My reviewer criteria. I like light, entertaining novels. I like smaller scale stories rather than epics. I like character focused novels featuring pleasant characters, with a minimum number of unpleasant ones. I greatly value clever and witty writing. I like first person, or close third person narratives. I dislike a lot of "head jumping" between POVs and flashbacks. I want a story, not a puzzle. While I am not opposed to violence, I dislike gore for the sake of gore. I find long and elaborate fight, action, and battle sequences tedious. Plot holes and things that happen for the convenience of the author annoy me. And I fear I'm a born critic in that I don't mind pointing out what I don't like in a story. However, I lay no claim to be the final arbitrator of style and taste, you need to decide for yourself what you like or dislike in a book.
Your opinions are always welcome. Comment below.
The Box of Delights by John Masefield C
First off, I am clearly not the target audience for this story, being nearly a century and seventy years away from the target audience. This is a children's story first published in England in 1935. It is a sequel to The Midnight Folk. I recall seeing at least part of a TV adoption of this story many years ago, when my kids were small. And I may've read The Midnight Folk to them, back when I was reading classic children's fantasies to them as bedtime stories. However, I don't believe that I was able to find this story. In any event, I did not find this story familiar.
It is a strange book. Kay, the protagonist is returning home on a train from his boarding school for Christmas vacation. I have no idea just how old he would be. He is an orphan, as most children's book characters are, parents being a very much a nuisance to children having adventures. He meets some shady characters on the train, as well as an old man with a portable Punch and Judy puppet show that he carries around on his back. The old man is being hunted - the wolves are running - for a very special box he carries, and ask Kay to give a message to a certain lady in town when they arrive, which draws Kay into a supernatural drama, as desperate criminals are after the box.
As I said, it is a strange story, a whimsical mix of mystery, danger, semi-comical villains and historic folk lore fantasy. Very much over the top in its plot. Our hero, Kay, ends up holding the box until the Cole Hawkins, the Punch and Judy man, can get clear of the criminals... but given the magic properties of the box that Kay uses, he shouldn't have had any trouble doing so... But does. The villains, gangsters with a flying car, in an effort to find the magic box, and start kidnapping everyone whom they think knows where it is including the entire staff of the local cathedral... Leaving no one to celebrate the 1,000th Christmas of the local church. They must be defeated, and the local police are no help.
As I said, I found the story pretty over the top, it never made a great deal of sense, but that probably isn't a priority in a children's fantasy story. It is also, rather sadly dated, though I could see how it could be made, with a lot of editing, into an interesting historical children's drama. I can't imagine any child of today being enthralled with this story as written.
The Blue Castle by L M Montgomery B-
Sadly, Montgomery did not live a very happy life, and I think this 1926 novel reflects that. This is the story of Valancy "Doss", told in close third person, and as in a lot of older books, includes a lot of "telling". We get to know Valancy and her mundane life and thoughts quite well leading up the inciting event.
The story starts with a view of the life of Valancy, age 29, who is living at home with her unloving mother, and a cousin. She had always been a fearful person, often sickly, who does everything her mother expects of her, fearing her cold anger, i.e. from not altering her bedroom decor, to always being on time for every meal, doing her expected chores... etc. She is not pretty and being very shy, she never had any friends, nor suitors, and knows only her many relatives, whom she dislikes. She keeps her unhappiness and distain for her life and family all to herself, for fear of... of life? She believes that she has never known a happy day in her life. Her only comfort is in the imaginary world in her head centered around her "Blue Castle" where she is a princess in her imagination. Pretty grim.
Valancy has a lot of pain and spells centered around her heart, and one day decides to visit a doctor, one that the family does not use, to have him examine her. He does, but before he can talk to her about her condition, he rushes off - his son had been injured in a car accident. He does, however, send her a letter telling her that her heart condition is fatal, and that she might live a year, if she does not exert herself.
Well, as she puts it "Despair is a free man, hope a slave" and knowing that she has no hope and is going to die shortly, she decides that she has nothing to lose by being free, free to say and do whatever she pleases, damn the consequences, i.e. braking the shackle of fear that had ruled her life until that point. She attends a family gathering, shares her previously unuttered thoughts about it and them, scandalizing them. They think she gone mad. She continues to flaunt her new found freedom by taking a housekeeping job with a disreputable character and a companion of his daughter, who had a baby out of wedlock and therefore shunned and who is now dying of TB. This move shocks her family and they fear that is will tarnish their standing in the community.
And with the death of the daughter, Valancy's "outrageous" conduct does not stop there.We continue to follow her life as she discovers life in her last year.
I do think that there was a lot of wistfulness in this story, as I suspect it is an expression of Montgomery's unhappiness of the time, with the idea of finding a way escaping the grim narrow-mindedness of small town life and a cold, unloved husband.
I found it interesting enough to read it in two days, and it has a lot of the lyrical passages of nature that one finds in her other books. I have toyed with the idea of writing an essay on the "strangeness" of old and forgotten books, and this would be one of the books I would mention, as well as one coming up. The strangeness is in both the differences in the society of the time, the story the author chose to write, and how it was written. But it's a very nebulas idea, very hard to pin down, so suffice to say, there is a certain strangeness in this story.



%20style%203000.jpg)


%20style%203000.jpg)






