Fantasy precursor to 'The Hobbit' -- a found treasure!
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 16 years ago
Marvellous! In a word, that's my feeling about Puck of Pook's Hill (Dover Value Editions). I'll get into the actual story in just a moment but I first wanted to make some general observations about this terrific work of fantasy. Kipling harbored a kid's imagination for fantasy stories and a sociology professor's knowledge of history, especially concerning 19th Century England and its colonies. Kipling lived from 1865-1936 and, of course, he generated a plethora of superb period literature including The Jungle Books (Oxford World's Classics), The Man Who Would Be King (Dodo Press), and Kim. The thread so common to the bulk of Kipling's work seems to be ADVENTURE, a theme in which he excelled beyond most other authors, either then or now. In "Puck" he achieved a level of historical imperative and nostalgic fantasy that was only ever paralleled by Lewis Carroll and J.R.R. Tolkien. This book is (for reasons unknown to me) a real sleeper -- you don't hear much about it either in academia or in bookstores, which is a tremendous shame given its refreshing effervescence and rainy-day appeal. I feel compelled to say that it would be infinitely helpful in digesting "Puck" if you're already somewhat tutored in the history of England and, if you're accustomed to reading the vernacular of other works of Kipling's era. I luckily have the 1987 Penguin softcover edition of this book (Goodwill Store, 50 cents) which is heavily footnoted and which also includes a lengthy, informative introduction to the book written by Sarah Wintle. There even a nice little "Map of the Weald" (Kipling's Sussex) which provides added perspective. The ten "stories" from this book first appeared in "The Strand" in 1906 which were then illustrated by Claude A. Shepperson. Additionally, some of these entries were published in "Ladies Home Journal" and in "McClure's Magazine". The lion's share of the book is prose but most stories either begin or end with a poem such as "The Runes on Weyland's Sword," a title which reveals much of the flavour of the overall work. THE STORY: On Midsummer Eve in a secluded meadow just below "Pook's Hill," a boy and his sister (Dan and Una, respectively) acted out their children's version of "A Midsummer Night's Dream," coincidentally, inside a fairy ring (of mushrooms). Such an act on the part of these two kids was surely bound to give rise to something very magical (although they never anticipated this possibility) and, in fact, it did. Shortly after their little theater, Puck appeared to them! Puck is enigmatic, for human adults at least. While he's referred to at one point as a "faun," he seems to be part Leprechaun, part fairy, and part sorcerer. He purposefully engages in shrewd indirect speech which he knows will give rise to endless questions from Dan and Una, thus allowing him to spin his yarns and to bring forth historic figures of The Weald, one after another, over a period of days. He's also capable of conjuring a little spell which has th
Face to face with English gods, ghosts, trees and history
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 24 years ago
Kipling's prose has a very special quality - quintissentially English, proud and very robust. I asked a scholar of English and a Buddhist meditation teacher to recommend a good book for me and she thought briefly before mentioning this. The poems in it are sometimes dated - the one about queen and country but this is a warm and pleasant read containing many important and esoteric aspects that few care to appreciate. Ideal to communicate something about being a whole human being and this earthy realm with some of its hidden and ancient forces.
User-Friendly ( British) history.....
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 24 years ago
I bought this book for my children many years ago - son is now working in e-commerce (a job that I never imagined would exist when he was born!) - and I found it and re-read it with enjoyment some days ago.Basically, it's about some (upperclass- there weren't any others in books in those days) children who accidentally conjure up "the oldest thing in England" - Puck.He, in his turn, conjures up for them Normans, Saxons, and, yes, a Jewish moneylender who was the real clout behind the Magna Carta!I had to revise my ideas about Kipling after reading this - he's a very contradictory character - but most of it reads (very gently) as a sensible argument for tolerance and diversity.It's also a very good way of bringing history alive...
A great, fanciful look at the history of England.
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 24 years ago
Having trouble getting into English history? Can't stand "A Midsummer Night's Dream?" This book is for you! Una and Dan, two young British children, are playing scenes from "A Midsummer Night's Dream" on an old hill in their farm one midsummer evening, when they have a guest- Puck himself! They are playing their scenes on Pook's Hill- Pook=Puck, Puck tells them. He soon tells them other things, they are swept back to the early days of England, where they encounter Phoenician gods, Norman invaders, Vikings and other such adventures. If you know someone who is having trouble buckling down and actually _enjoying_ English history, this could be a the key to their gaining pleasure from it. History is actually brought *alive* with this, it's not just a march of dates- it's a gathering of people.
A timeless classic
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 25 years ago
I don't know what the previous "reviewer" was injecting but I suggest he (or more probably she) stop while any brain-cells are left. Psychedic! This collection of short stories is one of the finest by a timeless master.
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