Rock solid childhood friends Photo: Jordy Theiller |
The
Big Alfie and Annie Rose Storybook
ambushed me the other day. It was sitting in the window of a charity shop while
I was on my way somewhere. Sentimentality can get you when you’re least
expecting it, especially where the children’s author Shirley Hughes is
concerned. One minute you’re thinking about what you need from the chemist, and
the next about how long it was since you’ve read to your kids, and why the
little pests have to grow
up so quickly. But they’re off to chat to their mates online and don’t care
that you are left clasping a book with a hopeful expression. It helps – a bit –
to know that you’re far from the first to go down this road. Literature and
modern culture abound with examples. From Peter Pan to Toy Story, it’s clear
that leaving behind childish things can be painful; sometimes for the one
growing up, but more often for those around them. Is it possible to watch Jessie the cowgirl being thrown
out by her owner, without reaching for the tissues?
A recent exhibition
of Shirley Hughes’ art suggests that she is predominantly viewed as an
illustrator. She has twice won the
prestigious Greenaway Medal for illustration and, a few years ago, was asked by
Sarah Brown to design the Downing
Street Christmas card. I’m not sure that her artwork, beautiful though it is, completely accounts for my
little crisis en route to the chemist, though. Perhaps a more plausible reason
is that, while Hughes’ images are memorable, it’s as a writer that she stays
with me; as someone who supremely conjures up a world of childhood joys, fears
and transitions.
Hughes is not the most
immediately obvious candidate for such a verdict. She isn’t Jacqueline Wilson.
She doesn’t write about rebellious teens, parents with manic depression or
school bullying (well, only occasionally, such as in her story for older
children, The
Lion and The Unicorn). The world Hughes considers can seem small, even
mundane. In her most famous book, Dogger,
a child loses a toy and finds it again. That’s pretty much it, on the surface.
I can offer no higher praise though, than to say I consider Shirley Hughes at
least Jacqueline Wilson’s equal in terms of artistic power and emotional truth.
When Dogger is finally found, both adult reader and child listener tend to be
equally relieved.
The values that flow
through Hughes’ work are of course part of her appeal. The kids in her
imaginary Trotter
Street all play outside together and the adults help each other with
everything from child-minding to laying concrete. Whether this is a reflection
of a reality or an idealised fantasy I’m not sure, but maybe that doesn’t
matter. It’s the need for community that speaks to us. The real emotional
centre of her work, though, is in its acute observation of the world of very
young children. Nowhere is this more evident than in her stories of Alfie, a
small boy who lives with his parents and his younger sister Annie-Rose. For the
most part, little out of the ordinary happens to Alfie. He has a grandma who
tells him stories. He lies awake on light summer evenings. He starts school.
Once he brings a comfort blanket to a party (Alfie
Gives a Hand). The boy having the party behaves badly. Hughes is as
accurate a witness to childhood as any psychologist, and it’s this quality that
characterises the greatest children’s fiction. Her sharp eye for feelings is
ultimately what makes her writing resonate so deeply. At the party Alfie is
thanked by his friend Bernard’s mum. To see Bernard then chucking crayons about
is to get a glimpse into something profound and painfully honest about the
nature of envy, and how hard it can be for those whom we love to praise someone
else.
Many child psychologists
have placed great importance on the development of the ability to have some
objects stand in for others. Think of a child using a banana as a telephone.
Actually, these days, phones no longer look anything like bananas, but the
principle stands: something is representing something else. Children can even
give a chosen object feelings. In this way a teddy bear has a life and
personality for a child, sometimes experiencing emotions the child cannot yet tolerate
(‘Teddy will miss you when you’re at work’). Though such stand-ins are
significant, a proper appreciation of what is real and what is not may be also key
to healthy psychological development. For some observers of childhood, the
psychoanalyst Hanna
Segal in particular, it was important a child realised something could represent
something else but not actually
become it. Despite the uses to which they are put, bananas are still just fruit
and teddies remain stuffed. Or, as my kids tell me when I get shocked at one of
them playing at being dead (or something equally extreme), ‘Daa-aad! It’s just
pretend’.
The most accessible, and beautiful,
account of these processes in a young child I’ve ever read is a story where Alfie
goes to the beach. He finds a stone and it becomes his friend. He names it
Bonting and they play for the afternoon. There is a crisis when Bonting is lost
then found again. Does Alfie get worried when Bonting is lost? Yes, and the
reader feels it with him. Does this mean he thinks a stone is really his
friend? Of course not, though he still feels sad. Even a pebble on the beach
can be a symbolic representation of another, the recipient of friendship and
longing.
Though there are plenty of
other joys and pains to be experienced as children grow older, I’ll be sad if reading
Shirley Hughes is gone from my life. I hope we’re not quite there yet and I can
dust off some of the stories, even if it’s only for old times’ sake. But, when
we are finished it will be comforting to know that Alfie and Annie Rose will
still be playing on beaches, making friends with stones and filling the
ordinary with wonder.
Sweet. My children are pretty into Alfie right now. Glad to know there is a 'serious' reason to read it as well.
ReplyDeleteI found 'Alfie's Feet' in the Oxfam bookshop and bought it out of nostalgia, as my own children liked it. To my surprise, my up-to-the-minute 6 year old granddaughter read it again and again. It all seems so dated - the street scenes, the furniture, the clothes, and so on. But I think what entranced her was the emotional tone. Here in her books are the relationships that we long for; warm, secure, funny, just the right amount of manageable tension, and timeless!
ReplyDeleteThe first time I read Dogger it was to my young son whilst pregnant with his sister, I'm usually not a sentimental person but it made me cry, I blame the hormones! Both my children used to pick up stones so we also love the Bonting story, the little bathing suit was great. Thanks for a fantastic post!
ReplyDeleteMany thanks Josie. Those hormones clearly got me too. Or maybe something in my eye... John McGowan
ReplyDelete