{"id":2441,"date":"2011-01-27T09:00:59","date_gmt":"2011-01-27T09:00:59","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.badreputation.org.uk\/?p=2441"},"modified":"2011-01-27T09:00:59","modified_gmt":"2011-01-27T09:00:59","slug":"we-three-fossils-in-praise-of-noel-streatfeild","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/badreputation.org.uk\/2011\/01\/27\/we-three-fossils-in-praise-of-noel-streatfeild\/","title":{"rendered":"“We Three Fossils”: In Praise of Noel Streatfeild"},"content":{"rendered":"
My father took me to secondhand bookshops throughout my childhood. They were
mostly the same few haunts, growing increasingly familiar over the years,
although as time dragged on, we would have to cross locations off our list as
they closed. For him, these were business trips: an academic must have his
books, and there was always some rare tome calling him to the chase. For me,
they were about tracking down Noel Streatfeild<\/strong><\/a> books: I was in the constant state of
having read all the ones I had.<\/p>\n This old
thing?<\/p><\/div>\n
She has a dizzying list of titles to her name, of which I managed to
snatch only a portion: most people have heard of
Ballet Shoes<\/strong>, and, for many, it was a defining childhood
book. It’s a critics’ and writers’ pet: (Dame) Jacqueline
Wilson<\/a> cites it as her “all-time favourite children’s
book”, and the BBC has twice adapted it for television. Lots of
people also know about the other ‘Shoes’ books:\u00a0Dancing Shoes<\/strong>,
White Boots<\/strong>,
Tennis Shoes<\/strong>,
Ballet Shoes for Anna<\/strong> and\u00a0the Carnegie
award-winning\u00a0The Circus Is Coming<\/strong>, but maybe less are familiar
with\u00a0The Children of Primrose Lane, Party Shoes, <\/strong>the
Gemma <\/strong>books, or
Caldicott Place<\/strong>. Certainly, her considerable
output of books for adults has largely gone unnoticed
(one of which formed the basis for
Ballet Shoes <\/strong>itself)\u00a0and I myself have
only read one:
Saplings<\/strong>, an experimental novel that
explores contemporary thought about child psychology
in the aftermath of war. Somewhat disturbingly, it
is still written from Streatfeild’s
distinctive ‘child’s-eye-view’,
from which vantage point it addresses issues as
varied as depression, alcoholism, sex, bed-wetting,
bereavement and female self-esteem (not all at once,
of course).<\/p>\n We Three Fossils... The
Fossil Vow, illustrated by Streatfeild's sister,
Ruth Gervis<\/p><\/div>\n
It has been often commented that
Streatfeild’s gift is her ability to
establish a rapport with her reader: she never
talks down to children, and deals with difficult
topics in the same way she describes
everyday\u00a0occurrences. Her commitment to
realism in writing extends to\u00a0her habit of
painstakingly explaining what all the characters
are thinking at all times. Thus, in
Dancing Shoes<\/strong>, the just-orphaned
Rachel is considered unloving and aggressive
because she took her mother’s death with
equanimity: we the readers, on the other hand,
are kept aware of Rachel’s trials –
how she scowls to keep from crying and wants to
avoid any questions that might set her off. The
child-reader is nevertheless forced to see the
situation from at least two perspectives
simultaneously, a common approach to Literature
since Samuel Richardson, but amazingly
innovative in writing for children. The result
is a style that demands a responsibility from
its readers as well as understanding: it accepts
that life is often unfair, but invites children
to consider how best to respond.<\/p>\n
Streatfeild was famously the
‘unattractive’ middle girl in a
clergyman’s family of three daughters.
After the ‘beautiful child’
tradition of nineteenth-century
children’s literature (best represented
by
Frances Hodgson Burnett<\/strong> and
Lewis Carroll<\/strong>), her novels
frequently focus on the rebellious, the
stubborn and the plain, than which no
better example exists than the
‘black-doggish’ Jane Winter in
The Painted Garden<\/strong>, which
meta-fictionally reworks Hodgson
Burnett’s most
famous novel<\/a> on a film set in
Hollywood. In the absence of naive
beauty and idyllic country settings, her
characters must make their way on merit,
and, not only plain, they are often
money-minded to a startling degree:
“The law lets me work; I
don’t need a licence, and I can do
what I like with my own money,”
asserts Pauline, in
Ballet Shoes<\/strong>, at fourteen
(and she gets her way).<\/p>\n Dr Jakes and
Dr Smith, by Ruth
Gervis.<\/p><\/div>\n
The central conceit of this
novel
<\/strong>– the absence of
Great Uncle Matthew
(“Gum”), who adopts
the three ‘Fossils’
and then dashes off to “some
strange islands” –
means that the book features an
essentially all-female cast. Aside
from the Fossils themselves
– Pauline, Petrova and Posy
– the house in Cromwell Road
also contains Sylvia, the
children’s guardian
(“Garnie”); Nana, a
no-nonsense disciplinarian; Theo
Dane, a dancing teacher at the
Children’s Academy of
Dancing and Stage Training, and Dr
Smith and Dr Jakes, doctors of
Maths and English respectively.
These last two later move on to
“a charming flat in
Bloomsbury” and although
aged seven I never thought to ask
why two female doctors should have
to live together, now I wonder if
Streatfeild has not rather
audaciously put a lesbian couple
in a 1930s kids’ book (there
are some rumours about the nature
of the friendships she shared with
women herself, and she has been
claimed variously for a lesbian
and an asexual). Certainly the
illustration of the Doctors by
Ruth Gervis suggests she saw it
that way, even if Streatfeild may
not have done: they are depicted
in a stereotypical style that has
barely changed since the novel was
written in 1936.<\/p>\n
The only man in sight, apart
from the absent Gum, is Mr
Simpson, a border who teaches
Petrova all about cars and then
must go back to his
‘rubber trees’ in
Kuala Lumpur. And while Pauline
and Posy have looks and
interests to endear them to the
most pink and fluffy reader
going, Petrova remains as
stubbornly boyish as that
perennially scruffy heroine of
female fiction,\u00a0Little
Women<\/strong><\/a>‘s
Jo: when the dancing school
plan is first mentioned, Nana
hopes it will “turn her
more like a little lady”
– Petrova “never
plays\u00a0with dolls, and
takes no more interest in her
clothes than a
scarecrow”.<\/p>\n
Alas for Nana, Petrova ends
up spending auditions
“flying an imaginary
airplane on a new route to
China”, and by the end
of the book, is a determined
aviator: “Amy Mollison
and Jean Batten will be [in
the history books], but not
as important at you”,
promises Pauline, imagining
the distinctly un-fluffy
story such books will tell:
‘[She] found routes by
which goods could be carried
at greater speed and less
cost, and so she
revolutionized trade.”
Hardly the dreams of a
‘beautiful
child’.<\/p>\n
For Petrova, as for so many
of Streatfeild’s
children not given to
performing art (and there
are a surprising number,
despite her reputation), the
most important lesson of
stage school is
self-sufficiency, a goal
underlined across all the
books by the fact that the
overwhelming majority of
child-characters have no
parents to speak of, or are
lumbered with a domineering
guardian to struggle against
(notably in
Ballet Shoes For
Anna<\/strong> and
White Boots<\/strong>).
With their realist
emphasis, and the
lessons that
‘even’
little girls can get on
in a world assailed by
stupidity, war, and even
natural disasters, I can
think of no better
author to recommend to
absolutely everyone you
know.<\/p>\n<\/a>
<\/a>
<\/a>