osprey_archer: (books)
[personal profile] osprey_archer
What I’ve Just Finished Reading

Continuing the adventures of the Melendy family with Elizabeth Enright’s The Four-Story Mistake! If you like mid-century family adventures, this is simply a peak example of the genre.

Newbery Honor Books this week: a bonanza! There are just a few books left in the 1950s, and I am racing through.

First, two animal books, Meindert DeJong’s Along Came a Dog and Francis Kalnay’s Chúcaro: Wild Pony of the Pampa. As I worked my way backwards through the Newberys, I thought the 1950s would be the inflection point for Dead Animal books, but in fact the Dead Animal Newbery books reached their peak in the 1960s and 70s; the only one in the 1950s is Old Yeller. Possibly it kicked off a trend because it got made into a Disney movie?

Along Came a Dog is fine, but I really enjoyed Chúcaro, which gives a delightful picture not only of the wild pony, but of life on an estancia in the Argentinean pampas. Infodumps are often maligned, but I love them when they’re well done, and Kalnay often scurries off on a tangent for a short chapter to tell us about quebracha (a type of wood so hard and dense it sinks in water) or bolas, cords with weights on the end to wrap around the legs of an animal and bring it down.

Meanwhile, Claire Huchet Bishop’s All Alone is… a fable about agricultural collectivization? In the French village of Monestier, the motto of the villagers is “Each man for himself.” But when a rockslide traps boy shepherds Marcel and Pierre on the mountain, the villages are forced to work together to dig them out, and the experience so invigorates then that they decide to tear down all the fences separating their little plots of land and “work the whole land of the valley together - one common field under the sun.” And then Monsieur le Maire unveils a shiny new tractor!

I would have expected this as a plot of a 1930s Soviet movie, not an award-winning children’s novel published in the midst of America’s 1950s Red Scare. The world contains multitudes!

What I’m Reading Now

Rather than settle down to any of the books that I’ve begun, I simply seem to be starting more and more, most recently John Davis Billings’ Hardtack and Coffee, which is a memoir about everyday life in the Army of the Potomac during the Civil War. The writing is lively and engaging, and it’s full of fascinating information, as witness this tidbit about the practice of “chumming”:

“Every man had his chum or friend, with whom he associated when off duty, and these tented together. By mutual agreement one was the ‘old woman,’ the other the ‘old man’ of the concern. A Marblehead man called his chum his ‘chicken,’ more especially if the latter was a young soldier.”

What I Plan to Read Next

I need to knuckle down and finish some of those books I’ve already started! They simply do pile up… Also contemplating taking a little breather from the Newbery Honor books once I’ve finished the 1950s. (Five books left!) I’d like to finish the Melendy quartet and read Jean Slaughter Doty’s Can I Get There By Candlelight?

Date: 2023-05-31 02:25 pm (UTC)
nnozomi: (Default)
From: [personal profile] nnozomi
Enjoying your reading notes! The Four-Story Mistake is so, so good. (As are the rest of the Melendy books! Old favorites that stand up very well to adult rereading.)

Date: 2023-05-31 04:29 pm (UTC)
asakiyume: created by the ninja girl (Default)
From: [personal profile] asakiyume
Wow, so do you suppose that thing about calling your chum a "chicken" is where we get "chick" from?

And I literally laughed out loud at your commentary on All Alone Is..., verily, I agree with thee, the world contains multitudes!

Date: 2023-05-31 06:43 pm (UTC)
rachelmanija: (Books: old)
From: [personal profile] rachelmanija
I love the collectivist tractor children's book. Now that is the content we need more of now.

Excited to get your report on Can I Get There By Candlelight?

The chums were totally married, right?

Date: 2023-05-31 07:25 pm (UTC)
troisoiseaux: (Default)
From: [personal profile] troisoiseaux
The chums were clearly, like, symbolically/emotionally married for the duration of the war.

It sounds like matelotage!

Date: 2023-06-06 11:57 pm (UTC)
ethelmay: (Default)
From: [personal profile] ethelmay
"Chick" is definitely a Cockney endearment. One of the midwives (Valerie Dyer) in Call the Midwife uses it.

Date: 2023-06-19 05:11 am (UTC)
msilverstar: (Default)
From: [personal profile] msilverstar
Just wandered over and was gently enjoying your reviews and stumbled on this: Elizabeth Enright was a favorite childhood author, and I just regret not reading these to my kids when they were young enough to hold still. Randy and the diamond, and the dancer, not Bulova that's the watch! I have such vivid memories of them and may read them again sometime.

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