Emma in Winter

Emma in Winter  
Author(s) Penelope Farmer
Illustrator Laszlo Acs
Cover artist Laszlo Acs
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Genre(s) Children's novel
Publisher Chatto & Windus
Publication date 1966
Media type Print
Pages 160 pp (first edition, hardback)
ISBN ISBN 0 7011 0105 9 (first edition, hardback)
Preceded by The Summer Birds
Followed by Charlotte Sometimes

Emma in Winter is a children's novel by British writer Penelope Farmer, published in 1966 by Chatto & Windus. It is the second of three books featuring the Makepeace sisters, Charlotte and Emma,[1] These three books are sometimes known as the Aviary Hall books.[1]

Contents

Background

At the age of twenty-one, Penelope Farmer was contracted for her first collection of short stories, The China People. One story originally intended for this collection proved too long to include. This was rewritten as the first chapter of The Summer Birds (1962), her first book featuring Charlotte and Emma Makepeace.[2] The Summer Birds received a Carnegie Medal commendation in 1963. A second book, Emma in Winter, set roughly two years later, with Emma as the main character followed in 1966. The main settings of both these books are a small village school in the South Downs in southern England, and Aviary Hall, the girls' home. Charlotte Sometimes followed in 1969, set slightly before the events of Emma in Winter, which follows Charlotte's first term in a London boarding school.

According to Farmer, Charlotte and Emma, who grow up in their Grandfather Elijah's house, were originally based on her mother and her mother's sister as children, having no parents and "…having to be everything to each other," one being the responsible one, the other being rather difficult.[3]

Penelope Farmer stated that while writing Emma in Winter, she did not realize that identity was such a predominant theme in the novel until she encountered Margery Fisher's comments in on the book in Growing Point. She had a similar realization, this time on her own, while writing Charlotte Sometimes.[4]

Plot summary

It is wintertime. Emma's older sister Charlotte leaves Aviary Hall to stay with a schoolfriend, and then to return to her second term at her London boarding school. Emma, along with her classmate Bobby Fumpkins, simultaneously begin a series of dreams of being able to fly again, as they were able to do in The Summer Birds. Bobby, being fat, is consistently teased by his classmates. Emma is also initial hostile towards Bobby, but realises that not only does Bobby appear in these dreams, but is also having the same dreams. As the two oldest children in the school, Bobby and Emma are appointed head boy and head girl.

In the dreams, they fly over their village and the South Downs, with the North Downs and the sea visible in the distance. Strangely, the trees in their dreams consistently shrink downwards into the ground. Bobby realises that in their dreams, they are being dragged backwards in time. In successive dreams, they travel farther and farther back in time, visiting the Ice Age and seeing a mammoth, and a distant prehistoric time where they see a monstrous dinosaur. They speculated if they will eventually arrive at the beginning of the world, and if they will see the Garden of Eden.

Eventually, in their final dream, Emma and Bobby are dragged back to the beginning of the world. They stand on a rocky shore facing the sea, and confront an evil being, resembling a grotesque, distorted form of their teacher, Miss Hallibutt. The being threatens to consume them by taking away their thoughts of reality. Its attempts are defeated by the two children being able to concentrate on reality and of their home and their school. They chilldren are jerked out of the dream world and return to reality.

As term draws to a close, the thaw comes, and the children at school react with great joy, with Emma realising that Charlotte will soon be return home after her second term at the boarding school. Bobby and Emma walk home, with the children knowing they will not return to the dream world. As Bobby runs up the laneway to his home, Emma calls out to him, "Pleasant dreams, Bob, pleasant dreams!"

Reviews

Emma in Winter was reviewed by The Sunday Times. It read, 'Miss Farmer is strong on character and situation and understandes the subtle changes between solid everyday life and the supernatural. As much a story of antagonism and growing friendship between a boy and a girl in a very real village school as it is a clearly conceived fantasy rapt in a dreamlike world.'

The Daily Telegraph wrote, 'The writing is curiously haunting, and the interplay between the children very percoptive, but always entertaining and robust.'

The Times Educational Supplement wrote, 'Here is a book which achieves a delicate balance between fantasy and fact and which will have lasting appeal…'.

Growing Point reviewed the novel, '…gives tangible form to the emotions of children in a dream-sequence brilliantly sustained in the author's elegant rhythmic style.'

Children's Book News commented on the novel, 'This book has a compelling quality given by intense feeling and writing which has real distinction.'

Editions

1st edition (UK), 160pp, illustrated by Laszlo Acs. London: Chatto & Windus, 1966, second impression 1974. ISBN 0 7011 0105 9

1st edition (USA), 160pp, illustrated by James J. Spanfeller. New York: Harcourt, Brace & World, 1966. OCLC Number: 301330

Reprint. New York: Dell Yearling, 1987.

References

  1. ^ Anita Silvey, ed: Children's books and their creators (New York, Houghton Mifflin, 1995), p. 238.
  2. ^ 'Penelope Farmer' in Something About the Author 105 (1999) p. 67
  3. ^ 'Penelope Farmer' in Something About the Author 40 (1985) p. 77
  4. ^ Penelope, Fisher; in Geoff Fox, Graham Hammond, Terry Jones, Frederic Smith, Kenneth Sterck (eds.) (1976). Writers, Critics, and Children. New York: Agathon Press. pp. 60. ISBN 0-87586-054-0.