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Monica Edwards: The White Riders
A Romney Marsh Story


This is a book form my childhood re-read after a gap of maybe forty years. Monica Edwards was writing from the late forties to the late sixties and her two most popular series for children, the Romney Marsh and the Punchbowl Farm stories ran parallel and occasionally overlapped. This is one of the earlier Romney Marsh stories featuring Tamzin Grey, daughter if the Vicar of Westling (a thinly disguised Rye Harbour in Sussex), her best friend Rissa, Rissa's cousin Roger and his friend, the dashing and roguish Meryon Fairbrass, descendent of pirates. Originally published In 1950, this is a gentle tale of derring-do.

When a property developer buys Cloudsley Castle with intent to turn it into a holiday camp and evict the Merrow family from Castle Farm in the process, Tamzin hatches a plan to resurrect the White Riders, ghostly horsemen who traditionally galloped over the Marsh, screeching like banshees, to scare off the Excise Men in times gone by. The plan is to haunt the castle so that the night shift workers will be scared off and the building work abandoned.

There's enough adventure and jeopardy in this to keep any child enthralled, yet it's a product of it's time.  There is danger, but no one gets seriously hurt. There's risk taking, but it's not stupidly reckless. And despite the fact that the premise is a bit far-fetched – somehow it all works out in the end.

The joy of Monica Edwards' Romney Marsh books lies in the characters and the community as much as the escapades and adventures.  Westling and the Marsh are as much recurring characters as the population of the village itself. No Romney Marsh book would be complete without Jim Decks, for instance, the disreputable but delightful old ferryman whose schemes are often central to the plot, and indeed it's Jim who remembers tales of the White Riders and kicks of Tamzin's idea to haunt the castle.

I have no idea whether anyone, child or adult, coming to these for the first time over sixty years since they were first written would find them relevant. They are certainly far removed from the children's books published today, but I've always loved them, and always will.


Date: Oct. 5th, 2011 12:45 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ferlonda.livejournal.com
Since I love children's books in general and the older ones particularly, I ADORED reading through your collection of Monica Edward's stories. They may be dated but I loved them for their window on another time and on other sensibilities. I love that there is only moderate danger- no ponies breaking legs, no children being absconded with by evil parents (though wasn't there the boy who was almost a slave to the smugglers?) and behind and underneath it all the unspoiled, unpolluted beauty of the marsh and ocean. I don't often buy books anymore- no room to keep them- but I would gladly buy a set of these and keep them always. Thanks for reminding me of them.

Date: Oct. 5th, 2011 01:14 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] birdsedge.livejournal.com
I think they're a bit special, too. I'm glad you liked them. That partly answers my question about whether they still appeal to people discovering them fresh today.

I remember us having the discussion about Monica's own father (then the real life vicar of Rye Harbour) taking the service for the drowned lifeboatmen of the mary Stanford of Rye - about which you and William sing so beautifully in the song of the same name. Monica attended as a child and later was to write 'Storm Ahead' in which she wrote of a similar (fictional) lifeboat disaster.

Date: Oct. 5th, 2011 05:05 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ferlonda.livejournal.com
I never sing Mary Stanford of Rye without thinking of that talk and of the book featuring the fictionalized version of that storm and the deaths of the lifeboatmen. Even though her books are dated in some ways they are still perfectly relevant as far as I'm concerned and, more importantly (to me), capsulize a particular time and place beautifully. I think they stand up very well to a modern reader on all levels- but I'm a fan of that kind of fiction so probably not the best judge of that, I suppose...

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