The Ghost Lake is a deeply personal, lyrical and stirring meditation on local history and changing landscapes that intertwines nature writing with an exploration of grief, belonging and the lives and legacies of rural working‐class people.
I am setting out on a pilgrimage through an ancient landscape.
I will begin at my daughter’s grave.
Paleolake Flixton is an extinct lake in North Yorkshire. Human occupation of the site dates back thousands of years to prehistoric times. Over the millennia, the vast lake disappeared, turning to wetland and peaty fields. Today all that is left of it is a watermark.
Wendy Pratt brings the reader on a pilgrimage around the ghost lake, to locations that have acted as journey markers in her own life. While traversing forests and fenland, she reflects on the process of finding belonging in nature as a woman who exists in a series of liminal spaces – as a working-class writer, an infertile woman in a fertile world and a bereaved mother in a society focused on children.
Discussion Questions
Why do you think the book is called The Ghost Lake?
The structure of the book revolves around the extinct lake, Paleolake Flixton. How does the lake represent the autobiographical story of the book?
What are the main themes and messages in The Ghost lake, and how did they affect you?
What did you learn from the The Ghost Lake?
How does The Ghost Lake compare in style and voice to poetry by the same author?
What is the book saying about the idea of ‘belonging’?
Is The Ghost Lake a good example of nature writing, or does it fit into a different category?
Is there a spiritual aspect to the pilgrimages the author takes in The Ghost Lake?
How did The Ghost Lake make you feel about environmental issues in the UK countryside?
What was the most impactful part of The Ghost Lake for you and why did it stand out?