The Story of a Bad Boy

The Story of a Bad Boy is a semi-autobiographical novel by American writer Thomas Bailey Aldrich.

Contents

Plot summary

"Tom Bailey" was born in Rivermouth, New Hampshire but moved to New Orleans with his family when he was 18 months old. When he was a boy, his father wanted him to be educated in the North and sent him back to Rivermouth to live with his grandfather, Captain Nutter. Nutter lives with his sister and an Irish servant. There, Tom becomes a member of a club called the Centipedes. Together, the boys become involving in a series of adventures. In one prank, the boys steal an old carriage and push it into a bonfire for the Fourth of July. During the winter, several boys build a snow fort on Slatter's Hill, inciting rival boys into a battle of snowballs. Later, Tom and three other boys combine their money to buy a boat named Dolphin and sneak away to an island. Tom also befriends a man nicknamed Sailor Ben, who Tom originally meets on the ship that took him away from New Orleans. Revealed as the long-lost husband of Captain Nutter's Irish servant, Ben settles in Rivermouth in a boat-like cabin. Sailor Ben helps the boys fire off a series of old cannon at the pier, much to the confusion of the local townspeople. When his father's banking job fails, Tom is invited by an uncle to work in a counting-house in New York.

Publication history

The Story of a Bad Boy was first published in 1869 by Ticknor and Fields in their juvenile magazine Our Young Folks.[1] It was published in book form a year later.

Analysis

The fictional town of Rivermouth is based on Portsmouth, New Hampshire.[1] After Aldrich's death in 1907, the author's widow purchased the home where the book takes place and restored it to look as it did in 1850. It has been a house museum open to the public since 1909, now part of Strawbery Banke.[2]

The book is considered the foundational text in a genre of "bad boy" literature which also includes Mark Twain's The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (1876), Charles Dudley Warner's Being a Boy (1877), William Dean Howells's A Boy's Town (1877), Hamlin Garland's Boy Life on the Prairie (1899), and Booth Tarkington's Penrod (1913).[3] A precursor was Horatio Alger, Jr.'s "Ragged Dick" series beginning in 1868,[4] though scholar Kenneth B. Kidd says his works are generally excluded from the list.[5] The bad boy genre, intended to be read by both children and adults, shows boys as irrational, primitive, and masculine.[6]

Though the main character is relatively mild (something that Aldrich himself admits in the book's opening lines), The Story of a Bad Boy was the first to celebrate a misbehaving boy as protagonist rather than antagonist.[4] Contemporary reviews hailed the book as a departure in traditional children's literature.[7] The book was praised for showing the true life of a boy, rather than dictating what it ought to be. Ultimately, the story shows that a young troublemaker can grow up to become a successful adult.[1] Though it has also been compared to the "girls book" genre initiated by Louisa May Alcott in Little Women, The Story of a Bad Boy does not have a single overarching narrative and is instead a series of sketches.[8] Aldrich established the precedent that, generally, bad boy stories do not depict the characters' maturation to adulthood, though there is some evidence that they do grow up. In the case of The Story of a Bad Boy, Aldrich notes early in the book that the characters are now adults and serving as "lawyers, merchants, sea-captains, soldiers, authors, what not."[9]

Twain in particular was heavily influenced by the book, though he was not originally impressed. He wrote to his wife Livy, "I started to mark the Story of a Bad Boy, but for the life of me I could not admire the volume much."[10] He later determined that Aldrich was the wittiest man in the past seven centuries.[11]

References

  1. ^ a b c Goodman, Susan. Republic of Words: The Atlantic Monthly and Its Writers, 1857–1925. University Press of New England, 2011: 142. ISBN 9781584659853
  2. ^ Gutek, Gerald Lee and Patricia. Experiencing America's Past: A Travel Guide to Museum Villages. University of South Carolina Press, 2004: 65. ISBN 9780872496675
  3. ^ Kidd, Kenneth B. Making American Boys: Boyology and the Feral Tale. University of Minnesota Press, 2004: 51–52. ISBN 9780816642953
  4. ^ a b Wadsworth, Sarah. In the Company of Books: Literature and Its 'Classes' in Nineteenth-Century America. University of Massachusetts Press, 2006: 81. ISBN 9781558495418
  5. ^ Kidd, Kenneth B. Making American Boys: Boyology and the Feral Tale. University of Minnesota Press, 2004: 52. ISBN 9780816642953
  6. ^ Kidd, Kenneth B. Making American Boys: Boyology and the Feral Tale. University of Minnesota Press, 2004: 53. ISBN 9780816642953
  7. ^ Mailloux, Stephen. Reception Histories: Rhetoric, Pragmatism, and American Cultural Politics. Cornell University Press, 1998: 138. ISBN 9780801485060
  8. ^ Mailloux, Stephen. Reception Histories: Rhetoric, Pragmatism, and American Cultural Politics. Cornell University Press, 1998: 139. ISBN 9780801485060
  9. ^ Hendler, Glenn. Public Sentiments: Structures of Feeling in Nineteenth-Century American Literature. University of North Carolina Press, 2008: 201. ISBN 9780807849217
  10. ^ Powers, Ron. Mark Twain: A Life. Simon and Schuster, 2005: 294. ISBN 9780743274753
  11. ^ Klein, Marcus. Easterns, Westerns, and Private Eyes: American Matters, 1870-1900. University of Wisconsin Press, 1994: 61. ISBN 029914304X

External links