Anastasia Krupnik Stories:
Anastasia Krupnik; Anastasia Again!; Anastasia at Your Service; Anastasia Off
Her Rocker. By Lois Lowry. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. $25.99.
Wow, have times changed. When
Lois Lowry, best known for The Giver
and its sequels, created Anastasia Krupnik, she loosely based the outspoken
10-year-old Jewish girl on President Jimmy Carter’s daughter, Amy, who was
known to speak her preteen mind at many opportunities. But Lowry added
introspection to the character and also put in occasional missteps and some
memories from Lowry’s own childhood. The first Anastasia book, simply called Anastasia Krupnik, came out in 1979; the
series continued through nine books, with Anastasia
Absolutely appearing in 1995. There were also spinoffs featuring
Anastasia’s younger brother, Sam, plus the start of a 10th book that
Lowry never finished because the series, no longer selling very well, was
halted.
Now Anastasia is back and
sanitized of pretty much all the distinguishing characteristics that made her
interesting in the first place. The first book contains a four-letter word for
excrement that has been removed. Scenes in which Anastasia’s pipe-smoking
father lets her taste the foam from a beer he is drinking – one of Lowry’s
personal memories – have been excised. An odd scenario in which Anastasia lies
about her age and meets someone through a “Personals” newspaper column – long
before Internet dating – is gone, even though nothing of any sort happens
between the girl and the older man and the whole thing is played for laughs.
And on and on the reissues go, excising the oddities that made Anastasia an
interestingly offbeat character and turning her into little more than yet
another preteen trying to make her way in the world and gradually, bit by bit,
growing up and maturing.
Not even the book titles are
sacrosanct. The first is unchanged; so is the second, from 1981, Anastasia Again! And the third volume, Anastasia at Your Service (1982), keeps
its title as well (Anastasia is 12 by this time). But the fourth book, from
1984, has metamorphosed from Anastasia,
Ask Your Analyst to Anastasia Off Her
Rocker, which does not make a great deal of sense. This is actually one of
the better books in the series, with Anastasia deciding she needs psychotherapy
and therefore buying a plaster bust of Sigmund Freud at a garage sale and
talking to it about her problems and concerns. The first and fourth books are
unillustrated in their new editions; the second and third contain what are
charmingly described as “decorations” by Diane deGroat. Anastasia now is shown
as having long blond hair and being quite thin; originally she was considerably
chunkier, was brown-haired, and wore far less stylish eyeglasses than in the
new releases. She is not seen within the books, only on their covers, where she
is rendered by Sara Not (deGroat did the original portrayal).
So where does this leave
contemporary preteen girls whose mothers may remember Anastasia with amusement,
bemusement, or some combination of the two? Anastasia still has a series of
rather mundane adventures with a rather mundane family (although her usually
calm and steady mother comes somewhat unhinged in the second and fourth books).
She still has to adjust to everyday life in ways for which she is not quite
prepared, as when she expects to become a summertime Lady’s Companion to earn
money in the third book, then finds herself serving as a maid instead. She
still has everyday traumas that loom large in her life, as when, in the first
book, she works hard on a poem assigned in class, but does not write it
according to the teacher’s instructions and therefore gets an F. She tries to
negotiate everyday life to the best of her ability; although, as Lowry explains
in her new introductions to the first two books, elements of Anastasia’s life
will likely seem dated to young readers in the 21st century. Still,
there is an undercurrent of groping toward maturity in the Anastasia books that
can connect with young girls today as effectively as in the past. And
Anastasia, although scarcely a complex character, has enough interest and enough
remaining quirks to make time spent with her worthwhile. What she is not
anymore is highly distinctive: her rougher edges are gone, her politically
incorrect ideas and adventures have disappeared, and she is now just one among
innumerable other preteen girls on the road toward greater self-awareness and understanding
of her place in the world. However, since the appetite for such protagonists
remains a large one, there may well still be a place on many bookshelves for Anastasia Krupnik Stories.
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