Gef! The Strange Tale Of An Extra-Special Talking Mongoose
(Revised Edition)
Christopher Josiffe
416pp / 148mm x 210mm
B&W illustrations throughout
Paperback
£15.99
Winner of the Folklore Society’s 2017 Katherine Briggs Award.
————————
There’s plenty of oddity and charm in Gef!. Entertaining and unsettling it’s a quirky delight.
- Sarah Waters
Christopher Josiffe’s meticulous telling is both brilliantly silly and irreducibly mysterious.
- Bee Wilson in the London Review of Books
Thoroughly researched…vigorously written and often charming.
- Kevin Jackson in the TLS
During the mid-1930s, British and overseas newspapers were full of incredible stories about Gef, a ‘talking mongoose’ or ‘man-weasel’ who had allegedly appeared in the home of the Irvings, a farming family in a remote district of the Isle of Man.
The creature was said to have the ability to talk in several languages, to sing, to steal objects from nearby farms and to eavesdrop on local people, such that they became uneasy at the farmer’s seeming ability to be able to tell them their most private goings-on.
Despite written reports, magazine articles and books, several photographs, fur samples and paw prints, voluminous correspondence and signed witness statements, there is still no consensus as to what was really happening to the Irving family.
Hoax? Mental illness? A poltergeist? The possession of an animal by an evil spirit? Now you can read all the evidence and decide for yourself.
Seven years’ research and interviews, photographs (many previously unseen), interviews with surviving witnesses, visits to the site – all are presented here in this new book, the first examination of the case for 70 years.
“If you knew what I know, you’d know a hell of a lot!”
————————
About the author
Christopher Josiffe is a regular contributor to Fortean Times and has also been published in Faunus, Abraxas and The Pomegranate. He has presented lectures at (amongst others) the Ghost Club, the Society for Psychical Research, Senate House (University of London), Alchemical Landscape II (University of Cambridge), the London Fortean Society, and the Fortean Times Unconvention.