My History With This Book
As a child, I was raised on Disney cartoons and The Disney Channel, so my primary impression of this story is through the Disney movie The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad.
I know that this is one of Disney's less-remembered animated movies, but, for my money, the Disney version of The Battle for Toad Hall is some of the best animated slapstick that classic Disney ever produced.
But as great as these scenes are, they of course give a false-impression of the book. If you go into the book expecting a face-paced story with lots of action... oh boy, are you going to be in for an adjustment!
(Incidentally, since I'm hanging out with a lot of British friends these days, I might add I've discovered that there was a TV show based on The Wind and the Willows that was on British TV in the 1980s, and for British people around my age it was this TV show that is their primary impression of The Wind and the Willows, not the Disney movie.)
My mother at one point bought me a copy of The Wind in the Willows book, but I never got more than a few pages into it.
Why I Read This Book Now
Aside from the fact that this is
one of those classic books that’s been on my to-read list for decades now,
there were a couple things that pushed this book to my attention recently.
A couple
brief excerpts from this book are featured on the audio book anthology 1000 Years of Laughter which I’ve been listening to, and I decided I liked
the humor.
And then,
somehow in my Internet wanderings, I came across this interview with Guillermo del Tor, where he was talking about how he pulled out of the Disney movie
project: "It was a beautiful book, and then I went to meet with the executives and they said, 'Could you give Toad a skateboard and make him say, 'radical dude' things,' and that's when I said, 'It's been a pleasure...'"
. I decided I wanted to read the book and find
out why he thought it was so beautiful.
The final
reason is that I was going on a beach trip with a few friends, and I needed a
short, light read that I could kick back at the beach with, and finish off in a
couple days, and this seemed to fit the bill perfectly.
Children’s Book or
Adult’s Book
I’d be curious to hear about other
people’s experience of this book. Did
you read it as a child, or as an adult, and what age did you think this book
was most appropriate for? Do me a favor
and leave a comment if you’ve already read this book.
In my case,
my mother actually gave me a copy of this book when I was a child (around 4th
grade I think) and for years it just sat on my bookshelf mocking me. I tried several times to read it, but could
never get past the first few pages. It was
just so boring and slow moving.
Now that I’m
an adult, I have a lot more patience, and I can easily put up with the long
descriptions of natural settings or domestic life or daily animal habits. But as a child I lacked this patience.
The style
of the book is episodic with many different chapters containing separate
stories. (The exception being the
stories involving Toad, most of which happen near the end.) The stories in the
beginning chapters are very simple: Mole meets Rat and has his first trip down
the river, Mole and Rat get lost in the woods for a while until they find
Badger’s house, Mole gets homesick and re-visits his old house, et cetera.
There’s
perhaps a temptation to imagine that simple stories are ideal for children, but
I think the contrary is true. Children,
perhaps especially young boys, need a lot of fast paced action to hold their
attention. If you want to see the ideal
book for a ten-year old boy, check out Princess of Mars by Edgar Rice Burroughs. It’s all non-stop
action, and very little time wasted on describing anything.
The Wind in the Willows, however, is the
antithesis of Burroughs.
It’s very little action, and a lot of description.
The publisher’s
introduction to my paperback (Jane Yolen, 1988, Tor Books) tackles this
awkwardness head on, and admits that parts of the book are more suited for
middle-age than childhood. The book was
apparently written as part of a middle-aged crisis for Kenneth Grahame when he
was feeling very nostalgic about his childhood.
It was combined with a series of stories about Mr. Toad that Kenneth
Grahame had been telling his son, and the Mr. Toad stories are much more child
friendly.
But,
although the adventures of Mr. Toad are what everyone remembers from this book,
the bulk of the book is actually filled with nostalgic descriptions of the
English countryside and domestic life in rural England.
I can
appreciate the beauty of all of this now, but I would never give this book to a
child.
A couple of
the chapters are even overtly about middle-aged crises. In one chapter, Rat, who has lived all his
life in peaceful domestic bliss on the same river, encounters another rodent
who has sailed over the world and has stories from every port town. Rat has a moment of crisis in which he
wonders if he’s missing out on life by not travelling and having adventures,
and he almost packs up his things and sets out to see the world before he is
eventually talked out of it by Mole, who brings him back down to earth by
talking about English pastoral life. “Casually, then, and with seeming
indifference, the Mole turned his talk to the harvest that was being gathered
in, the towering wagons, and their straining teams, the growing ricks, and the
large moon rising over bare acres dotted with sheaves. He talked of the
reddening apples around, of the browning nuts, of jams and preserves and the
distilling of cordials; till by easy stages such as these he reached midwinter,
its hearty joys and its snug home life, and then he became simply lyrical.”
(p. 145-146)
There’s
another chapter when Rat and Mole encounter the nature god Pan. It’s a beautifully written passage (and often
very beautifully illustrated [LINK HERE]), but the primary emotion
is a sense of painful nostalgia for something lost. Again, it’s not something I would recommend
to a child.
On the
other hand, the pastoral scenes in this book are intercut with the adventures
of Mr. Toad, and the Mr. Toad parts are obviously written for a child. They are much faster paced and adventurous,
and they also follow a child’s sense of logic.
(After Mr. Toad escapes from jail, he is a fugitive from the law and
pursued by the police, but all of this is abruptly dropped from the story as
soon as he gets back home. In the logic
of this book, it appears once you get back to your home base you win and the
police just go home. Also, the stouts
and the weasels are driven out of Toad Hall by a surprise attack, but for some
reason there is never any question of the stouts and weasels re-grouping for
any sort of counter-attack, despite the fact that they have superior
numbers. Once they are driven out of
Toad Hall the first time, the game appears to be over.)
To quote
from the publisher’s afterward:
“The Wind
in the Willows is not one book but
three. There is the contemplative,
pastoral, sentimental, and nostalgic story of those best of old-fashioned
friends Rat and Badger and Mole. There
is the rollicking adventure of the irrepressible and trouble-minded toad. and there is the mystical, magical, even
visionary and dreamlike, allegory of Pan with his Pipes at the Gates of
Dawn. Some readers prefer the story of
friendship, some prefer the fast-paced adventure; some prefer the dream.”
(Jane Yolen, 1988).
So,
although parts of The Wind and the
Willows are written for children, and parts for adults, I think on the
whole the book is best read by adults.
Adults can enjoy the children’s sections of the book a lot better than
children can handle the adult parts.
But that’s
just my opinion. Let me know what you
thought of this book.
While out
on the beach, I did a quick survey of my group of friends. One person said he actually had read this
book as a child. Even though the book
had bored him, he said he was just such a voracious reader as a child that he
read anything and everything he could get his hands on, and he plowed on
through the book anyway despite the boredom.
I suspect
this is the only kind of child that can read this book. I was very much the opposite kind of child
though. I liked reading, but it was a
slow and laborious process for me, and if the story didn’t move quickly enough,
I was very easily distracted by other books which did move quicker. And that’s
what happened to me with The Wind in the
Willows.
My other
friends had never even read this book, but had a lot of nostalgia for the
characters and the story nonetheless because they remembered it from the
various TV shows. (In my case, I have a
lot of nostalgia for the Disney version (W), but from my British
friends I learned there was also a TV show based on The Wind in the Willows that ran for several years in Britain (W).)
The fact
that the characters from this story have worked their way into our collective
childhood nostalgia, regardless of whether we read the book or not, is perhaps
an indication that this book does have some level of strong appeal to children
after all.
The Review
All that being said, let me put
aside the question of who this is for, and simply focus on how enjoyable it was
for me to read now at my present stage in life.
And the
answer is: quite enjoyable. This is a
quick read which I easily finished off in a couple of days, and it’s a
thoroughly charming. It has a lot of
cute scenes describing animal society, very detailed descriptions of life in
the Edwardian English countryside, and it can be quite funny.
Having been forewarned by the
publisher’s introduction that a lot of the book was simply nostalgia about the
English countryside, I allowed myself to get in the mood and allowed the author
to paint his picture of the simple joys of the river and the forest, and the
joys of a cozy home.
The
sections describing home life in Edwardian England were interesting as
well. In this day and age of electric
heating, it’s easy to forget how important the fireside was to Edwardians in
the winter time, and there are a lot of passages describing how comfortable the
fire place was, and describing animals talking to each other while warming
themselves by the fireside, or drinking warm ale by the fire.
I also
enjoyed the humor of the book. And to
illustrate this, I’ll indulge myself by
quoting my favorite passage.
My Favorite Passage
The Rat was sitting on the river bank, singing a little song. He had just composed it himself, so he was
very taken up with it, and would not pay proper attention to Mole or anything
else. Since early morning he had been
swimming in the river in company with his friends the ducks. And when the ducks stood on their heads
suddenly, as ducks will, he would dive down and tickle their necks just under
where their chins would be if ducks had chins, till they were forced to come to
the surface again in a hurry, spluttering and angry and shaking their feathers
at him, for it was impossible to say quite all you feel when your head is under water. At last they implored him to
go away and attend to his own affairs and leave them to minds theirs. So the
Rat went away, and sat on the river bank in the sun, and made up a song about
them, which he called
“DUCKS’ DITTY”
All along the
backwater,
Through the rushes
tall,
Ducks are a-dabbling,
Up tails all!
Ducks’ tails, drakes’
tails,
Yellow feet a-quiver,
Yellow bills all out
of sight
Busy in the river!
Slushy green
undergrowth
Where the roach swim—
Here we keep our
larder,
Cool and full and dim.
Every one for what he
likes!
We like to be
Heads down, tails up
Dabbling free!
High in the blue above
Swifts whirl and call—
We are down a-dabbling
Up tails all!
“I don’t know that I think so very much of that little song, Rat,” observed
the Mole cautiously. He was no poet
himself and didn’t care who knew it; and he had a candid nature.
“Nor don’t the ducks, neither,”
replied the Rat cheerfully. “They say, ‘Why can’t fellows be allowed to do what they like when they like and as they like, instead of other fellows sitting on banks and watching them
all the time and making remarks and poetry and things about them? What nonsense it all is!’ That’s what the ducks say.”
“So it is, so it is,” said the Mole,
with great heartiness.
“No, it isn’t!” cried the Rat
indignantly.
“Well then, it isn’t, it isn’t,”
replied the Mole soothingly…..
4 comments:
I read the book in grade four, and when I wrote my book report I focused almost exclusively on the Toad adventures. I read it again to the girls when they were six or seven. They were keen to hear it right to its conclusion, even if the Dream segment was completely baffling. It could be that girls are better attuned to the drama of relationship. I'll have to ask them what they remember about the book.
My daughters have clear recollections of Toad's prison break -- one of them went so far as to include poor Mr. Toad in her nightly prayers. Also the stoat appropriation of Toad Hall. There is some recollection of Toad's propensity to bloviate and take credit for the heroic efforts of his friends. And they have strong memories of the first chapter, when Mole crawls out of his hole in the spring and dances on the river bank.
Like I say, this was not a book I forced on them in any way. In fact, at the time, they preferred it to Harry Potter (which probably read to them as overly cruel and oppressive). The Wind In The Willows ain't Green Eggs & Ham, but it is very much a children's book I'd say.
I guess that's why it's always useful to bounce these things off of other people before making blanket pronouncements. Having tried to read this book as a kid, my own experience is that I could not get into it at a young age. But apparently not everyone's mind operates the same as mine.
Terrific choice of quote, by the way. It strikes me as a very "adult" perspective on friendship.
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