Fen Lander: The Humanoid Landscape

63

By Whitstable Views

I don’t normally use this column for advertising, but in this case I will.

On Sunday 28th of August there will be a Lightwaves festival in the Umbrella Centre on Oxford Street Whitstable.

I mention this for two reasons: firstly because I don’t think there’s ever been such a thing in Whitstable before, and secondly because my friend, Fen Lander, will be giving a talk on the Kentish Zodiac, and on his new book, The Humanoid Landscape, which is due to be launched that day.

Fen is the first speaker, at 10.30 in the main hall.

A lot of you will know Fen. He’s a Whitstable institution. A bit like the Dead Horse Morris, but without the bells, he’s been investigating the ancient past in this region for as long as I’ve known him. First it was the Whitstable alignment, then the Kentish Zodiac, but lately something new and wondrous has entered his conversation.

He lived in a shed in someone’s garden for about ten years. It was during this time that he came up with the idea for this book.

I remember popping in to see him one day. This must have been about ten years ago now. He was in the garden, painting a picture. The picture was composed half of a map of the British Isles, and half of a figure like a baby which he was inscribing into the landscape.

“It’s really there, it’s really there,” he was saying, vehemently, leaping about in his bare feet like some crazy wood elf who’s consumed too much blackberry wine.

He was a bit like a mad professor, he says, shuttered away in that shed of his, with his compass and his maps, and his Anglo-Saxon dictionary, making huge leaps of the imagination, to come up with this fabulously deranged idea of his.

I won’t tell you what it is. You should come along to the talk to find out.

Suffice it to say that the book is unusual, written in a colloquial style, and that I guarantee you’ve never read anything quite like it before.

I have already ordered my copy.

Comments

Mark Golding 9 months ago

Simply wonderful...

Whitstable Views profile image

Whitstable Views Hub Author 9 months ago

Thanks Mark.

Bard of Ely profile image

Bard of Ely Level 6 Commenter 9 months ago

Sounds like my sort of book! Wish I could be there! Voted up!

Whitstable Views profile image

Whitstable Views Hub Author 9 months ago

Thanks Bard. Yes, I think you'd like it. It will be available on Amazon soon. I'll put the link up as soon as I know what it is.

suzettenaples profile image

suzettenaples Level 7 Commenter 8 months ago

I just read his hub. It really is fascinating and he really is convincing. Someday, I have to visit Whitstable, because, between you and Fen Lander living there it would be quite a humorous place to visit.

2patricias profile image

2patricias Level 5 Commenter 8 months ago

There are not enough interesting people around these days! This guy must be encouraged.

When Pat was at Uni, she made daily observations of an old man who came to the city library every day and worked on translating English books in Greek. The interesting man lived in a tent in a woodland on the edge of the city.

Nils Visser profile image

Nils Visser Level 4 Commenter 8 months ago

The baby on the map looks like something Blake might have done.

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