Here are the occasional reflections of a joyful traveller along the strange pathways of fantasy and adventure. All my reviews are independent and unsolicited. I read many books that I don’t feel sufficiently enthusiastic about to review at all. Rather, this blog is intended as a celebration of the more interesting books I stumble across on my meandering reading journey, and of the important, life-affirming experiences they offer. It is but a very small thank you for the wonderful gifts their writers give.

Thursday 29 September 2022

Stone by Finbar Hawkins


Cover: Edward Bettison 

‘The stone has carved you a door between myth and memory. . .
And Samhain is when it opens. . . ‘ (p 222)

Differently the same

I was greatly taken with Finbar Hawkins’ first YA novel Witch, one of my Books of the Year in 2020. Now, here is an equally outstanding second book, although in many ways quite different from the first. This new, essentially stand-alone story is grounded in contemporary realism as opposed to the historical witchery of the first. It is a very troubled realism at that. Yet, on greater acquaintance, there is a little more synergy between the two books than first appears.There is a sheen of ancient magic over the new narrative, a shimmering at the edge of its disturbing vision, that echos some of the themes and, indeed characters, of the first.

Loss and grief

Essentially Stone is a story of bereavement and grief. There have been any number of novels on this theme, for children, for teens and for adults, but this one is distinguished by an exceptionally deep understanding and a fine sensitivity. It is grounded in the author’s own emotional experience - and, my goodness, it shows. Older teen Sam has just lost his soldier father with whom he was very close, in a violent and tragic incident that happened whilst his father was on a tour in Afghanistan. It is an understatement to say that Sam is not coping well, in fact the trauma is driving him hard towards a breakdown in mental health.

The language which Finbar Hawkins uses to convey all this is quite remarkable. On one level it is powerfully simple, yet it captures an effecting lyricism, especially in emotionally heightened moments when it fractures into short lines that almost constitute a sort of brutalist poetry. In both its linguistic and its narrative ethos the book strongly echos distinguished predecessors like Anthony McGowan’s quartet The Truth of Things and some of the grittier novels of David Almond

Sam’s journey through mental darkness with its accompanying negative, and sometimes violent, episodes is effectively caught, building to a climax at Hallowe’en (Samhain). His gradual struggle towards acceptance is supported by a number of other characters, his mother, his would-be girlfriend, Oona, his sister, Beth, his best friend, Chad and an old man who also befriends him. However, Sam’s nightmare is, at the same time, exacerbated by a horrendous bully, Dan McGuire, who eventually becomes associated with the figure of Death himself. All of these relationships are vividly drawn and convincingly developed through both dialogue and action.

Witchy ways

Yet, impressive though all this is, it is not the complete picture of Stone. In the wonderful post-Garner tradition, it is richly grounded in both particular location and the folklore of that place. The White Horse of Uffington and the nearby ancient hill fort are places that featured  strongly in Sam’s life with his father and prompted many of the stories he heard from him. They continue to act as places of deep connection through his period of traumatic loss. There he find the stone of the title, an object that acts as a conduit to the mystical past of the place. It serves to conjure, amongst others, the shade of  Odin, gatherer in of the dead,  with his ravens and wolves. Whether these experiences are magical, merely imaginings or the figures of dreams is deliberately never clear. But they hover on the edge of Sam’s  reality as an expression of his struggles to deal with the reality of his loss. The same stone can also be used as a weapon in Sam’s tormented hands. 

It is on this level of the narrative that the subtle links with the earlier book are to be found: the stone itself is identified as a witch’s ‘scrying stone’; Oona, with her apparent talent for reading tarot and other divinations, believes herself to have inherited ‘witchy ways’; and then, providing the clearest link of all to Witch, Dill and Evey, the ‘real witches’ from the earlier book,  and the first owners of the stone, make several ‘ghostly’  appearances, before merging  gently with the halloween-costumed ‘white witches’ who are, in reality, Beth and Oona.

I find it an absolute delight when an author’s stand-alone fictions link in such ways. It is a great readerly joy to spot the references, somehow particularly satisfying.

This is a very fine book on many levels. It explores traumatic loss and its gradual semi-healing with profound understanding, but it also celebrates potent connection with place and past, and, indeed, it melds these two themes with richly resonant effect. If Finbar Hawkins can keep up this level of quality writing over an extensive canon (although this is a very big ask for any author) then he seems destined to join the  great names in writing for young readers.




‘Whatever happens we’re part of this place for ever . . . Us and the horse, the land and the sky.’ (p 250)

Images that connect

The cover by Edward Bettison is very strong. It also pairs beautifully with Witch and further emphasises the underpinning  links between these two remarkable stand-alone books. The interior design is very pleasing too and much enhanced by the author’s own illustrations. The wolves and ravens are particularly impressive.

   

Saturday 24 September 2022

The Little Match Girl Strikes Back by Emma Carroll Illustrated by Lauren Child




The truth of the tale

Here is a book for younger readers (7-9 ish?) from a remarkable author of children’s historical fiction.

As it happens, it is an appropriate follow up to my previous post; in its own way, it is about telling the truth to children.
What Emma Carroll very cleverly does is take Hans Andersen’s cringingly maudlin ‘fairy tale’, The Little Match Girl and recast it as a far more realistic picture of the people and conditions it purports to portray. 

She transforms the match girl herself into a much more credible character, attracting real empathy rather that the distanced and sentimental pity of the original. She also gives her a name, Bridie, and builds  a life for her which, although imagined, is sufficiently based on actual history to paint a convincing portrait of a desperately impoverished child in Victorian London; a child’s life unfortunately representative of so many at that time.

Match strikes

Emma Carroll further extends this shocking picture by including Bridie’s  mother. Working in the factory that produces the Match Girl’s actual wares, she has to endure appalling working conditions, including what we would now consider inhuman hours, subjecting herself to serious illness through constant proximity to the highly noxious phosphorus then used for the match heads. 

Although embracing a little of the magic from the original story, even this Emma Carroll handles far more purposefully. Bridie’s  visions in the flames of her ‘magic matches’ only serve to highlight the injustices of the social order and the unfeeling selfishness of the industrialist owners.

Without over-complicating matters for her young audience, Emma Carroll , skilfully builds her story to demonstrate the power that strikes and workers’ solidarity (especially here that of women) played in gradually bringing about much needed reforms. improvements in working and, ultimately, in living conditions. This is a rather different, and far more truthful, picture of ‘The Victorians’ that I suspect many children end up gleaning from their National Curticulum teaching - and huge thanks and admiration are due to Emma Carroll for making this available to young readers. Even more credit to her for doing it in a way that is always engaging and never comes across as heavily didactic. 

Seeing red 

Another very significant plus indeed for this little volume is provided by  Lauren Child, whose illustrations turn an important and well told story into an absolutely stunning book. Her copious images carry a remarkable power and potency despite (or perhaps because of ) their relative simplicity of style. They reflect the content of the narrative splendidly, adding considerably to its atmosphere and excitement. It is impossible to describe as anything but striking the way the dominant greyscale tones are dramatically highlighted by occasional splashes, swirls and flares of red

The author’s and artist’s commentaries at the end of the book, and especially the authentic period photographs that accompany them, further bring home the reality of the living and working conditions portrayed in the story.

It is a small book which packs a big punch; in truth, a little treasure. It is more than a match for the original story, in fact it is a very considerable improvement, 

Tuesday 20 September 2022

Attack of the Black Rectangles by Amy Sarig King : Why children must be free to read


Cover: Illustration, J Yang; Design, Elizabeth B Parisi 


Books that challenge

In terms of fiction, it seems to me there are two main categories of young people’s reading (or perhaps anyone’s for that matter). Like many such statements, this is of course an oversimplification. The reality is perhaps better represented by a Venn diagram of intersecting  circles than two separate columns. Some books will belong in both categories and placement may even depend on the response to a book by a particular reader. Even so, I think it is a helpful way of thinking for the argument I want to make here. 

First there are books that primarily provide amusement, entertainment and diversion. I suppose Harry Potter is the epitome here, but I am also thinking of  many comedies, exciting adventures, mysteries and fantasies.

Then there are books that not only engage but challenge. This challenge can be in terms of writing style; books that expand young readers’ experience of what a novel can be and do. These  can include fiction that is non-linear or told from different perspectives, stories narrated through letters email or social media communications, or ones that use language itself in ways new to the reader. Other challenges can be in terms of ideas, challenging thinking, questioning prejudices and stereotypes, for example, involving young readers with the lives and experiences of others very different to themselves or increasing their awareness and understanding of issues in their own world. Again, of course, some books will do both of these things.

This general distinction is in no way intended to belittle fiction in my first category. There are many instances when amusement, entertainment and diversion, ‘easy reading’, if you like, is exactly what young people need in books. Such books also play a great part in developing young people who not only can read but do, helping establish lifelong habits of reading for pleasure. They can also contribute much to the development of background knowledge, empathy, modelling such virtues as courage and determination and promoting the importance of family and friends. Children must be free to read such books whenever they choose, even if this is very frequently; adults do them a great disservice if they try to censure children because such books are ‘too easy’ ‘too young’, or even (in the case of comics, graphic novels and the like) ‘not proper books’.

Nevertheless, it is books in the second category, ones that challenge as well as entertainthat can make the most difference to the lives of young readers.They are the books that carry the real power and potency of story out into the world - and make a difference to it. They often constitute the most important contributions to the canon of literature for young readers. Of course, they cannot do that if they do not engage as well as challenge, but the best certainly do both. These are the books that children grow with and through, ones which I hope teachers, librarians and others will share enthusiasm for them, encouraging and supporting young readers to find. 

I would not wish to pass through this subject without mentioning how delighted I am to see Alan Garner’s Treacle Walker on the Booker Prize shortlist. Not only is major international recognition long overdue for this truly great writer, but Treacle Walker must be close to the apotheosis of a great novel that challenges young readers in just about every way..

A writer who challenges supremely well
 
Another of the most outstanding contemporary writers of challenging fiction for young readers is an American author, highly reputed in her own country, but not nearly as well known here as she deserves to be. She writes truly remarkable YA fiction as A. S. King, much of which is highly challenging in both style and content. I strongly recommend readers in the age group (or any older readers interested in high quality YA  fiction) to try to get hold of her work, perhaps especially recent books Dig and Switch. But be prepared to work hard for huge reward. Her YA work is often described as surreal, with good cause.

However, she also writes MG novels using her full name, Amy Sarig King. As befits the age group, these are slightly less difficult novels stylistically, but no less challenging in terms of their readers’ thinking. Her first two children’s books, Me and Marvin Gardens and The Year We Fell From Space are well worth seeking out. But her latest, Attack of the Black Rectangles, is an enormously powerful and important book, one that I think as many young readers here in the UK should have a chance to read as well as those in The States.

American is good

To a UK readership this author’s  books feel very American. (Although she can hardly be criticised for that, since she is American!) Hovever, as I have said before on this blog, I think many children here have now seen so many US films, TV programmes and videos that they have at least a degree of familiarity with cultural differences, the different school system, and the like. Beyond this, specific unknown references  in terms of vocabulary are easy and quick to look up. In any case, I think it is highly beneficial for our children to become aware of such a major western culture and its differences to ours (as well, of course, as its very many similarities). I therefore see the ‘American-ness’ of books published in the US not as a barrier but as a positive incentive for them to find young readers in the UK. The USA is home to some brilliant children’s authors  and it is a tragedy if our children miss out on their work.

Allowed to read (or not)

As its cover suggest Attack of the Black Rectangles is primarily about the censorship and banning of books. In particular, it it highlights instances of an, often small, number of adults denying children access to material that they think may  ‘give young people  the wrong ideas’, generally ideas with which the adults disagree with, or with which they patronisingly think the children cannot cope. Specifically here, protagonist Mac and a group of friends take issue with their teacher, school and ultimately district school board over passages that have been blacked out in the book they have chosen for their reading assignment. 

Now it may be that the censoring and banning of books is currently a larger issue in some areas of the USA that it is here, but it is a serious concern in some quarters here too, and one that we should not be prepared to overlook. What some children are allowed or not allowed to read, or simply not given the opportunity to read, needs far more careful consideration. If novels like this help to open up the debate, and allow children’s own voices into it too, then that is a very good thing.

Telling the truth

There are other related themes in this book too. Primarily, the way history has and is being distorted, not told or taught  truthfully. Specific American issues in the book concern the inappropriateness of some of their big commemorative days, in the light of such realities as almost three quarters of the ‘Founding Fathers’ owning slaves, and the white colonisation of North America involving slaughter and abominable treatment of indigenous tribes. However, there are more than enough similar British issues, both involvement in the slave trade and the many wrongs of colonialism, for the concerns to be equally applicable here. And although there have recently been some valuable steps forward in the growing appreciation of areas such as Black History, there are still far too many instances where reactionary attitudes abound. The cause of fair and truthful teaching of history to children still has a long way to go..

Throughout this richly themed book, also runs a more personal plea for honesty and truth, this time in relationship to the breakup of Mac’s family. As the narrative develops  he comes to realise that he is ultimately better knowing the truth that his father has has left for good, rather than maintaining the delusion that their relationship has a future. All of this is quite brilliantly captured through this author’s skilful storytelling, in scenes where Mac and his father take trips through space, the illusory nature of which he only gradually accepts.

Ultimately, however, the novel’s thematic strands weave together into into one: the importance of openness and honesty, of telling the truth to children. However, whilst taking a clear stand on the rights and wrongs of issues, this author is at pains to make clear that people themselves are rarely all good or all bad; this only adds to the integrity of a wonderful novel. Amy Sarig King ends her story with a resolution that is encouraging and positive, without being in any way unrealistic or sentimental. She is a writer of deep humanity and acute social conscience.

Uniting not dividing

The real life issues raised in this truly challenging novel are undoubtedly difficult to handle and even harder to get right. Often, there is a fine line to be negotiated. Clearly, adults do have a responsibility to protect children from material that is seriously harmful. However children’s books from legitimate publishers are unlikely, if at all, to harm or corrupt, even where adults disapprove of the characters portrayed, the themes explored or the vocabulary used. Books help children learn about themselves and their world - but only if they have the opportunity to read them. They bring us together - but only if we have the opportunity to share them. Amy Sarig King’s fine novel makes a very important point: children can understand and cope with with a great deal more than some adults give them credit for; telling them the truth about their own lives and the world in which they live is often far less harmful in the long run than hiding that truth in the name of protecting them. Children need the truth. They need books.

Over and above being a very engaging and often amusing read (which it certainly is), Attack of the Black Rectangles is a powerfully significant book, with crucial messages for today’s world.  It needs to be read by many young readers, and probably some adults too. I hope teachers, librarians and others will gently guide young readers towards such novels and, if necessary, help to access them. And a plea to UK publishers. This author’s books, and perhaps this one in particular, desperately need to be published over here. To presume its American context, or indeed its challenging subject matter, 
 is a barrier would be to patronise children and keep them from the truth in exactly the way the book so passionately and convincingly warns against.



Sunday 18 September 2022

The Treekeepers by Kieran Larwood


Cover: Fernando López Juárez

Pedigree

Over the years, a number of writers have made high fantasy accessible to younger readers by replacing human characters with anthropomorphised animals. One of  the most notable examples is the late Brian Jacques whose Redwall novels are still well worth seeking out for fans of this genre. However the best by far is Kieran Larwood’s recent series The Five Realms (3 ‘Podkin One-Ear’ books, followed by 3 ‘Uki’ books). They create the richest, most involving world of animal legends, heroes and villains and constitute a very significant contribution to the canon of UK children’s speculative literature. The blurb on the cover of Kieran Larwood‘s  latest book calls him ‘one of the greatest fantasy writers of our generation’ and, if you amend this just slightly to read ‘one of the greatest children’s fantasy writers’, then I think this is not too much of an overstatement. David Wyatt’s illustrations for these books represent a glorious triumph in their own right too. However, after six books, the decision to bring the series to an end was probably the right one. Such sequences can easily become over-extended and it is better to stop before they do.

Something old, something new 

However, Kieran Larwood seems to be fully back on song with a completely new fantasy, The Treekeepers. This one is very different from his Five Realms books in that its principal characters are not animals, but shapeshifters (here called shapewalkers) who change from human form into that of ferocious hybrid mythological creatures (griffyxes, pantherines,  cockatrices and the like). However, the fact that its protagonist, Liska, and her principal friends are child-aged keeps the narrative comfortably within a children’s perspective. 

The tree-dominated fantasy world that the author builds in The Treekeepers is very elaborate and complex, with many different layers of society and multifarious peoples and creatures. It is, in fact, so multifaceted that it takes quite  a lot of exposition in the early stages of the book and can be a little confusing initially. However,  once into the story, it is well worth the effort and the reader becomes immersed in a richly imaginative and very compelling fantasy environment.

A tree ring world

The story is built around many conventional high fantasy tropes and characters and is in essence a classic fantasy quest. However, there is more than enough that is original and highly inventive in the world building to make the whole book feel creatively fresh as well as uber-exciting and involving. The author brings a wonderful richness of language to his storytelling that is accessible to young readers without in any way sacrificing power and potency. Liska grows and develops convincingly over the course of the narrative. She and her companions are completely engaging and both good and bad characters (as well as some intriguing ‘in-betweens’) are brilliantly imagined and vividly evoked.

There are a good number of gruesome battles, which may put off some (adults), but then such conflicts  are, after all, the very stuff of high fantasy. As such, they are sufficiently distanced from reality as to avoid being too seriously disturbing and, in any chase, they will probably thrill and delight far more young readers than there will be concerned adults.

Although very decidedly fantasy, this new creation is based firmly around trees, with its levels of society radiating out from a heartwood centre like the rings of a great tree itself. Within this context, it strongly promotes the importance of keeping systems in natural balance and of harmony with nature in general. This links the book in timely fashion to real world issues and means it has much to say to young readers; its subliminal messages may well be more potent that heavy lecturing. Like the best fantasies, it is ultimately a good deal more than escapist entertainment, whilst still providing page-turning excitement.

Myth not to miss

Whereas The Five Realms draws very effectively indeed on the potency of legend, The Treekeepers feels more related to the world of myth. However, it is no less powerful and no less resonant for that. 

Whether or not this book will remain a stand-alone, or become the first of a new sequence, is not yet clear. However, I am absolutely sure that it will be be a favourite on many children’s shelves and borrowed enthusiastically from class and school libraries, where it absolutely ought to be found. It is a book that wins my strong recommendation for young fans of Harry Potter and other fantasy.

Chris Wormell’s atmospheric and evocative chapter-head vignettes add very significantly to the quality of this fine book.