The Selkie Myth: Guest Post by Kristin Gleeson

The myths of the selkie are usually found among people who inhabit the coastal waters of Scotland, Ireland and even far flung areas where the Saami (Laplanders) and the Inuit live. One of the theories used to explain their existence is that selkies are the souls of dead fishermen and other people lost at sea. Another theory is that they are fallen angels, doomed to live out their days as animals until judgement comes; or that they are humans forced to take animal form for some grave misconduct.
The various myths that feature selkies show them as either men or women who come ashore either Midsummer’s Eve, “every ninth night,” or “every seventh stream.” I use both types of selkies in my novel, Selkie Dreams. A myth of a woman selkie tells of a fisherman who spies a selkie woman on the shore and compels her to go with him after he steals and hides her seal skin. She bears him a child, but eventually she finds her seal skin and she returns to the sea, leaving her child behind with the promise she will come when the child calls.

A male selkie myth is also a running theme in my novel and comes from the song The Silkie of Sule Skerrie, the song that frames the novel. It tells the story of a selkie man who comes ashore and seeks out a lonely woman. After spending only one night together the man departs and the woman spends her days searching the shoreline awaiting his return. Eventually, after she gives birth to a son, the man appears and gives her a gold chain for the son. Years later, when the son is seven years old, the selkie comes again to claim him. Though she mourns her son and lover, she marries a hunter who, not long after their marriage, shoots two seals, one with a gold chain around its neck.
With all the many versions of the myth, each contains the unmistakeable theme of transformation and the idea of humanity’s unbreakable link with the sea. That idea underpins the novel as well as the song.
It wasn’t just the song and the myth that influenced the novel. Though it starts out in Ireland, in the north, the main character, Máire travels to Alaska, another place that seals inhabit, to teach the Tlingit. I was inspired to select that area and the Tlingit to set the novel from my work with the Tlingit when I was an administrator at an historical society. A Tlingit elder phoned me and asked for help trying to prove that Tlingits inhabited a section of land in Alaska when the U.S. go

Kristin Gleeson www.kristingleeson.comFacebook www.facebook.com/kristingleeson1
Selkie Dreams will be published June 7, 2012, by Knox Robinson Publishing www.knoxrobinsonpublishing.com $23.99 hardback and $5.99 ebook and will also be available from Amazon, Book Depository, the publisher’s website and wherever fine books are sold.
Purchase links: Amazon hardcover Amazon.co.uk hardcoverBook Depository
Check this blog on Thursday for a review of Selkie Dreams!
Published on June 05, 2012 01:01
No comments have been added yet.