Chuyển đến nội dung chính

Friday's Tunnel, and February's Road, by John Verney

I have an online friend who is a connoisseur of vintage English children's books, of which I too am fond.  She has the advantage over me in that she is actually English, and so has much greater access to out-of-print books.  For instance, she's enthused repeatedly over the years about the books John Verney wrote about the Callendar family--how much fun they are, how intelligent they are, how much she loves the main characters, etc.

My local public library, which for many years had a fossilized children's collection, still had the third and fourth books when I moved to town, which I snatched up when they were weeded (it was really beautifully serendipitous how I arrived on the scene just as weeding was beginning again), and I have for years kept a look out for the first two--Friday's Tunnel and February's Road, to no avail.  But the first two eluded me, so when I was offered review copies of Friday's Tunnel and February's Road, which Paul Dry Books has just reprinted as affordable paperbacks, I was enthusiastic in my yes please.


February Callendar, the point-of-view character for the first two books, is the oldest girl in a large English family living in an old farmhouse.  Her parents were more interested in playing with words than giving their children sensible names, so her older brother is Friday, although the four younger sisters were spared that joke.  It's not otherwise a tremendously eccentric family (though like ylarge, intelligent, and opinionated fictional English family from the mid-20th century the provide plenty of entertainment) , and their daily lives of arguing about whose turn it is to milk, pony rides, and free range exploration of a wonderfully beautiful bit of the English countryside are fascinatingly different from modern American life.

When the first book, Friday's Tunnel (1959), begins, Friday is fixated on digging a tunnel through the chalk cliff at the edge of their land (with is perhaps a little eccentric), and is actually making progress.   Little do any of the Callendar's know that the tunnel digging is going to result in the family mixed up in an international crisis, involving a strange new mineral from a Mediterranean Island that could (this being the height of the Cold War era) be used to make a weapon even more powerful than the current atomic bombs....February finds herself following the threads of the international mystery that is taking place in her stomping ground until she ends up in real danger.  It's a gripping read, thrilling at times, at others offering the more relaxed pleasure of spending time with an large, interesting family.

The second book, February's Road (1961), presents a new crisis, although on a more local scale.  A new highway is going to be built right against the Callendar's property, cutting them off from the country side they love, and there seems to be no good reason why the area of outstanding beauty was chosen when other routes would have made more sense..  Of course February is against the road, but though she's suspected by some of sabotage, the solution to re-locating the road comes from following the money, and enlisting the help of the press.  So not quite as exciting, but still a fun read.

But what, I wonder, will modern American middle grade youth (for the series, I think, is best suited to 10-12 year olds) make of them?  I'd recommend them to kids who last year enjoyed the Vanderbeeker series for the large, entertaining family overcoming difficulties), or perhaps Sheila Tunage's books (Three Times Lucky, etc.) for the plucky kids solving mysteries in a very real, particular place that's a character of its own, and who enjoy the fantastical--the Callendar family books aren't science fiction, but might well be so strange to the modern readerer that they have the same feel....

Although I'm not as much of a fan as my aformentioned English firiend, I enjoyed the books lots! I'm very glad Paul Dry reprinted the books, and am looking forward to reading my copies of the next two, Ismo and Seven Sunflower Seeds, and then looking for the fifth, Samson's Hoard.  

As an extra bonus, the reprints include the original illustrations by the author, such as this one of the Callendar family Christmas, from February's Road:


And as a final postscript, Paul Dry's Young Reader list is not long, but it is very interesting (and includes a Rosemary Sutcliffe book I don't have, and medieval fiction by Barbara Leone Picard which I have heard is very good.....). I will be very curious to see what they publish next!




Nhận xét

Popular Posts

The Princess Who Flew with Dragons, by Stephanie Burgis

I still am busily reading elementary/middle grade speculative fiction a in my roles as a judge for the Cybils Awards (mainly going back to re-read things I read early last year), but I am in good enough shape that I treated myself one dreary day last week to a shiny and new and much anticipated book-- The Princess Who Flew with Dragons , by Stephanie Burgis (Bloomsbury, November 2019). This is the third in the series that began with The Dragon with a Chocolate Heart (link to my review), and it's possibly the one I enjoyed most.  I certainly think it was the fastest read; it was a (more or less) single-sitting of about an hour read for me (when I like a book and need to know what's going to happen next, I read faster, and it was relatively short-- 216 pages). Princess Sophia, who we met in Book 2, The Girl with a Dragon Heart , is the main character here, and when her story begins, she's being sent by her older sister, the ruling princess, to a distant city to attend a Worl...

The Owls Have Come to Take Us Away, by Ronald L. Smith (review and interview)

I first had the pleasure of meeting Ronald L. Smith at Kidlitcon back in 2015 (PSA--come to Kidlitcon 2020 in Ann Arbor next March!).  His first middle grade book, Hoodoo, a tale of supernatural horror in the south, had just been published, and I enjoyed it very much ( my review ).  I likewise enjoyed The Mesmerist (2017), about kids fighting evil in 19th century London ( my review ).  I never reviewed Black Panther: the Young Prince (2018)….someday I will.  So in any event, I was very excited about his most recent book, The Owls Have Come to Take Us Away (Clarion Books, February 2019). This is the story of an air force kid, Simon, son of a black mom and a white dad, who's obsessed with aliens.  He's convinced owl-like aliens have arrived, watching and experimenting on humans.  His family has no time or patience for aliens, so Simon is alone with his fears of the Grays, as he calls them.  When something very strange happens on a camping trip with hi...

The Wind Eye, by Robert Westall, for Timeslip Tuesday

This week's Timeslip Tuesday book is an older English one-- The Wind Eye , by Robert Westall (upper MG/YA 1976, still in print).  Westall's work ranges from picture books to adult, often exploring how the past hits the present in dark and mysterious ways.  Which is what happens in The Wind Eye.... It begins when a family, comprising a mother and her teenaged son married to a father with two daughters (one a young teen and one a little girl), setting off to the northeast coast of England to stay in the old house the father has just inherited.  They are not a happy family.  The kids get along fine, but the parents are not getting on well at all. And then the past and the present collide.   St. Cuthbert still is a real person to the people of this part of the Northumberland coast, and he becomes so to the kids as well when they find a boat that travels back to his time, taking them out to the island that was his retreat from the world.   Along the way, there's...