The Children's Book
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As a child, what bookworm didn鈥檛 dream of having a writer for a parent? Bedtime stories would be one-of-a-kind masterpieces. And maybe, if you were really lucky, they鈥檇 name a character after you, like A.A. Milne did with Christopher Robin.
Then you grow up and realize, at least when it comes to the founders of British children鈥檚 literature, even Oliver Twist would recoil in horror from such a fate.
Kenneth Grahame鈥檚 son committed suicide at boarding school. Peter Llewellyn-Davies, the inspiration for 鈥Peter Pan鈥 and one of J.M. Barrie鈥檚 adopted sons, also killed himself. 鈥淪ecret Garden鈥 author Frances Hodgson Burnett left her dying teenage son in Italy to be with her lover in England.
Edith Nesbit had a family epic in its emotional complications. She and her husband had an open marriage, and his mistress and two children lived with the family. There were serious gaps in parenting. One of Nesbit鈥檚 sons died having his tonsils out, for example, apparently because no one remembered to tell him not to eat the night before the operation.
While it may seem amazing that writers who delight so many generations of other people鈥檚 children were so rough on their own, it鈥檚 worth noting this particular generation wasn鈥檛 really writing for children. They were writing for the child in themselves, as A.S. Byatt points out in her intricately crafted, deeply satisfying new novel The Children鈥檚 Book. And that creative genius depended on never growing up. Being a good parent kind of does.
For 鈥淭he Children鈥檚 Book,鈥 which was short-listed for this year鈥檚 Booker Prize, Byatt uses details from Nesbit鈥檚 life as a jumping-off point for inspiration. Like Nesbit, Olive Wellwood and her banker husband are founding members of the Fabian Society, a precursor to Britain鈥檚 Labour Party. They also have many children, who are looked after by Olive鈥檚 sister, Violet, so Olive can create the stories that keep the family in their beloved home, Todefright.
Not having to cook or clean, Olive concocts never ending stories, 鈥渓ike segmented worms,鈥 for each of her children. 鈥淭he story books were kept in a glass-faced cabinet in Olive鈥檚 study.... It had begun, of course, with Tom, whose story was the longest. Each story was written in its own book, hand-decorated with stuck-on scraps and coloured patterns.鈥 The Wellwood children are raised to believe in a hidden world of magic that exists just out of sight. 鈥淭he seen and the unseen world were interlocked and superimposed. You could trip out of one and into the other at any moment.鈥
Into this imagination-driven society stumbles Phillip Warren, a runaway teen with an artistic spirit. After Olive plays good fairy for the weekend, Phillip is apprenticed to a family friend, a potter of uncertain temper and undoubted genius, who has two fragile-looking daughters. The Fabians believed in giving children room to explore, and Olive鈥檚 most beloved child, Tom, disappears into the woods for days at a time. Prickly Dorothy longs to be a doctor; and proto-Goth Hedda ferrets out family secrets and rages at being ignored. Meanwhile, Olive鈥檚 bourgeois-raised nephew flirts with anarchy, and her golden niece longs to be allowed to think.
Readers will also be allowed to think, as they sink comfortably into Byatt鈥檚 gorgeously stuffed narrative. (And at almost 700 pages, you can get really comfy.) I haven鈥檛 had as much pure fun with one of her novels since her Booker-winning 鈥淧ossession.鈥 The Edwardian age agrees with her every bit as much as did the Victorian.
鈥淭he Children鈥檚 Book鈥 manages to be encompassing in scope and watch-maker precise in detail. Following members of Wellwood鈥檚 extended brood over the decades, Byatt covers huge swaths of the transition from the Victorian to the Edwardian era right up through World War I, discoursing intelligently about everything from women鈥檚 suffrage to the language of fairy tales and the art of puppetry. Periodically, she offers omniscient history lectures, and the last section of the novel, believe it or not, feels rushed. But by then, a reader is so invested in the characters, it almost doesn鈥檛 matter.
As with 鈥淧ossession,鈥 Byatt includes long excerpts of her characters鈥 work. This time she turns her skilled hand to Golden-Age-era children鈥檚 literature and World War I trench poetry. Interestingly, Wellwood doesn鈥檛 write much like Nesbit. Instead of schoolkids digging up an irritable sand fairy (鈥淭he Five Children and It鈥), Olive鈥檚 stories are more in the vein of George MacDonald. 鈥Tom Underground,鈥 for example, follows a prince into dark tunnels as he seeks to reclaim his shadow from an evil fairy.
In the real world, the children discover secrets that make the Big Bad Wolf look the recipient of the Babysitter of the Year Award, while the adults pride themselves on their enlightened, reasoned parenting. 鈥淕rown-ups always think we don鈥檛 know things they must have known themselves,鈥 a friend tells Tom. 鈥淭hey need to remember wrong, I think.鈥
Fans of 鈥淧ossession,鈥 you鈥檝e got yourself a new bedtime story.
Yvonne Zipp regularly reviews fiction for the Monitor.