The Scarecrows

The Scarecrows

Front cover of first U.S. edition
(Greenwillow, 1981)
Author Robert Westall
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Genre Children's supernatural fiction, psychological novel, ghost story
Publisher Chatto & Windus
Publication date
1981
Media type Print (hardcover & paperback)
Pages 159 pp (first edition)
ISBN 070112556X
OCLC 8046301
LC Class PZ7.W51953 Sc 1981[1]

The Scarecrows is a young-adult novel by Robert Westall, published by Chatto & Windus in 1981. It is a psychological novel with a supernatural twist, featuring a thirteen-year-old boy's reaction to his mother's courtship and remarriage six years after his father's death. It deals with themes of rage, isolation and fear. Beside the inner themes, it "tells of a boy and his family brought to the brink of destruction by sinister external forces"[2] and it may be called a ghost story. Its U.S. Library of Congress Subject Headings are remarriage, stepfathers, and horror stories.[1]

Westall and The Scarecrows won the annual Carnegie Medal for British children's books.[3] Thus he became the second writer with two such honours (of seven to date), having won the 1975 Medal for The Machine Gunners.[4]

William Morrow and Company published the U.S. edition under its Greenwillow Books imprint within the calendar year.[1]

Plot summary

The story is a third-person limited narrative, with the point of view entirely that of Simon Wood—his thoughts, feelings and memories, the things he sees and experiences, conversations he has, conversations he overhears. The novel opens at Simon's boarding school in the south of England, where the poisonous atmosphere of bullying and denigration has nurtured Simon's "devils", as he describes his blind rages. He first sees Joe Moreton there, when the man has given Simon's mother a lift to an event at the school. Simon loathes him at first sight and regards him as a "yob", unimpressed by his fame as an artist.

At an art gallery the boy overhears a conversation making clear that Joe and his mother are dating, which enrages Simon. When mother tells him she intends to marry Joe, he vainly begs her not to, and then refuses to attend the wedding. But he must finally join his mother, his sister, and Joe at their new home in Cheshire. There both his mother's happiness and his sister's adoration of Joe incense him, for he regards them as betraying his father's memory. A neighbouring unused water mill, separated from the house by a turnip field, provides a refuge, but it harbours a sinister secret. During the war, the miller was murdered by his wife and her lover.

By his own attitude and actions, Simon becomes increasingly isolated. When he is driven to call on his father's spirit for support, it appears that the call is intercepted by the spirits at the mill, which manifest as scarecrows and imperceptibly advance across the turnip field to threaten the family. Simon's friend Tris la Chard comes to stay, and helps Simon to face up to reality and defeat the spirits.

Characters

Present
Past

Literary significance and reception

By conferring the 1981 Carnegie Medal, the Library Association named The Scarecrows the year's best book for children or young adults written by a British subject.[3] The novel has been described as a book "full of anger. Simon ... loathes his stepfather and resents his mother's marital happiness; and it is obviously his own fury and malice that brings to life the Scarecrows, grown from clothes left in the nearby ruined water-mill by the participants in a long-past murderous triangle of passion."[5] The effectiveness of the horror aspect of the story is emphasized in Reading for Enjoyment, in which it is described as a "book to make the hairs rise on the back of your neck".[6]

The Guardian newspaper named The Scarecrows one of ten books recommended for teenage boys in 2001, calling it an "intelligent and menacing novel".[2]

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 "The scarecrows" (first U.S. edition). Library of Congress Catalog Record. Retrieved 2012-07-26.
  2. 2.0 2.1 "10 reads for the teenage bloke". The Guardian 9 October 2001.
  3. 3.0 3.1 (Carnegie Winner 1981). Living Archive: Celebrating the Carnegie and Greenaway Winners. CILIP. Retrieved 2012-07-26.
  4. (Carnegie Winner 1975). Living Archive: Celebrating the Carnegie and Greenaway Winners. CILIP. Retrieved 2012-07-26.
  5. John Rowe Townsend, Written for Children - An Outline of English-Language Children's Literature, 3rd edition, Penguin Books, 1987, p. 249.
  6. Fiona Waters, Reading for Enjoyment 12-15, Baker Books 1987, p.40.

External links

Awards
Preceded by
City of Gold
Carnegie Medal recipient
1981
Succeeded by
The Haunting