I've just finished reading a couple of novels I picked up in the cheap books tray in a supermarket. They were "Midwinter of the Spirit" and "A crown of lights" by Phil Rickman. I bought them because they seemed suitable light reading to fill in odd moments -- on Tuesdays I travel to Johannesburg to give a one hour lecture on church history, but I
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John
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I've reread a couple of the others, and see that the same characters appear in some of them - Gomer Parry in Crybbe for example, but I think it was only with Merrily Watkins that he really hits his stride -- cross between a ghost story and a whodunit, with humour and showing the contemporary religious scene as well. I found that Crybbe lacked the humour of the Merrily Watkins ones.
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John
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I've read the first three Merrily Watkins novels now, but they are hard to find in local bookshops, which is why I've been giving them a bit of a plug. I think Rickman's religious and social commentary is right on; hie ecclesiastical characters are believable, and his description of relations between Christianity, neopaganism and New Age is better than many "factual" accounts, most of which are polemical and have axes to grind.
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