Re: summer reading

From: F Mendlesohn (fm7@YORK.AC.UK)
Date: Sun May 18 1997 - 09:34:31 PDT


So, did you like Elinor M. Brent-Dyer?

Farah

On Fri, 16 May 1997, Nalo Hopkinson wrote:

> NH: Re British vs. North American children's lit: I'd never thought of
> it that way before. I believe you're correct; one of the few places
> where the canons overlap is in kid's fantasy. I also devoured any number
> of English boarding school My-Friend-Flicka type novels about horsey
> girls having secret midnight sardine sandwich picnics, but I find that
> when I refer to that type of writing, North American people just stare at
> me blankly. 'Course, it all read like fantasy to me. _My Friend Flicka_
> had as much to do with my reality as _The Catcher in the Rye_ or the Tom
> Swift stuff. They were all unreal worlds.
>
> -nalo
>
> On Fri, 16 May 1997, farah mendlesohn wrote:
>
> >
> >
> >
> > On Thu, 15 May 1997 17:11:43 -0400 Nalo Hopkinson wrote:
> >
> > > NH: I'm in the lucky position of having come from a bookish family.
> > Dad
> > > was a writer, Mum's a library cataloguer. Don't remember holiday
> > reading
> > > separately from other reading, partly because I spent my childhood
> > in the
> > > Caribbean, where seasons aren't as clearly defined. Did my share
> > of
> > > reading under the covers with a flashlight as a child, but no-one
> > batted
> > > an eye at a kid who could get so lost in a book that she'd block out
> > the
> > > whole world. My dad did the same all the time. I managed to be a
> > > tomboy, too; perfected the art of swinging up into the branches of
> > > whatever tree was my current favourite with a book clenched
> > between my
> > > teeth. Kid's books I remember fondly are:
> > >
> > > _A Traveller in Time_ Alison Uttley
> > > _Underground Alley_ (forget the author)
> > > _Green Knowe Series_ (agh! author's name on my tonguetip, but I
> > can't
> > > spit it out)
> > > -Gulliver's Travels_ (what did I know from social commentary?)
> > > _The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe_ C.S. Lewis (this one was
> > a class
> > > text that I read in a matter of days before school even began. Got
> > to
> > > read the part of Aslan the Lion when he created the world (what did I
> > > know from Christian allegory?). Still remember whole chunks of
> > that text.)
> > > _Alice in Wonderland_ and _Through the Looking Glass_ my 1st
> > form
> > > English teacher (that would be Grade 7, I think, or maybe 8 or 9;
> > never
> > > can get it straight) taught us some tunes for some of the songs.
> > Still
> > > remember those to this day.
> > >
> > > Living in ex-colonies, much of the reading matter to which we had
> > access
> > > was published in England. As I look back at those titles, I realise
> > how
> > > many of them are English.
> > >
> > > Do remember one seasonal novel; by then we'd moved to Toronto
> > and there
> > > were definite seasons. Always got books for Xmas & birthday,
> > which come
> > > within days of each other. My dad gave me Frank Herbert's
> > _Dune_ one
> > > year. I don't think I surfaced until after new year's. Carried it with
> > > me everywhere. The sheer scope of it enthralled me.
> > >
> > > -nalo
> > >
> >
> > I too came from a bookish family, I just took the definition to new
> > extremes. Re your ex-pat past... I have been fascinated to discover
> > how different the US children's canon is to that of Britain and the
> > British Empire (where children seem to have received British books
> > as Sunday school prizes). One of the few meeting points seems to
> > have been in fantasy.
> >
> > Farah
> >
> >
> >
>
> [So I tell my brother about being in the sf bookstores & everywhere
> the covers show bronze, blue and gold-skinned aliens and white humans.
> "What is that about," I ask him, "that the people of colour are all
> aliens?" And he says wryly, "Maybe they're phasing us in."]
>



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