12 January 2012

Dark Side of the Moomin

Most stories start with a kick-factor, an event that sets of the action. For example, detective stories usually start with the discovery of a dead body. Tove Jansson found a simple and haunting opener for Moominland Midwinter, my favorite of the Moomin books. Moomins hibernate during the winter and never normally see the cold season, never normally encounter the snow or long nights. However this particular winter young Moomintroll wakes up in the middle of his hibernation and is unable go back to sleep.

And so the tale begins. He leaves the family den and meets the winter creatures of the valley.


Moomintroll visits his sleeping mother.

One thing I love about this book is its atmosphere of cold-weather loneliness. Moomintroll meets lots of characters but they come and go with long periods between visits. Nobody talks much, everyone is isolated, traveling alone. His "friends" are not too friendly, they have other things on their minds. There is much reference to darkness, to everything being held in a kind of icy death, albeit a temporary one.

Moomintroll sometimes goes to his mother, who is still hibernating underground, and asks her questions. By talking in her sleep "from the depths of her womanly understanding of all that preserves tradition", Moominmamma is able to help her son. Here Jansson is softening the blow for younger readers. Without a few kind words from Moominmamma the book's atmosphere of winter melancholy could get genuinely upsetting. This indicates how well-written this book is.


The Groke.

The icy Groke is a wonderful creation. A lonesome wanderer, she is attracted to light and warmth but doomed to extinguish it by drawing close. Moomintroll at first fears her, but then comes to pity her. He learns a lot of other things that winter but Jansson steers away from putting big lessons in her plot. Moomintroll does not have any revelations, he does not seem overly changed by the time spring comes and we reach the end of the story. His growth is slow and gradual, without high risk or climaxes, an ordinary childhood.

As the thaw arrives Moomintroll is at last able to see familiar things emerge from under the snow. In a beautiful bit of dialogue, he makes a complaint to an acquaintance, Too-Ticky. Moomintroll tells her that she should have been more supportive of him when he first found himself awake, alone and unhappy.
‘It’d have been such a comfort. Remember, I said once: “There were a lot of apples here.” And you just said: “But now here’s a lot of snow.” Didn’t you understand that I was melancholy?”

Too-Ticky shrugged her shoulders. ‘One has to discover everything for oneself,’ she replied. ‘And get over it all alone.’


05 December 2011

Author of the Month

My new book Deep Deep Down is now out and no doubt I will be talking about it with the pupils of Wellington College, Belfast, when I visit them on December 14th. Thank you to Tanja Jennings, librarian at Wellington, who has made me the school’s author of the month.


Rebecca Cullen's winning monster.


I first visited this school to be part of the Northern Irish heat of the Kid’s Lit Quiz. As part of this competition I offered one of my own drawings as a prize to the artist producing the most exciting sea monster. You can see my drawing and find out more about the Kid’s Lit Quiz on the last entry on this blog. Above is the winning piece of art, below is the runner up. I hope the Rebecca Cullen is enjoying her prize and has maybe hung it up somewhere.


Rebecca Jones came second.

01 November 2011

Kid’s Lit Quiz

I will be a guest at The Kids' Lit Quiz which will be held at Wellington College in Belfast on Thursday the 10th of November. It is an annual international reading quiz for students aged 10-13 years. 26 teams from 19 different schools across Northern Ireland will be competing for reading honours. I’m told that previous quizzes have had rounds on everything from “pigs, primates and publishers' logos to Harry Potter, Dr Seuss and famous first lines." All regions of the United Kingdom take part along with New Zealand, South Africa, Canada, the USA and China. The regional heat winners will compete in the UK Final at Warwick University in December. The UK champions will then travel to New Zealand to take on the International teams who will be battling it out for the coveted World Title. There are all sorts of prizes to be won and, of course, there’s the glory.



I am bringing an additional prize for the Northern Irish quiz, it is a drawing in a frame and will be presented along with one of my books. It will be awarded to the winner of a Monster drawing competition. I drew this picture when beginning to write The Badness of Ballydog. When writing I often sketch props and characters to help me get a clear idea of them in my head. This particular picture is of May looking over the side of the Sunny Buoy at a certain leatherback turtle. A turtle who turns out to be important in the story.

I look forward to partaking in the day, testing my knowledge of youth literature and seeing all the student’s artwork.