The Penderwicks : An Old-Fashioned Tale
Speaking of old-fashioned stories, as I did in my previous post's review of the movie The Astronaut Farmer, I am reminded of the 2005 National Book Award winner The Penderwicks by Jeanne Birdsall. The subtitle of this book sets the retro tone of the novel : A Summer Tale of Four Sisters, Two Rabbits, and a Very Interesting Boy. Reminiscent of Eleanor Estes' The Moffats or Elisabeth Enright's Gone-Away Lake in style, The Penderwicks tells the story of four sisters whose benevolently disengaged widower father rents a summer cottage tucked into the corner of a large estate and leaves the girls to find their own vacation adventures there.
The sisters are well delineated: Rosalind is the motherly oldest sister who finds herself in the middle of a first crush on the handsome nineteen-year-old gardener Cagney; Skye is the eleven-year-old tomboy firebrand; Jane is the dreamy, literary sister who constantly constructs a narration around their daily doings; and Batty is the shy, animal-loving four-year-old, who has a faithful companion, the family dog named Hound. The plot revolves around their friendship with Jeffrey, the lonely only child of the estate's owner, a fussy, snippetty society matron whose attention is absorbed with her formal gardens and her self-absorbed, social-climbing boyfriend.
The large gardens and grounds of the estate form a wonderful backdrop for the summertime adventures of the sisters and Jeffrey, with secret passages through the hedges, a frog pond to fall into, and the intriguing attic of the main house with its generations of clothing and artifacts to explore. Fortunately for the children, the adults are quite hands-off in their parenting in an old-fashioned way which may seem delightful to modern children used to constant supervision. Major decisions are handled by the sisters themselves through MOOPS (Meetings of Older Penderwick Sisters) and the OAPS (Oldest Available Penderwick Sister).
There are the usual summer adventures--midnight missions through the gardens, rescues of roving rabbits and lost little sisters, bulls chasing the children in the fields, and a convenient tree used for strategic escapes from a bedroom window. When Jeffrey's mother and her fiance' decide to send Jeffrey off to military school, the girls become involved in his plot to run away from home. As expected, all ends well, with Jeffrey's mother listening sympathetically to his own needs and Mr. Penderwick, happily absorbed in his botanical hobbies, gently reprimanding the girls for their intervention in Jeffrey's scheme but celebrating the result.
This is a thoroughly pleasant and refreshing novel about likable and resourceful children in a timeless setting which features none of the trappings or dangers of the current scene. (There is no mention of electronic devices beyond the telephone, and all of the adults are either friendly or at least non-dangerous.) It feels like a book read or a movie seen a generation or two ago, but amazingly was published and honored in this century!
In all, this is a book about which you can honestly say, "What's not to like?"
Labels: Family Stories, National Book Award
6 Comments:
My children - 9 yob, 7 1/2yog at the time - loved the audio version of this book. We actually had to sit in the car at our destination to finish a chapter. We loved Gone Away Lake as well. Guess we ought to be looking for The Moffats soon!
By Anonymous, at 11:36 AM
Dear Margaret,
Thanks for your comment.
Don't forget that there are quite a few books in the MOFFATS series and other noted books by Estes. Also, see THE SATURDAYS by Enright.
Another group of books your kids may like is the series beginning with HALF MAGIC by Edward Eager, which features a family of "liberated" (speaking plot-wise) children whose summers involved freewheeling adventures requiring ingenuity and teamwork.
Thanks again for taking time to comment.
By GTC, at 11:46 AM
Oh yes, love Edward Eager too! Thanks for the reminder on E Estes and E Enright. We have some of their books kicking around here... need to get to them.
And you really must check out Arthur Ransome's Swallows and Amazonss books. They are lovely stories set in England's Lake District in the 1930s. We have been reading the series for several months, about to start the final book (of 12). They are wonderful stories of children having adventures independently of their parents (but still with parents in mind). Lovely, exciting, fun reading.
By Anonymous, at 4:26 PM
Dear Margaret,
The Swallows & Amazons must have fallen between the period when I was a child reader and when my oldest child became one. The school library where I worked had none when I arrived. Of course, we had The Fool of the World...Ship by John Crow Ransome, but none of his other work, and I recall no reviews for them in the 33 years I was there. (I read Booklist & School Library Journal constantly.)
I checked my local P.L. and found some of his books in the main downtown library (1 in repair), so I reserved a couple of titles. I'm sure I'll like them since your children seem to be tracking what my family has liked. Thanks.
By GTC, at 3:24 PM
Oh I do hope you like them. Do let me know which one you start with. My daughter almost gave up on the first book (Swallows and Amazons) due to the technical sailing information, but we persevered and she ended up loving it and the subsequent books. There are a couple that reflect the sensibilities of the time - words we don't use, attitudes we don't display. But minor, minor problems.
Margaret
www.homeschoolblogger.com/hsmomof2
By Anonymous, at 1:33 AM
Dear Margaret,
I finally got the P.L.'s one copy of Swallows and Amazons. I really enjoyed it. I wish I had read it when I was nine or ten years old, but I guess the originals were OP or NP (never printed in the U.S.) back in that day. I loved water so much in that time that even now I was not put off by the sailing data, loving it even when I didn't know what Captain John was talking about.
As we remarked in the discussion of The Penderwicks, modern kids may be blown away by the freedom these kids had and the lack of danger control the parents provided. Just imagine parents now allowing four kids, one a non-swimmer of 7 years, to sail about and stay away from home for days and days. "BETTER DROWNED THAN DUFFERS" would get us hauled into court these days! Still, it's a wonderful world Ransome creates! Those of us who lived something a little like it remember it well, and at least modern kids can experience it vicariously through these books!
I'm about to work on a review of the book. Maybe we can spark a revival.
By GTC, at 10:34 AM
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