Sunday, 24 July 2016

THE BOY AT THE TOP OF THE MOUNTAIN by JOHN BOYNE, reviewed by Pauline Francis


 

In this novel, Boyne re-visits World War 2 almost ten years after the success of The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas, so there’s the question: ‘Will this be as successful? 

Boyne uses a familiar technique: he sets up the world of Pierrot, a seven year old boy, very carefully. Did he decide to make this boy younger, I wonder, following the criticism of Bruno in his first novel - that he was too old not to understand that he was living next to a concentration camp? Or is that just me, thinking as an author, not as reader...it goes with the job. 

Pierrot has a German father, a French mother and a Jewish friend, a deaf boy called Anschel. After being orphaned, Pierrot is sent from Paris to Austria, where his Aunt Beatrix works as a housekeeper to a mysterious master who visits the Berghof, a house on top of a mountain in the Bavarian Alps. Travelling there alone, Pierrot’s fear is increased when he is bullied by young German soldiers on the train.

The reader is quickly drawn in to Pierrot’s new and strange world: the master of the Berghof is Adolph Hitler; the year is 1935 and the world is already moving towards war. Pierrot recognises Hitler as soon as he sees him. His aunt has already taught him what to say if they meet: Heil Hitler. They do meet, and Hitler take s a liking to Pierrot (re-named Pieter), and slowly sucks him into the Hitler Youth. That’s when I became too aware of the research that went into this book. I didn’t like the cameo appearances of real people into real history, such as the visit from the Duke of Windsor and Wallis Simpson. 

But then fictional events take a turn for the worse and rack up a terrible tension. This is where I began to hold my breath. I want to sympathise with the traumatised, orphaned Pierrot/Pieter. I want his innocence to survive the brutality of war. But I know, deep down, that he has to conform to survive. 

And survive he does, at the cost of a terrible decision. Traitors must be punished, Pieter told himself.
That’s the great sadness and tragedy for me, an innocent child corrupted by his environment. Will Pieter suffer regret and guilt forever? Will Pieter be able to see just what he’s become? He has to, hasn’t he, otherwise he will have been corrupted forever. There has to be a way back for him, for all those who have been corrupted by war.

I once listened to a talk given by a boy soldier, ordered to kill to order in Sierra Leone. He said that afterwards, he was taught by a therapist to repeat, ‘It wasn’t me who killed. It was somebody else.’
How will Boyne deal with this dilemma?

I thought it wasn’t going to be solved, even as I began to read the last chapter, A Boy without a Home. At first, it read again too much like a history book, too close to research. And then came the ending I wanted, a wonderful ending of hope, which has stayed with me – and I won’t spoil by telling you, except to say that Pieter offers his only friend – and his reader – the chance to decide.

Pauline Francis






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Wednesday, 20 July 2016

A TRIO OF PICTURE BOOKS reviewed by Adèle Geras

The news agenda in the last six weeks has been a cross between a roller-coaster and an earthquake. I have done very little reading because I have been glued either to the television or the radio, watching one ginormous Changing of the Guard. So readers of this blog will forgive me  if I've taken refuge in the three picture books I'm going to discuss below. Whatever happens in the corridors of power, or in what our new Foreign Secretary so powerfully called  "the chancelleries of Europe," (Our Boris is no slouch, language-wise!) and in the rest of the world, little children still need to be read to every night. They need it as much as they need food and the more picture books you read to them when they're small, the better will be their chances of being literate, friendly, sociable, unfussy about their food (Bread and Jam for Frances by Russell Hoban is good for this!) and more able to withstand anything a government can throw at them.

The three I'm highlighting here are all published by Faber, which as everyone knows, is  famous for its poetry list. Now I'm not claiming that Elli Willard is T.S.Eliot, but she's written a book (one of a series) called A Present for Pig and  I can guarantee that any child you read it to will be reciting the rhyming couplets till you are probably heartily sick of them.  I found them delightful. What is more, they tell a story:  Woozy the Wizard, resident of Snottington Sneeze, wants to find a  birthday present for his friend, Pig. In spite of all his magic tricks, nothing seems to be working out, but of course in the end the present appears and it's JUST RIGHT! 


Al Murphy has a loose, casual style that fits perfectly with the verse. This kind of illustration looks as if anyone might do it, but they really, really couldn't. It's perfectly suited to the text which is one of the most important things about picture books. The colours are bright and the whole thing beautifully produced. Altogether, it's a cheery, funny, joyous and enjoyable story which has a satisfying beginning, middle and end. I'm sure children of four and up will love it and I'd be willing to bet that parents all over the country will be muttering lines from it before too long.


A Dog called Bear is a simple story about love. About compromises, and give and take and searching for the right pet. Lucy wants a dog. No dogs are forthcoming, so she settles for a Bear. Well, why not? The Bear gets fed up with doing doggy things and runs away, and Lucy, in spite of being extremely annoyed by various Bearish habits, like hibernation, is desperately sad when he does. I don't have to tell you that it all ends happily and we are left to assume that they live happily ever after. Well, of course they do!
Both Bear and Lucy (in a very short text) come over as fully rounded creations and the illustration style is cartoonish but still packs in masses of emotion and character. The big pages of this large-format paperback are full of space which is a real treat.  The critics on the back just love it and I think you will too. 




My last choice is a good and appropriate one for Faber to be publishing.  It's a poem by Walter de la Mare, who is probably out of fashion these days but whose work I love. The very  short verse is  called   Summer Evening and Carolina Rabei has expanded it to show a whole series of scenes of life on a farm. It's a simple idea but it works very well and the colour palette the artist has chosen will remind grandparents at least (my generation) of that supreme nursery classic, Rosie's Walk by Pat Hutchins.  The view it gives of a farm in the UK is a very traditional and probably old-fashioned one, but it's none the worse for that. And when your children are reciting Walter de la Mare by heart you will deserve a pat on the back for introducing  them to a great and underrated British poet. 








All three books published by Faber in paperback.

A Present for Pig by Elli Willard and Al Murphy.
ISBN: 9780571313198   £6.99
A Dog called Bear by Diane and Christyan Fox.
ISBN: 9780571329441     £6.99
Summer Evening by Walter de la Mare. Illus. Carolina Rabei.
ISBN: 9780571314676 £6.99




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Saturday, 16 July 2016

The Girl of Ink & Stars, by Kiran Millwood Hargrave, reviewed by Pippa Goodhart

This, as you can see, is a handsomely intriguing book from the off.  It demonstrates the power of a really strong cover because it caught my attention amongst the mass of new covers on display in shops and online, and it’s clearly attracted the attention of many others.  This book has been Waterstones Book of the Month, and has become a best seller in a way that few debut novels do. 

I’ll admit a personal reason for curiosity about this book too.  Kiran Millwood Hargrave acted in a play at university with one of my daughters, and I had a feeling that somebody who could ‘live’ a story as well as she did then would have the capacity to create story well too. 

I was right.

This is a story told in the first person by young Isabella, living on an island where myth and politics clash, throwing her into an action-packed adventure of danger and daring and wonder … from which not everybody returns happily ever after.  Underground tunnels, demons and giant predatory beasts, magical maps and materials, fire and water, and misunderstanding people all add-up to excitement and a touch of romance.  The final stages of this story certainly have the reader gobbling the text up to find out how things will end.

I have some quibbles, and I am aware that they may be quibbles from a hyper-critical adult and of a sort which wouldn’t bother the young reader this book is really intended for.  There’s a large cast of characters with unfamiliar names along with numerous place names, and I found it hard to keep track of them all.  I felt that continuity didn’t always work.  Isa empties her satchel, then a couple of pages later empties her satchel again; that sort of thing.  But what most annoyed me was that the maps (hooray, I love maps!) provided on the in-turned flap of back and front covers didn’t fit with what we are told in the narrative.  The tunnel is in the shape of a ‘knot’ and then ‘coils like a shell’, and yet neither of those things is evident on the map.   And so on.  So I’d advise not trying to follow routes on the maps as you read, but to regard them as decoration!

But who can resist a heroine who sets out on an adventure with a chicken … and the chicken is still there at the end?!  There’s some wonderful writing in this.  I, for one, look forward to seeing what Kiran Millwood Hargrave writes next.

Pippa Goodhart
www.pippagoodhart.co.uk


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