ground with soot. What does it all mean - could it be an elaborate hoax?"

It's a great little film made better by the serious, schoolmasterly presentation. Joining the discussion is pulp author F.R. Buckley who shares his 'expertise' as they tour the alleged sites and warn of the danger to anyone who would "monkey with this kind of thing".

But remember, in Wyrd Britain, home is where the heart is, a sheep's heart, pierced with the thorns of a hawthorn tree and nailed to the door.

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Sunday, 1 March 2026

The House in Marsh Road

Wyrd Britain reviews 'The House in Marsh Road'.
This 1960 movie brings bickering, impoverished couple Jean (Patricia Dainton) and David Linton (Tony Wright) into ownership of a haunted house formerly belonging to Jean's aunt.  Once there, the alcoholic, philandering David can not wait to offload the property and drink the proceeds, but Jean falls for the house and the settled life it promises.

Ghostly mishaps begin immediately with the poltergeist, named Patrick by the housekeeper Mrs O'Brien (Anita Sharp-Bolster), taking an instant dislike to David, an animosity only strengthened by his escalating contempt and murderous intent towards Jean.

For a movie filled with drink, adultery, theft, and attempted murder, 'The House in Marsh Road' is a decidedly polite affair.  It's clunky editing belies a pretty packed script that would certainly have benefitted from another 30 minutes or so to really nail the landing but the core cast are fine, if a bit well-mannered, with Sandra Dorne (who also appeared in the ventriloquist horror, 'Devil Doll') as the vampish Valerie Stockley being the standout.

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Friday, 27 February 2026

E4 Wicker Man ident

E4 Wicker Man ident
Idly channel surfing earlier tonight I stumbled across this lovely little animated ident for the E4 channel based around the finale of that cornerstone of Wyrd Britain, The Wicker Man.

Apparently it's been in use on the channel since 2018 but I'd never seen it before, but then I don't really watch much current TV. 

It's a fun little homage which caught me completely by surprise and made me smile.

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Wednesday, 25 February 2026

The Wayfarer's Weird: Wild Tales of Uncanny Rambles

The British Library

“Come tonight,” I heard the old man say, “come to me tonight into the Wood of the Dead.” 
Join Weird Walk for a new journey into the ghostly and bizarre, striking out from the shelter of the inn for the places where the path begins to fade, from the sublime wilderness of mountains, coasts and ravines to forbidden, ancient tracts of woodland. 
Featuring disorientating classics from John Buchan and Algernon Blackwood alongside modern, thrilling (and sometimes violent) warnings to the intrepid from Lisa Tuttle and Dorothy K. Haynes, The Wayfarer’s Weird leads you towards fae dangers, down lost tracks in time and deep into the liminal spaces of Britain and beyond. 

This book will always have a special place in my readng history as it was the one I'd put in my bag before heading out on the walk where I fell and broke my femur - oh, the irony (not to mention the agony).  For obvious reasons, it took me a long while to get around to reading it again, but it was worth the wait.

Coming as it does from the editors of the Weird Walk zine it presents, in line with the rest of the series, a series of themed stories, here all about wanders in the great outdoors.

It's an attractive selection of old and modern and of classics and lesser known examples of wanders in the weird. Walter de la Mare's 'All Hallows' and L.T.C. Rolt's 'Cwm Garon' rub shoulders with Ramsey Campbell's 'Above the World' and R.B. Russell's 'The Pharisees Glass' along with stories by the very welcome likes of Algernon Blackwood - 'The Wood of the Dead' - H.R. Wakefield - 'The Cairn' - and E.F. Benson - 'The Face'.  Some of the older stories have a nice, almost pulp fiction flavour - A.N.L. Munby's 'The White Sack' - but a couple of the modern tales failed to raise my interest with the obviousness of their telling.

This is though another strong entrant in the series and one I recommend, although maybe not before you head outside for a walk.

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If you enjoy what we do here on Wyrd Britain and would like to help us continue, then we would very much welcome a donation towards keeping the blog going - paypal.me/wyrdbritain

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Sunday, 22 February 2026

The Dumb Waiter

Wyrd Britain reviews 'The Dumb Waiter' (1979), starring Geraldine James and written and directed by Robert Bierman.
Writer and director Robert Bierman's little British giallo from 1979, 'The Dumb Waiter', finds Sally (Geraldine James - 'Mrs Hudson' in the Guy Ritchie 'Sherlock Holmes' films) attacked in her car and beseiged in her flat by a black gloved stalker (John White).

Ably aided by a great score from then Gillan keyboard player Colin Towns, it's a taut and effective little shocker, although you will wonder how Sally could remain quite so relaxed after being attacked in the street, why she never calls the cops and how she could remember where all those keys were.

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If you enjoy what we do here on Wyrd Britain and would like to help us continue then we would very much welcome a donation towards keeping the blog going - paypal.me/wyrdbritain

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