The Northern Elements

The Northern Elements

Rated 5.0 out of 5
5.0 out of 5 stars (based on 35 reviews)

Set in Lancashire, in 1890 and 1960, the novel involves two gangs of small boys and their adventures, seventy years apart.

The Northern Elements

The Northern Elements

Rated 5.0 out of 5
5.0 out of 5 stars (based on 35 reviews)

“The story grows in the mind and stays with you. The structure is masterly.”

The Northern Elements is so called because the ancient elements of earth, air, fire, and water are thematic threads woven into the story. Set in Lancashire, in 1890 and 1960, the novel involves two gangs of small boys and their adventures, seventy years apart.

The tragic secret that links the the two gangs only emerges in the second part of the book, which is set in the present day.

Thomson explores aspects of identity which are the product of a specific time, and elements which can be said to be universal in our nature. He writes with characteristic wit and sharpness of observation about the world as seen by boys on the brink of adolescence, in a rapidly changing cotton town in the North of England.

An Excerpt from The Northern Elements:

1890
Bread

Five boys met under the gas lamp at the corner of River Street and Higher Audley Street at ten o’clock, as arranged. It had been raining for days but that was nothing new in Blackburn. The damp air was good for the cotton, they said, and anyway, the boys had never known anything different.

They all wore cloth caps and mufflers. Two of them wore clogs and three were barefoot despite the cold and wet. You got used to it. There was Daniel Lyon, the leader of the gang; Richard Clayton, the brightest; Robert Catlow, the biggest, and James Bibby, the practical one. Little George Pickford was late.

‘He’ll mar everything if he doesn’t show up soon,’ Danny said.

‘Let’s go without him,’ said Richard. ‘Wherever it is we’re going. What’s it all about, Danny?’

‘You’ll see,’ Danny said. ‘It’s James’s idea really. But we have to wait for Georgie. We need him.’

After a minute or two, Robert shouted: ‘Here he is!’ – and sure enough, George came hurtling round the corner of Withers Street, passing through the patches of pale light which hung in a damp aura around each gas lamp and through which thin rain continued to fall. In the darkness between two gas lamps, he slipped and fell in a puddle but soon recovered.

‘I’m sorry, Danny,’ he blurted out when he reached them. ‘I accidentally let the sneck of the door go with a clack and I thought me dad were moving about, but it’s all right now.’

‘Are you sure?’ Danny said.

‘Aye, he’ll have got up for a pee and gone back to bed. He’s not bothered about me any road. He couldn’t care less.’

Though none of them was older than ten, they had had little trouble getting out at this hour of the night. All of their parents worked at River Street Mill, apart from Richard’s dad, who was a clerk at the Gas Board. The others used to try teasing him about it, claiming that it made him ‘posh’, but he wouldn’t rise to it. All of their parents were dirt poor, worked extremely hard, and went to bed early, exhausted. In any case, they couldn’t afford to spend money on candles and lamp oil after eight o’clock at night. The knocker-up would be rattling on their windows with his long pole at five the next morning. They needed all the sleep they could get. Besides, sleep was a blessed relief from labour.

The exception was Danny’s father. Danny had lost his mother in an accident at the mill two years ago and since then his dad had been on the sauce. He’d be in The Wellington or the Cicely Hole Hotel until chucking out time, which would be soon.

‘Now then lads, we need to get our skates on,’ Danny said, ‘We don’t want to bump into my dad. He’s been dead mardy lately.’

‘Right,’ said Richard. ‘Georgie’s here now. What’s going on?’

‘You hungry?’ Danny asked.

‘Course we’re hungry. We’re always bloody hungry,’ Richard snapped. It was no fun standing about in the rain.  ‘What are you on about?’

Richard was getting frustrated with Danny’s air of mystery. Though the two of them were close pals, there was sometimes friction between them.

‘All right, don’t get your knickers in a twist,’ said Danny. ‘What we’re going to do is this. We’re going to do Hargreave’s Bakery on Eanam. You’re going to go to bed with full bellies tonight lads, and there’ll be some left over. Come on, let’s get a move on. We’ll get down to the tram shelter at Foundry Hill and I’ll tell you the plan.’

They set off, close together, half-walking, half-running until they reached the railway bridge on Cicely Lane where, rain or no rain, they stopped to look down the line at Blackburn Railway Station. Rob Catlow had to lift Georgie up so that he could see.

There was a passenger train in the station where the engine was taking on water. From here on the bridge, they could hear a kind of panting and then, from time to time, a thud and a great hissing exhalation of steam, rising up the sides of the engine and closing over the top. In the dark, they could see the faint and fuzzy points of the gas lamps on the platforms, seeming to converge only to disappear in the rainy murk. Much brighter was the red glow from the firebox of the engine, leaking out on either side of the black monster.

‘That is so beautiful,’ said James Bibby dreamily. He was obsessed with trains.

‘Where’s it going?’ asked George.

‘That one will be going to Glasgow,’ James said, ‘via Hellifield and Carlisle.’

‘Where’s Glasgow?’ George said.

‘It’s in Scotland,’ said James. ‘That’s another country, Georgie.’

‘How will it get across the sea?’ George asked.

‘Magic,’ said James.

Just then, steam issued from behind the wheels, smoke billowed from the funnel, and the train began to chug towards them. In a few moments, they were enveloped in smoke that smelled like coal. They rushed to the other side of the bridge and the white smoke began to stream over their heads. They could see the rain as if it were suspended in the smoke. The passenger coaches passed beneath them, throwing light from their windows onto the stones of the cutting on either side. Sparks flashed on the gravel and there was a squealing noise. At last, only the red lamp at the back of the guard’s van was visible, rapidly dwindling to a point. A melancholy whistle announced that the train was taking the bend at Daisyfield and the excitement was over. There was only the cold and the rain.

The Northern Elements

“It gets more and more compelling as it goes on and the last few chapters are stunning”

Cover image (copyright pending) with thanks to
Blackburn with Darwen Library & Information Service.
www.cottontown.org

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Reviews for The Northern Elements

Brilliant Read

Rated 5.0 out of 5
Tuesday, 15 October, 2019

Absolutely brilliant, fantastic read, brought back some very happy childhood memories.

- Lynda

Excellent!

Rated 5.0 out of 5
Saturday, 12 October, 2019

Excellent quality and excellent value for money

Hugh Lewis

It's a must read

Rated 5.0 out of 5
Saturday, 12 October, 2019

Ian Thomson, I absolutely loved the book. Took me right back to my childhood: Copy Nook , St Albans, Larkhill, I could not put it down. Thank you for the memories

- S Furey

Well worth the purchse

Rated 5.0 out of 5
Tuesday, 17 September, 2019

Best book I have read in years and, though it reminded me of the area I was brought up in and the things we did, that was irrelevant, as the story and how the author brought the two different eras together at the end was nothing short of brilliant.

- Tricia Owdienko

To Live and Die in Blackburn

Rated 5.0 out of 5
Friday, 23 August, 2019

For me, this is the leanest and most accomplished work in the Thomson canon. The juggling of contrast and continuity at key points across three centuries is deft. Northern vernacular of yesteryear is persuasively done, as is the acute sense of both time and place. Attention to detail in such areas is above par, suggesting both assiduous research and personal knowledge. So close and feeling is the writer’s hold on the strands of his town’s history that the book lingers in the memory as part paean, part elegy.

The synopsis has been well covered elsewhere but certain themes loom large in my wholly subjective response. By offering three distinct time-frames that run from an age of industrial poverty to our own age of affluent decline – by way of two world wars – there is a keen sense of small lives lived urgently while history looms. The novel’s latter-day narrator scrapes meaning from human remains, as befits his forensic calling and the history in his own bones. Post-retirement, with his own era drifting from his grasp, he seeks to gather the tenuous threads of a life long vanished from memory, to give meaning and continuity to a child robbed of that life 130 years earlier.

Can one retired scalpel-jockey in a northern town unravel a 130-year old mystery, and pluck one small soul from oblivion? What will that search mean for his own soul? I commend you to buy the book, read on and find out. As a final impression, I’ll rip-off F. Scott Fitzgerald: And so we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past.

- Chastermief

Response from Ian Thomson, Author

Thank you for this sensitive and perceptive review. I’m so pleased you enjoyed the time framing. It involved holding quite a lot of information in my head so that it all cohered.

Cracking yarn!

Rated 5.0 out of 5
Monday, 12 August, 2019

What a cracking yarn..just finished this and I was thrilled with it. As an expat it also brought back wonderful memories of my childhood in the early sixties and much of the scenery was around where my grandmother lived….My only criticism,it wasn’t long enough…could have easily devoured a couple more chapters…many thanks.

- Barbara Thornton

Brilliant!

Rated 5.0 out of 5
Sunday, 11 August, 2019

‘The Northern Elements’ is excellent: skilful story – telling which conjures up childhoods we all recognise whatever our age or gender. Put aside enough time to start and finish the book in one sitting as you won’t want to put it down.

Warm, poetic, tragic and funny.

I do hope Catlow and Melling decide to investigate another historic mystery.

- Whistlingwoman

Didn't want it to end!

Rated 5.0 out of 5
Friday, 9 August, 2019

Read this as soon as my copy arrived – loved it! Great story, wish the book was longer, didn’t want it to end! Wonderfully written

- Sheila Lawton

Lovely read

Rated 5.0 out of 5
Thursday, 8 August, 2019

This was a book full of emotions! Thoroughly enjoyed it and couldn’t put it down.

- Amazon Customer

Ingenious

Rated 5.0 out of 5
Tuesday, 6 August, 2019

The Northern Elements is ingeniously constructed. The intercutting emphasises the unchanging nature of the subject. ‘1890 School’ evokes my Infants’ School in Cheadle so well.

- RT

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