Theatrical Dramas: Hard-Working Children

 

She Shall Have Music by Kitty Barne

published 1938
 

Listen to the Nightingale by Rumer Godden

published 1992
 
 
 
She shall have Music
 
 
commentary: When I blogged on Rumer Godden’s Thursday’s Children recently, I followed a line from Noel Streatfeild’s Wintle’s Wonders via the writer Sarah Rayne.

Now, in the intro to the Godden book, the author says that she wants to acknowledge that there’s a scene in the book with similarities to a-NOTHER book – the first one listed above (both writers having come up with the idea quite separately and with a 45 year gap) – and blow me if Sarah didn’t tell me that THAT was a really good book too, and that I should read it. So of course I got hold of it and here it is.

This time it is music, classical music, and there isn’t really any question of stage school or similar. Karen is part of a cheery family who have come to live in Bristol from Ireland. She starts playing and studying the piano, and shows a great deal of talent. She goes through the normal range of experiences for the talented-child-book, including the disastrous festival entry shared with the Godden book, and knows and hopes that she must go to music college, so must audition...

I enjoyed She Shall Have Music very much, and can see why it was such a success at the time; it’s a shame it’s mostly forgotten now. It doesn’t have the drive of Noel Streatfeild’s Ballet Shoes (much blogged), and keeps dipping into family life in an awkward but endearing way: it is surprisingly charming that none of the rest of the family much knows or cares about Karen’s talents and successes. And of course with the piano there isn’t the same excitement of costumes, the auditions are less dramatic, and there aren’t great productions to describe. But still it is very convincing, and one would guess somewhat autobiographical as Barne had a similar trajectory.

In fact Barne was married to Noel Streatfeild’s cousin and they seem to have known each other well. I have always been charmed by the classic illustrations in most editions of Ballet Shoes – I mentioned them in the earlier piece – by Ruth Gervis. She did the pictures for this book too, and now I have discovered why: she was Noel Streatfeild’s older sister. They are beautifully integrated into the text, and I wanted to show an oddity in the typeface – look at the ct and the st in the words ‘practising’ and ‘vest’ above - which is why I have used a scanned page rather than my usual picture and extract. It’s my tribute to Ruth Gervis and all the pleasure she has given me over the years.

I thought I would round off this reading venture with Godden’s other stage school book, Listen to the Nightingale – and ended up disliking it very strongly. It didn’t have the energy and drive of Thursday’s Children, and I did not like the heroine, Lottie, at all. She was a tiresome, feeble character – but also completely immoral. She lies, cheats and steals, then gets terribly upset if she thinks she’ll be caught out. The whole book is lacking in any moral framework – nobody behaves well, but it doesn’t seem to matter. There are jaw-dropping scenes where another child forces Lottie to give him her food, so she almost starves. It is a very sinister and unpleasant section altogether, but then it stops, and that’s all right then. 

Lottie seems to be incapable of understanding anyone else’s point of view, and the book starts with an utterly extraordinary scene in which she spots someone stealing a valuable dog, trips up the thief and then – keeps the dog. Steals it. Takes it home, and uses money taken from someone else to achieve all this. Because she wanted to, she really liked the look of the dog. The dog then causes endless trouble and serve her right. No, couldn’t get on with this one AT ALL.

But Kitty Barne was a real find.















Comments

  1. You know, I've always liked Godden, but hadn't caught that link to the Barne before, Moira. And how interesting about that real-life background, too. Those things always fascinate me - they add to the story in a way, if that makes sense. And the music theme sounds great, too. You have a detective's instinct for following leads!

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    1. Thanks Margot, that's a great compliment! I love it when you get that sense of conviction, you feel 'I believe that is what it would be like' - and the Barne book gave me that.

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  2. Everyone else seems to love the Godden book (the reviews tend to have words like 'heartwarming' and 'charming') but I'm more inclined to believe your verdict. Lottie sounds like an absolute ratbag. I had a similar experience with CATCHER IN THE RYE, where everyone else seemed to think that Holden Caulfield was rather wonderful, whilst I thought that he was a tiresome little nitwit. Oh well, sometimes you just have to swim against the tide...

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    1. INdeed! I'm glad you shared my view (on my deeply objective description of course...) - I was rather mystified by the reviews. Especially as children in older-style books are usually held to very high standards, and feel guilt and shame aobut all kinds of weird things. Not Lottie, the little madam...
      I know what you mean about Holden - I did keep worrying about the other people whose lives he was ruining...

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  3. Hmm.....never! Slim pickings of late.

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    1. Yes, I haven't been going for the hard stuff lately.

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  4. I don't think I will be trying these books (even if I did not have an overload of books, you have already pointed me to many other more appealing books -- to me)... but I love the connections and I can see how these were popular.

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    1. It's one of those little areas that I like but don't expect others to follow me there - I can give you quite enough detail from them to be going on with!

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  5. That was so funny. Saw the illustration, and thought "Gosh, that looks so like the illustrations in my old Puffin paperback of "Ballet Shoes"" Now I know why. Thanks for flagging the Kitty Barne up, will have to find it.

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    1. Well spotted! I do recommend it, I'm sure you'll love it. And now I'm seeking out the one by her that you mentioned...

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  6. She won The Carnegie award for Visitors From London about evacuuees WW2. She was in charge of organising them in Sussex herself so background is solid.

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    1. I just tried to find a copy, after your mention in a different comment, but there are only very expensive copies. I am intrigued by it.

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