Rediscovering books from your childhood, by Elizabeth Kay
When I left home in 1968 at the age of nineteen to go to art
school, like most students, I couldn’t take very much with me. Three weeks
later I went home for the weekend. My mother led me up to my bedroom and said,
“Surprise! Isn’t it lovely?” The room had been completely redecorated, and most
of my possessions had been thrown away. She had no idea what was materially
valuable or nostalgically important, and I had to stand there and say how nice the
room looked. All my drawings went, and my writings, and most of my books. It
used to upset her that I read the same books over and over again – not to the
exclusion of anything else, but because I loved them and wanted to re-enter
that world. So – thank goodness for the Internet.
I have just
started to look for those lost books again – in the early days of the web, my
searches were pretty fruitless. But not now! To my delight, if I could remember
the title, someone, somewhere, has probably put a copy up for sale. My first
rediscovery was The Silver Brumby, by
Elyne Mitchell. The Australian Outback was so different to the smog and grime
of London that I drank in every detail. Tam
the Untamed, by Mary Elwyn Patchett, with a similar setting. And who remembers 20th Century Short
Stories, that O/level text which introduced you to so many wonderful writers?
Katherine Mansfield, D.H.Lawrence, Saki, E.M Forster, Joseph Conrad, Graham
Greene. All these books were published in the fifties.
But what
has been particularly interesting has been re-reading these now. I notice things I never saw then,
understand things that were completely beyond my experience. 20th Century Short Stories really
did give a snapshot of life in the first half of that century. The absolute authority adults had over
children – young ones, as in the case of the rebellious and enterprising
Nicholas in Saki’s The Lumber Room,
and older adult ones, as in the downtrodden and indecisive sisters in
Mansfield’s Daughters of the Late Colonel.
Lawrence’s Odour of Chrysanthemums
was totally alien to a naĂŻve sixteen-year-old only child from suburbia. References
to pregnancy and descriptions of laying out the body of a dead miner when I
didn’t even know what a naked man looked like went right over my head. As did
life in a back-to-back house in a mining town. To me, it sounded like something
out of Dickens – which in, those days, we did at Junior School when we were
ten! I had no idea Science Fiction existed until I read The Machine Stops, by E.M.Forster. The casual callousness of the
teenage gang in The Destructors, by
Graham Greene, opened my eyes to the fact that not everyone thought the same
way as me, although losing a house means far more to me now than it would have
to me then. A terrific collection.
But more
interesting, in a way, are the two Australian brumby books. Friends who have
tried re-reading their childhood favourites have told me that they’re nearly
always dreadful disappointments. But when I re-read Tam I was struck by how
extremely well-written it was. It wasn’t sentimental or sloppy, and gave a
vivid picture of life and death in the outback. Mary Elwyn Patchett (1897 –
1989) grew up on a cattle station in Queensland, but moved to England in 1931.
The first book she had published was Ajax
the Warrior, about a dog owned by a young girl, and Tam the Untamed was the second in the series, about a horse. At one
point Tam goes off to join the wild brumbies in their secret valley, a lush
green oasis that can’t be overlooked from above – at least, it would be
possible from a plane but as the book was probably set in the early part of the twentieth
century this is fair enough. My clue for this is that one of the books has
Mary, the heroine, getting lost in a forest of giant prickly pear. This cactus
had originally been introduced from Spain to feed cochineal beetles – and then
spread out of control, with devastating consequences. The destruction of this
forest is the first example of a successful biological control – Cactoblastis
caterpillars were introduced in 1926, and the moths died out once they’d eaten
all the cactus. But the secret setting rang a bell – as exactly the same valley
occurs in all the Silver Brumby books by Elyne Mitchell. Mitchell (1913 – 2002)
lived all her life in Australia, and wrote many more books than Patchett. Was
the valley a coincidence? Or was it a real place that they had both visited at
different times? Or had Mitchell read Tam
the Untamed, and decided to use the location?
Tam is written in
the first person from a human perspective:
…The steep rocky cliff sheered away beneath us for fifty
feet or more, then it began to crumble and lead less steeply into a great,
rock-ramparted hollow. Grass grew on the floor of it, and from where we were we
could see the gleam of water in a rock pool, evidently caught when the heavy
rains stormed down the cliffs. In this secluded spot, so completely hidden from
the outside world, which could see only the hard, bare outline of the mountain,
a herd of brumbies cropped the sweet grass…
Of all the horses running in the mountains, Bel Bel alone
thought she knew the secret hiding-place that enabled Thowra and his herd to
disappear from all their hunters… she wondered if he had found again the deep
valley that was like a cleft in the hills at the back of Paddy Rush’s Bogong, the
valley with the grassy Hidden Flat that could not be seen from the top…
There are occasions when we writers honestly think we have
invented something, but in reality we’re remembering it without realising it.
It’s a minor issue – I was delighted to discover that I’d been reading some
quality writing, and it’s a pity that the only way to get hold of the books is
by searching online. The Silver Brumby series has been reprinted every so
often, and an e-book version is available. But I don’t suppose anyone remembers a
book called Claud the Seahorse, do
they?
Comments
Glad you're re-finding those books and enjoying them again. But, no, sorry, never heard of Claud the Seahorse. Hope you find him.
https://www.amazon.co.uk/deep-sea-horse-Primrose-Cumming/dp/B0000CJK0R
"One of my favourite children's books, published in 1956. I absolutely love this book, quite rare now, but I read it at primary school in the 1960s and have never forgotten it. It is a story of Claud, a tail-less thoroughbred, who is lured to the cliff edge by singing from the sea, but falls in! Thereafter he meets mermaids, a spider crab and a wicked cuttlefish among others. He has adventures and it's quite scary at times. The end is good and Neptune is very kind to him, so a happy horse is he! If you ca get your hands on a copy, DO! it's wonderful for adults and I would say for children around 8 or 9 to 12 yrs. It also has some nice illustrated pictures of Claud and his underwater life. I am saving it for Christmas 2016 and I can't wait." (From an Amazon customer.)
Elizabeth, is this the one?