osprey_archer: (books)
[personal profile] osprey_archer
This week, the 1950s Newberys Do Diversity, and please just take it as read that these 70-year-old books contain various degrees of problematic material.

Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings’s The Secret River is a beautifully dreamy fairytale about a girl named Calpurnia who sets out to catch fish for her family to see them through the hard times. She brings in a rich haul from the Secret River - which she can never find again thereafter, because the river doesn’t exist. And yet the fish she caught in the river turned the hard times around for the whole community.

Calpurnia’s race is never specified in the text. In Leo and Diane Dillon’s lovely illustrations for the 2011 reprint, Calpurnia is Black, and I checked Wikipedia to see if that held true in the original illustrations, too. Evidently Rawlings (who died before the book was published) always intended Calpurnia to be Black, but the publishing house was concerned that school boards might refuse to buy the book if the illustrations unambiguously portrayed her as such. They published The Secret River on brown paper so the illustrations would suggest Calpurnia’s race without ruffling any feathers.

Alice Dalgliesh’s The Courage of Sarah Noble is based on the true story of eight-year-old Sarah Noble. Sarah’s mother had to stay in their old home to care for a sick baby, so Sarah accompanied her father into the wilderness to keep house for him as he staked a claim. (If anyone had expected me to keep house in the wilderness when I was eight years old, they simply would have starved to death, but 19th century children were made of sterner stuff.) When her father went back to fetch his wife and other children, he left Sarah in the care of a local Indian family, and according to the historical note the two families remained friendly all through Sarah’s life.

Meindert De Jong’s The House of Sixty Fathers, inspired by De Jong’s own war service in China during World War II, is about a Chinese boy who gets separated from his family during the Japanese invasion of China. Accompanied by his trusty pet pig Glory-of-the-Republic, Tien Pao starts a daring cross-country journey to rejoin his family. Along the way, he rescues a downed American airman, falls under the protection of a Chinese guerilla band, and makes it back to the city where he lost his family… just in time for yet another Japanese assault! Tien Pao flees just ahead of the invasion, nearly starves to death, and is, in his turn, rescued by American airmen, who more or less adopt Tien Pao in gratitude because he saved the downed airman earlier. Thus their barracks become the titular “House of Sixty Fathers.”

In the end, Tien Pao is reunited with his family, and his pet pig lives! To be honest I have serious doubts about the pig’s long-term survival, but he’s alive at the end of the book, and there we will happily leave him.

Date: 2023-02-16 02:02 pm (UTC)
asakiyume: created by the ninja girl (Default)
From: [personal profile] asakiyume
Wow, I'd like to read all of these.

Just googled to confirm that Marjorie Rawlings was the one who wrote The Yearling, and in doing so, read her Wikipedia page, and wow! What an interesting person!

I'm going to see if I can use our local library interlibrary loan service to get a copy of The Secret River with the Dillon illustrations.

--And the other two look equally interesting!

(Question: how come you don't have an author tag for Marjorie Rawlings, just the other two?)

Secret River art

Date: 2023-02-16 02:07 pm (UTC)
asakiyume: created by the ninja girl (Default)
From: [personal profile] asakiyume
Was it with you that I saw the Dillon exhibit at the Eric Carle Museum? .... I'm thinking it was another friend... but in any case, this picture from the book was included!

Date: 2023-02-16 03:22 pm (UTC)
oracne: turtle (Default)
From: [personal profile] oracne
Hooray for pig survival!!!

Date: 2023-02-16 05:32 pm (UTC)
copperfyre: (Default)
From: [personal profile] copperfyre
Oh! Reading this I realised that I read The House of Sixty Fathers as a kid but had no recollection of what it was called, or indeed even remembered it until this summary!

Date: 2023-02-17 06:04 am (UTC)
silverusagi: (Default)
From: [personal profile] silverusagi
(If anyone had expected me to keep house in the wilderness when I was eight years old, they simply would have starved to death, but 19th century children were made of sterner stuff.)

This is always the stuff that's WILD to me. Like sure, an eight year old can run a kitchen, why not??

Date: 2023-02-18 08:17 pm (UTC)
troisoiseaux: (Default)
From: [personal profile] troisoiseaux
Alice Dalgliesh’s The Courage of Sarah Noble is based on the true story of eight-year-old Sarah Noble.

Oh man, I loved this book when I was 7 or 8, although I'm sure it does not hold up fantastically well. The only thing I remember about it is feeling vaguely disappointed when her parents came back: like, ugh, she has to go back to wearing shoes now?

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