Alice Nutter is one of the main characters in
William Harrison Ainsworth's Victorian Gothic novel
The Lancashire Witches. In 1982, one of the members of the music group
Chumbawamba changed her name to
Alice Nutter by
deed poll, feeling "an affinity" to the historical figure. Since the band's breakup, one of her writing projects is a play based on the same
Pendle Witch Trials. The 1990 novel
Good Omens by
Terry Pratchett and
Neil Gaiman (later
adapted for television) features several witch characters named after the original Pendle witches, including Agnes Nutter, a prophet burned at the stake, and her descendant Anathema Device. In 2012 a statue of Nutter was unveiled in Roughlee by local celebrity
Bobby Elliott. The statue was commissioned following a campaign led by a local councillor. Local artist David Palmer researched local history and the fashion of Nutter's times to create the statue, which is made from steel and brass. In the same year,
Jeanette Winterson published her novella
The Daylight Gate whose main character is Alice Nutter. The book is about the events, but Winterson is keen to point out that her character is not the Alice Nutter of history. English author
Joseph Delaney in his books series ''
Spook's'', incorporated a character named Alice Deane, who is a witch. == References ==