Author Christopher Marsh hid a riddle in his novel. One readers managed to figure it out and locate the coin he'd hidden in the wall of a ruined house.
-Editor
When author Christopher Marsh wrote a riddle into his novel he was certain it would never be solved. But now a Belfast reader has unlocked the complex code 18 months after the book, A Year In The Province, was published.
The exact co-ordinates of where a Spanish medieval coin was hidden were buried in a complicated set of clues scattered through the story of Jesus Sanchez Ventura, who swaps the orange groves of Andalucia for Orangemen of Belfast.
David McNeill and his wife Sheila recently made the trip to Rathlin Island where they found the ancient coin placed in a hole within an internal wall of the ruined house at Rue Point, the southernmost tip of the island.
I read it over the summer; my wife read it first and suggested I might find it funny. It was quite humourous and quite outrageous in places, but it was really the riddle I was interested in, he said.
He had a hunch the secret coin might be on Rathlin as the riddle hinted at geographical coordinates matching the area.
They found the coin tucked behind a loose stone in the corner of the ruined building.
But the Belfast man does not want to keep it. I think I am going to try to return it so maybe Mr Marsh could be inspired to write another book.
Author Marsh, a history lecturer at Queen's University Belfast, was amazed that the riddle had been solved.
In order to crack it, they had to find their way through a forest of anagrams, rhymes, map coordinates and other cryptic verbal clues.
Then they had to use a map or satnav to pinpoint the location I think they did it with a map and travel there in order to unravel the last parts of the riddle. They must have walked the three miles from the harbour, almost certainly in high winds. I'm amazed that anybody found the coin at all, he said.
The McNeills must take it now to Conor Cafe in Belfast, where they can claim a fee meal for two and a fine bottle of Bushmills that I had assumed I might end up drinking myself, said Mr Marsh. Manus McCann of Conor Cafe said he agreed to provide the prize after speaking with the author about his book. Staff are now waiting for Mr McNeill to come in for his meal and drink. He is delighted to be giving away the vintage whiskey.
I didn't believe that it would be solved at all, the bottle of whiskey was almost getting in the way in the stock room. Hopefully he won't be waiting as long to claim his meal as the bottle has been waiting here with us, he said.
To read the complete article, see:
David coining it in after cracking novel code
(www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/local-national/ northern-ireland/david-coining-it-in-after-cracking-novel-code-15011118.html)
Wayne Homren, Editor
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