Posts tagged as:

Edith Nesbit

platform_9_3_4__king_s_cross_stationPut this into the “I wish I’d read it before writing Chapter 2 of my book” file:

“There is a curtain, thin as gossamer, clear as glass, strong as iron, that hangs forever between the world of magic and the world that seems to us to be real.  And when once people have found the little weak spots in that curtain which are marked by magic rings, and amulets, and the like, almost anything may happen.” ~ Edith Nesbit, The Enchanted Castle, Chapter IX

I’m betting a few different connections can be made between this statement and some of our favorite stories.  Some have already noted the Tolkien parallel with the magic ring.  A few paragraphs after this one, a statement was made that struck me as something that could come right out of The Lord of the Rings:

“I haven’t done anything with the ring yet,” Kathleen said.

“I shouldn’t think you’d want to when you see the sorts of things it does with you,” said Gerald.

Remember also how Uncle Andrew found the way into Narnia and other magical worlds: magic rings. Nesbit’s influence on Lewis is well-documented.  In “The Aunt and Amabel,” young Amabel finds a magical world through a wardrobe in a spare room.  That should sound familiar.  Back to this in a moment.

Two things are noteworthy as far as Harry Potter goes: [click to continue…]

  • Share/Bookmark

{ 24 comments }

Your ‘09 Reading Plans?

by Travis Prinzi on January 10, 2009

bookstackWhat’s the first book you’ve finished or will finish in 2009?

I just finished Paradise Lost, by John Milton, as read by Nadia May.

As far as actual eyes-on-print goes, I’ll probably finished The Enchanted Castle by Edith Nesbit before anything else.

I usually don’t make out much of a reading plan, because books I wasn’t planning on reading tend to find their way to the top of my list. But here are a few I know I’ll be working through in 2009:

  • Till We Have Faces, C.S. Lewis. It’s literally a character flaw in me that I have not read this yet. That will be remedied as soon as I’m done with The Enchanted Castle.
  • North! Or Be Eaten, Andrew Peterson. The first book in the series was fantastic, and I’m looking forward to the next with much anticipation.
  • Harry Potter’s Bookshelf, John Granger. I’ve been waiting for this one since I knew it was in the works years ago.
  • As much of The Complete Works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge as I can get through.
  • The Canterbury Tales, by Geoffery Chaucer.  I loved these stories back in high school, and this is a new, unabridged translation.
  • The Farthest Shore, by Ursula K. Le Guin.  This is the third book of the Earthsea cycle, which is tremendous myth-making.
  • Stardust, by Neil Gaiman.  Gaiman’s been recommended to me over and over again, and it’s about time I read him.

You?

The My Friend Amy blog is talking reading plans today as well for the weekly “Faith and Fiction Saturdays” post.

  • Share/Bookmark

{ 44 comments }

Railroads and Magic

by Travis Prinzi on January 8, 2009

hogwarts expressI’m willing to bet a few lines from one of J.K. Rowling’s favorite authors, Edith Nesbit, went through her mind as she was imagining all the magical happenings around trains and railroads while writing Harry Potter.

First, from a quote I posted from The Enchanted Castle a few days ago:

“I think magic went out when people began to have steam-engines,” Jimmy insisted. (Chapter I)

Then, from later in the same book:

“I don’t understand,” says Gerald, alone in his third-class carriage, “how railway trains and magic can go on at the same time.”

And yet they do. (Chapter VIII)

And in Harry Potter, they do so most potently.

  • Share/Bookmark

{ 4 comments }

nesbit“When you are young so many things are difficult to believe, yet the dullest people will tell you that they are true – such things, for instance, as that the earth goes around the sun, and that it is not flat but round. But the things that seem really likely, like fairy-tales and magic, are, so say the grown-ups, not true at all. Yet they are so easy to believe, especially when you see them happening. And, as I am always telling you, the most wonderful things happen to all sorts of people, only you never hear about them because the people think that no one will believe their stories, and so they don’t tell them to any one except me. And they tell me, because they know I can believe anything.”  ~ E. Nesbit, The Enchanted Castle, Chapter II

G.K. Chesterton“My first and last philosophy, that which I believe in with unbroken certainty, I learnt in the nursery. I generally learnt it from a nurse; that is, from the solemn and star-appointed priestess at once of democracy and tradition. The things I believed most then, the things I believe most now, are the things called fairy tales. They seem to me to be the entirely reasonable things. They are not fantasies: compared with them other things are fantastic. Compared with them religion and rationalism are both abnormal, though religion is abnormally right and rationalism abnormally wrong. Fairyland is nothing but the sunny country of common sense. It is not earth that judges heaven, but heaven that judges earth; so for me at least it was not earth that criticised elfland, but elfland that criticised the earth. I knew the magic beanstalk before I had tasted beans; I was sure of the Man in the Moon before I was certain of the moon. This was at one with all popular tradition. Modern minor poets are naturalists, and talk about the bush or the brook; but the singers of the old epics and fables were supernaturalists, and talked about the gods of brook and bush. That is what the moderns mean when they say that the ancients did not “appreciate Nature,” because they said that Nature was divine. Old nurses do not tell children about the grass, but about the fairies that dance on the grass; and the old Greeks could not see the trees for the dryads.” ~ G.K. Chesterton, Orthodoxy, Chapter IV

  • Share/Bookmark

{ 1 comment }

E. Nesbit and Xenophilius Lovegood

by Travis Prinzi 01.02.2009

Discuss:
The Enchanted Castle, by Edith Nesbit, from chapter 1:
“It is an enchanted castle,” said Kathleen.
“I don’t see any castle,” said Jimmy.
“What do you call that, then?” Gerald pointed to where, beyond a belt of lime-trees, white towers and turrets broke the the blue of the sky.
“There doesn’t seem to be anyone about,” said Kathleen, “and [...]

11 comments Read the full article →