In honor of the second annual DWJ March, I've written a guest post for Kristen at We Be Reading. She's posed the question: What makes Diana Wynne Jones magical?
Well, I don't know about everyone else, but the first thing I thought of was how Diana Wynne Jones is one of the brilliant children's authors whose works really stand the test of time. To me, she's just as good as J.K. Rowling. I read my first DWJ book, Dogsbody, years ago when I was in middle school. I probably picked it up because there was a dog on the cover, and even though I didn't get some of the British slang and references until years later, the story completely transported me. If you haven't read it, it's one of her first works, and a fantastic book.
Anyway, in Dogsbody, Sirius, the Dog Star, is not just a star, he's a sort of a celestial body personified. The story begins with Sirius on trial for murder by his peers, and he's sentenced to live a dog's life -- literally -- on Earth, unless he can find a mysterious object called the Zoi. Otherwise, he'll spend the rest of his natural life as a dog, and die here.
Sirius is reborn as a puppy, and is rescued from drowning and found by a lonely girl, Kathleen. Kathleen is Irish and is living an almost Cinderella-like existence with some horrible cousins in England, while her father is serving a prison sentence for his involvement with the IRA. Sirius is renamed Leo and is Kathleen's salvation, and as he grows, he becomes protective and attached to her as he searches for the Zoi. He becomes torn between his love for Kathleen and his desire to find the Zoi and return to his life as a celestial being.
DWJ is just brilliant at bringing characters to life. Kathleen is a sad orphan, but not sickly sweet, and the relatives who've taken her in are pretty horrible, rather like the Dursleys in the Harry Potter series. (Imagine, however, if the main character in Harry Potter never leaves Privet Drive, but is stuck there with a magic dog instead of escaping to the wizarding world of Hogwarts.)
I have an autographed copy of this edition!! Really!!!
It's a great story and I read it over and over as a child. I never could find any more books by Diana Wynne Jones -- back then we didn't have inter-library loan, and the bookstores in my town were pretty lame. I essentially forgot all about Diana Wynne Jones until 2005, when I spotted a copy of Howl's Moving Castle at a bookstore in a Japanese train station when we were stationed there -- I think it was in Kyoto. Every Japanese train station has a bookstore, but the supply of English-language books is pretty limited. I'm sure it was only available because the movie version had just been released, though I never got to see it on the big screen.
Anyway, since then I've read lots more Diana Wynne Jones books, and I've reread Dogsbody several times, which is just as good thirty years later. I'm pleased to see there's a new paperback edition with a brilliant introduction by Neil Gaiman. It's worth buying just for Gaiman's intro, which got me all choked up.
I'm still trying to finish the complete works of Diana Wynne Jones, but one of the nicest things is that I share her books with my own children. My youngest is almost twelve and loves Howl, which just thrills me to bits. To me, any author that you can pass down to a new generation is the definition of magical.
Kristen, thanks again for hosting this wonderful blogging event, and for allowing me to be a guest on your blog!
This is cross-posted on my blog, Books and Chocolate.
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Karen K. is a full-time library assistant living in South Texas who has waaay too many unread books on her shelves. Her favorite authors are Jane Austen, Anthony Trollope, Emile Zola, and Edith Wharton, and just for fun she'll take a break and read some riveting non-fiction or juvenile fantasy. When she's not telling other people what to read, she likes to knit, bake bundt cakes, watch movies, and hang out reading with her husband and two daughters. Her blog is called Books and Chocolate.
Books like this are magical. When I think of children's books that stand the test of time, first I think of Dr. Suess. However, anyone who doesn't mention DWJ isn't doing themselves or anyone else a favor. She is one of those authors that make it seem effortless, just like the greats from any other walk of life.
ReplyDeleteI love Dogsbody. It's such a good book, and it took me ages to get a copy. ;-)
ReplyDeleteIt would have been interesting to read Dogsbody as a child. I think I would have been traumatized by the puppy mill scenes and wouldn't have understood the Irish situation but I hope that I would still have liked it. As an adult, I thought it was brilliantly crafted.
ReplyDeleteDogsbody was my introduction to DWJ, but I was an adult! This one intrigued me and had me wanting to read more. Now, I just finished my third book by the author (Howl's Moving Castle), and my intrigue has only grown! Love her magic!!
ReplyDeleteI think I was an adult when I first read Dogsbody, as well. It's one of my favourites. I shall look for the version with the Gaimon intro!
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