Friday, 8 December 2017

Stuart Little

This children's novel, published in 1945, is set in New York City. The central character is the son of ordinary human parents but has the appearance and stature of a mouse. He proves to be “a great help to his parents, and to his older brother George, because of his small size and because he could do things that a mouse can do and was agreeable about doing them”. His father thinks it important that Stuart should in his childhood be shielded from references to violence against mice, insisting that his wife tear from the nursery songbook the page about blind mice. He felt strongly that he didn't want Stuart to “grow up fearing that a farmer’s wife was going to cut off his tail with a carving knife”.


The author, E.B. White (born 11 July 1899) grew up in New York City. He studied at Cornell University and served as editor of the student newspaper. In October 1918, he joined the university's training corps in preparation for service overseas but the armistice meant he was quickly discharged before seeing any action. After university, he started work as a journalist. When The New Yorker was founded in 1925, he submitted articles and was later taken on by the magazine as a staff writer. He married the magazine's literary editor, Katharine Angell (née Sergeant), in 1929. In the same year, his first collection of poems was published. Although he went on to write a wide variety of books, he is best remembered for his three novels for children, one of which, Charlotte's Web, was a Newbury Medal finalist. In 1970, he won the Laura Ingalls Wilder Award, a lifetime-achievement award for contribution to children's literature.



The adventures of the plucky central character include a naval contest on a pond in Central Park. Dressed in a sailor suit, he volunteers to go ‘to sea’, telling the owner of a model boat “I'm looking for a berth in a good ship and I thought perhaps you might sign me on. I'm strong and I'm quick”. The owner asks him to race against another boat and Stuart details how he intends to defeat the other boat:
“I'll catch the sloop broad on and rake her with fire from my forward gun”. The owner argues that he wants it to be “a boat race, not a naval engagement”. Stuart, therefore, promises to “sail [the boat] straight and true”.


No comments:

Post a Comment