As
many of you know, I've been semi-methodically working my way through a bunch of
Stella Gibbons's fiction in the past six months or so, and I'm delighted to
have finally got round to her one and only effort in the direction of
children's fiction. I owe a big thanks (not for the first time) to Grant
Hurlock for lending me his copy of the book, of which it is none too easy to
track down a copy these days!
I
wasn't sure what to expect from this book. In some ways, Stella Gibbons,
several of whose novels for adults are loose retellings of fairy tales, would
seem a natural children's author. On the other hand, despite her proclivity for
fairy tales, I somehow tend to think of Gibbons as a very smart, practical,
down-to-earth author, firmly grounded in reality and not terribly touchy-feely
or sympathetic to fanciful reveries. So then, what on earth would her tale of
elves and fairies, written for her own young daughter, turn out to be?
The handful of full-page illustrations by William Townsend are quite striking... |
What
it turned out to be, as I really should have known it would, was an entirely
unique, funny, and "Gibbonsesque" take on a children's fantasy. If
it's not a perfectly polished tale, and if it's not that surprising that Gibbons didn't feel that children's fiction
was her forte, it's nevertheless the kind of book I would have delighted in at
age 10 or so, and the kind that I take perhaps a deeper delight in as an adult
of several times that age.
For
whatever reason, Gibbons sets her story in Norway circa the mid-1700s, but the
only things affected by this setting is that the character names and landscape
are somewhat Scandinavian and the time is a rustic one, pre-automobile and
pre-electricity. Young Gerda, the daughter of Peter the woodcutter, is
kidnapped by Elves and held hostage, only to be returned if Peter vows to stop
cutting down the trees which form the elves' homes. This abduction is
complicated by the involvement of the Faeries, whose young Princess Fand is
outraged by the kidnapping and determines to use the Faery army to rescue Gerda.
Whether
Gibbons intended it or not, the plot is a strikingly modern one, even including
some of the complexities of conservation of natural resources versus people's
livelihoods, and even the misunderstanding of motives of those involved.
Peter's large family is oblivious of the pain his profession causes for the
Elves:
On the way they passed three big trees, cut down by their
father and his friends, lying with boughs stripped off and trunks white as
flour where the bark had been peeled from them, and if they could have seen
with fairy eyes, they would have seen the homeless Elves wandering sadly among
the scattered branches of their homes. Some of them were weeping and trying to
build themselves little houses out of pine needles, and others were stamping
and wringing their hands, and others were sitting quite still, in cold Elfin
fury.
After
Gerda is kidnapped, Peter faces the economic realities of his dilemma ("I
shall have to promise, and we shall all starve."), but we also see
Princess Fand's misunderstanding of the Elves' motives as she wants to teach
them a lesson about their spitefulness ("Fand did not know that the Elves
had acted, not out of spite, but to prevent more of their people being made
homeless"). Indeed, here's a situation that evokes a good many of the
fiercest conflicts of 20th (and 21st) century world politics, though some of
those it fits best actually postdate Gibbons' story.
...while the smaller, simpler drawings scattered throughout didn't seem quite so effective to me |
But
of course these are things that an adult reader might notice. A younger reader
would be far more interested in strange and often humorous details of the
book's imagined universe. For example, the gnome of the title is Kob, who grew
up with an overachieving houseproud mother (who may indeed have taken things to
extreme, as Kob and his siblings mostly had to live in tents in the garden to
avoid dirtying their home) and always dreamed of some day being a slob. He is charged with holding Gerda in his cave
high up in the mountains, but it's a pleasant enough form of imprisonment for
Gerda, who passes the time tidying his cave, paying off his bills, replacing his
shiftless robin housekeeper with a diligent rabbit, and generally delighting in
her own Flora Poste-ness.
We
learn about the strange behavior of witches' houses:
A splashing icy stream ran through the valley, and the witch's
house always stood on the side opposite to which you were, so that to reach it you
must ride or climb over three flat stones which made a bridge across the
stream.
The witch's house only did this because all witch's houses do
it, in order to puzzle and annoy travellers. In just the same way the witch
never looked like a witch when you got quite close to her, though you could see
her as plain as plain from a distance. All witches do this; it is a sure way of
telling one when you meet one.
We
learn what happens to Elves and Fairies instead of death ("'You might have
been turned into mist,' said the Prince gravely"). And, my favorite, we
learn about the excesses of insects as we catch a glimpse of "a butterfly
who had drunk too much sunlight and was singing loudly to himself."
I
also, despite his profession (and his lack of restraint in producing
children!), found Peter hard to resist in this early scene:
Peter the Woodcutter was pouring out soup into the ten little
wooden bowls which stood round him, like a little wooden fence at the head of
the table, and talking at the same time to Nils the baby, for Peter wanted Nils
to learn to talk, thinking it must be dull for him to hear a conversation going
on all round him, and not be able to join in.
Perhaps
it's inevitable, with such an imaginative setting and plot, that the ending was
not, for me, entirely satisfying. (Particularly when Gibbons had made her
fantasy political situation so realistic that a fully satisfying solution might have been as difficult to find as a
real-life outcome to the world's problems.) But that's a small quibble compared
to how enjoyable the book as a whole was. With Gibbons's name recognition and
the enjoyability of the story for adults as well as children, it's hard to see
why New York Review Books hasn't already grabbed this one for it's children's
series.
Without
giving too much away, one element of the story's climactic moments is the
pivotal arrival of the rarely-seen "Snow People", who, with their particular
loathing of noise and fuss, reminded me of a line from Gibbons's own ODNB entry that I used in her blurb on
my British Women Writers list, describing the weekly "at homes" she
hosted for many years: "She was known to expel guests from these tea parties
if they were shrill, dramatic, or wrote tragic novels."
Oh,
to go back in time and have an invite to one of those tea parties!