The Woodcutter Sisters, Book II:
Hero. By Alethea Kontis. Harcourt. $17.99.
The Adventures of Gremlin. By
DuPre Jones. Drawings by Edward Gorey. Pomegranate. $17.95.
Recent decades have brought
a substantial upsurge in consideration and reconsideration of fairy tales as
stories for adults – which is what they were for centuries, before Victorian
and post-Victorian sanitization. From Freudian interpretations to feminist
critiques, the venerable oral histories and stories of wonder have been viewed,
re-viewed and done to a turn to serve a bewildering variety of academic and
sociopolitical agendas. One result has been the creation of all-new fairy tales
that incorporate, accessorize, mock, expand or otherwise play upon the old ones
of Perrault and the Grimm brothers – thus falling into the same category as the
stories of Hans Christian Andersen, who created his own tales so effectively
that many people still believe he merely retold existing ones. One of the very best
contemporary authors to march in Andersen’s footsteps is Alethea Kontis, who
has figured out how to give fairy tales some thoroughly modern twists while
remaining true to their essential undercurrents and making them appealing to preteen and young teenage readers –
whose sophistication today is at a level quite different from that of their
peers just a few decades ago. Kontis’ Enchanted
was an absolutely remarkable mashup of multiple fairy tales, twisted into a Mรถbius strip of a story whose
romantic, heroic, magical and hilarious elements were constantly tripping over
each other, to the delight of absolutely everyone (even including most of the
book’s characters). It is wonderful that Kontis has decided to turn Enchanted into merely (merely?) the
first book in a series called The
Woodcutter Sisters, because the second book, Hero, is every bit as…well…enchanting as the first. The “back
story” here is of the seven children of a not-so-simple woodcutter and his
wife, whose name is Seven because she is the seventh child of her parents,
whose contact with the fey provides the underlying magical connection for many
of the happenings. Seven herself, who speaks little because her words have the
force of commands whether she wants them to or not, has seven children of her
own, their appearances and powers largely (but not entirely!) drawn from the
old rhyme that begins, “Monday’s child is fair of face.” Kontis complicates
matters thoroughly as she draws on, distorts, remakes and occasionally
eviscerates the entire fairy-tale world. Enchanted
was primarily the story of Sunday; Hero
is primarily the tale of Saturday – tall, statuesque, lacking any magical
abilities (she thinks), wishing for adventure, good with a sword (especially
one that contains a bit of magic), hotheaded, unromantic and something of a
whirlwind (whose mouth tends to run away with her, leaving her glad that her words do not have the force of
commands). However, any reader who thinks he or she can figure out where Kontis
is going with this combination of characteristics has not reckoned with just
how good a writer Kontis is. For every expected element of Hero (Saturday wishes for adventure and finds when she gets it that
it is not at all what she wished for), there are numerous unexpected ones (she
gets stuck in a mountain so high that Time cannot reach it, where two of her
companions are a young, somewhat enchanted skirt-wearing nobleman and a chimera
that is repeatedly transformed into stranger and stranger two-creature combinations
because of the misfiring, dragon-fueled magic of a blind witch). Mistaken
identities and not-understood consequences abound in Hero, and the book is so fast-paced in so many directions that it
would be a chore to follow if all the directions were not so tremendously
entertaining. Hero is every bit as
good as Enchanted – a high
compliment. And it not only enthralls from start to finish but also whets one’s
appetite for the next installment of this utterly captivating series – a higher
compliment still.
There will be no followup to
The Adventures of Gremlin, because
both its creators have passed on – and that is a shame, because the oddly
skewed and pun-filled world of this book is another fairy-tale delight,
although admittedly a lesser one than that of Kontis’ novels. Note that the
title does not refer to a gremlin:
Gremlin is the name of the book’s protagonist, a little girl whose brother is
named Zeppelin. And those are just mild examples of the peculiar sense of humor
of DuPre Jones (1935-2012), whose sole published book is this one, which dates
to 1966. The story is not quite as timeless as the best fairy tales – for
example, 21st-century readers will likely not understand why the two
kingdoms in the story are called Etaoin and Shrdlu, because few people today
know what a linotype is and what those letter sequences signify (suffice it to
say that they are roughly equivalent to Qwertyuiop and Asdfghjkl on a computer
keyboard, but are thankfully easier to try to pronounce). But today’s readers
will certainly enjoy Jones’ playfulness with a wide variety of fairy-tale
tropes, from the unhappy, adventure-seeking children of a woodcutter (who,
unlike Kontis’, is absent from the story), to a thoroughly untraditional fairy
godmother who must be summoned with words that Gremlin cannot quite seem to
remember, to a wombat much given to lantern-swinging and uttering quotations in
Latin. Non-Latin speakers, which would include almost everybody, may find this
last element a trifle off-putting; in fact, several characters in the book
utter phrases in that elegant language, all of them untranslated; and there are
a couple of equally untranslated comments tossed about in French as well. Jones
uses his own erudition perhaps a trifle too much as a club to beat his readers
about the head. But on the other hand, he is fond of thoroughly bad puns, such
as the “buoys and gulls” that the adventuring children find at the seashore and
a game in which pirates throw rocks at seabirds as their captain exhorts them
to “leave no tern unstoned.” The
Adventures of Gremlin is not a book for children, although it has children
as its central characters, and in this way it does bear a strong resemblance to
traditional fairy tales. The appearance of a giant and a black knight fits the
old models, too, as does the discovery – likely to no one’s surprise – that
Gremlin is really the princess of Etaoin, abandoned as a baby and then
discovered in a thoroughly biblical (specifically Mosaic) way. On the other
hand, a bear licensed to eat traitors and a poet who writes really awful
limericks and then attributes deep meaning to them are characters right out of
Jones’ offbeat imagination. And speaking of offbeat, one truly timeless and
completely delightful element of The
Adventures of Gremlin is its visualization by Edward Gorey (1925-2000),
whose illustrations of the major and minor characters are often laugh-out-loud
hilarious (“the muse of mal de mer”
and an incongruously dressed pirate leader with one wooden leg and one very
hairy flesh-and-blood one are two of the latter). Gorey fans will relish his
handling of the portrayal of the Red Cross Knight, whom Gremlin accompanies as
he attempts to overcome the seven deadly sins and, falling one short, decides
to go back and explore the ones he missed. The skeletal children who “go by the
names of the maladies” they contract in a dungeon where Gremlin is held for a
time give Gorey a chance to show the “walking cadaver” look with which he is
often identified, but it is the touches of humor that are more noteworthy here:
the constantly changing words on Zeppelin’s clothing, for example, and the
peculiar creature that Gremlin imagines to be the secret admirer with whom she
falls in love after he writes her a series of “singularly moving and simple”
but decidedly illiterate letters. The
Adventures of Gremlin is a pleasure and an oddity, perhaps not in that
order – a small book that takes its fairy-tale heritage quite a bit less than
seriously and, as a result, produces quite a bit more amusement than it
otherwise might.
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