|
Recent Features
Categories
|
Children's book week ...November 13, 2006 • Categories: Books, movies and reading ...
One of the first 'long' books I remember reading was The Wool-pack by Cynthia Harnett; the richness of its historical description made a lasting impression. This was first published in 1951 and runs to several editions under different titles. It is set in England at around the same time that Columbus was landing on this side of the Atlantic, and follows the adventures of a young boy, his servant, and his betrothed, as they try to undo some plotting against his father, a wool merchant. I do not know enough to know how realistic the historical setting is, but the strangeness and reality of another time and place are convincingly evoked. There is a strong narrative drive. I recently read it to my own children, Eavan (11) and Eoghan (8), and they were soon caught up in the story, as well as being fascinated by the historical detail of costume and custom. I took a children's literature course in library school; in fact this is where I got my best grades ;-) We were lucky in our teacher, Pat Donlon, then Director of the very interesting Chester Beatty Library, now newly housed in the grounds of Dublin Castle, and, later, the Director of the National Library of Ireland. Our children liked the Ahlbergs. Each peach pear plum is fondly remembered, another I spy book. But the favorite by miles is the story of the tender-hearted Burglar Bill. Incidentally, I notice that my copy of The Wool-pack is the Puffin edition. Puffin was the children's imprint of Penguin, which I talked about the other day. Our Peepo is the 1989 Picture Puffin. |
Colleagues
Book Reviews
Journals & Magazines
Find In A Library
|
1 comments so far
I discovered Harnett's books (in Puffin paperback) in the sixties when I was a college student. They should be widely available but aren't. Had I grown up with inaginative historical fiction like this I'd have had some interest in history! At least I do now. (In my childhood only Johnny Tremain came near the mark.)