The Young Pretenders (1895) is a children's book whose sophistication, humour and ironies are wadays appreciated by both children and adults. Babs lives most contentedly in a large house in the country with her grandmother, her nanny and her brother (their parents are in 'Inja'). Then their grandmother dies and they are sent to live in Kensington with their uncle and his wife. Having run wild in the country, spent hours with the gardener (very like the gardener in The Secret Garden ) and had a great deal to do and to think about, suddenly they are abandoned in a world of artifice and convention and are expected to behave artificially and conventionally. 'It all came of so much pretending. But then it was simply impossible for the children t to pretend. It would have been so dull to have lived their child lives only as the little Conways, when they might be pretending that they were such exciting things as soldiers or savages, cab-horses or mice.'Babs cant, of course, stop playing, and the central theme of the book is that she has t learned how to dissemble (as opposed to playing 'let's pretend') but must learn how to do so.However, as Charlotte Mitchell, the Preface writer, says, this is t a solemn book, on the contrary, 'its great characteristic is a gay malicious irony' as Babs misunderstands the adult world and fails to conform to adult rms. 'As anyone who has tried to bring up children kws, you spend a good deal of time teaching them to be insincere, to simulate gratitude or contrition, and t to repeat other people's comments at the wrong moments. Many of the jokes depend on the fact that Babs has yet to learn these lessons.'The focus, and the star, of The Young Pretenders is Babs. She is intelligent, fun, kind, lively and honest and it is hard to think of a heroine in children's fiction (that is, fiction written for children but enjoyed equally as much by adults) who is like her. Her most touching characteristic is her openness and her complete lack of fear. 'What was we naughty about?' she asks her brother after their uncle scolds them: 'The children could t kw that some very persistent tradesmen had insisted on immediate payment of their bills.' When the news comes from India that they have a new sister Babs thinks of a name for her - Mrs Brown.Her aunt slaps her down, saying that it's t a name but Babs persists, 'It is, I kw it is, 'cause nurse has a sister-in-law what's called it.'Then she 'began to think so hard that she refused a second helping of pudding' eventually anuncing, to renewed scorn, that 'I'd like her to be called Strawberry Jam.'
Product Identifiers
Publisher
Persephone Books Ltd
ISBN-10
1903155630
ISBN-13
9781903155639
eBay Product ID (ePID)
103924220
Product Key Features
Author
Edith Henrietta Fowler
Format
Paperback
Language
English
Topic
General & Literary Fiction
Additional Product Features
Place of Publication
London
Content Note
Illustrations
Date of Publication
25/10/2007
Country of Publication
United Kingdom
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