The Year of the Garuda was John Keel's original title for his famous The Mothman Prophecies. His publisher apparently made the change and given how well the book sold, it's hard to argue with that on just that basis. But the original title is a more accurate description of what the book actually. Certainly, it deals with the infamous Mothman sightings in Point Pleasant, West Virginia in the late 60's, but the book is really a chronicle of just over a single year, late 1966 into late 1967, the year in which a number of bizarre things occur before ending with the singularly tragic collapse of the Silver Bridge.
I suspect most already know about the Mothman. Two young couples encountered a strange flying creature with blazing red eyes around a deserted military complex on the outskirts of Point Pleasant. That sighting was given credence due to the good reputations of the people involved and supported by many additional sightings of the strange thing by many others. The Mothman was given his name by TV personalities seeking to capitalize on the events and drawing influence from the then highly popular show Batman. John Keel joined many other investigators in tracking down the "truth" of the events surrounding the Mothman, and his search is contained in this tome. But that's not all.
Despite the infamy of the Mothman, it is the sorrowful tragedy of the Silver Bridge collapse which claimed forty-six lives. The small town of Point Pleasant hasn't really ever recovered from the Silver Bridge tragedy, and like so many other Appalachian towns seems to linger more than live. The Mothman Museum commemorates the events documented in Keel's book which was published in 1975, several years after the events it describes. Kee's aim in the book it to suggest that the theories about Mothman are misguided for the most part and that the creature is part of a much grander scheme. Keel's theory, if I understand it correctly, is that paranormal manifestations such a cryptids, UFOs, and suchlike are all part of witnesses becoming aware of the broader spectrum on which all life exists. These beasties are glimpses of another dimension of sorts, part of an endless network of dimensions in which all things are possible.
It's a theory Keel develops more directly in his sequel The Eighth Tower - On Ultraterrestrials and the Superspectrum. This book is made up of material which would not fit into the original Mothman book. This book lacks the unnerving narrative which frames the original and gives it so much more emotional power. The extent to which Keel believes what he suggests is an open question, but regardless this is provocative stuff. I highly recommend The Mothman Prophecies or as I now think of it The Year of the Garuda, but the sequel is only for the firmly committed.
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There's a science fiction novel called 'Perdido Street Station' by China Mieville which was published in 2000 and it features a character called a garuda which I'd assumed was an invented name so I'm surprised to find the word already existed!
ReplyDeleteGarudas are an established bit of folklore, but not necessarily a Western one.
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