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The Dream Coach (1924)

door Anne Parrish, Dillwyn Parrish

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The Dream Coach - Fare: Forty Winks Coach leaves every night...for no one know where. And here is told how a Princess, a little Chinese emperor, a French boy, and a Norwegian boy took trips in this great coach. With pictures by the authors.
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Toon 2 van 2
Twas cute. I don't know what more to say than that, but it’s legitimately very cute. I feel like it’d be good to read sections of it to a kid before bedtime to clear the room of monsters and bad thoughts. There’s some light poetry, some drawings, and then stories of the types of dreams different characters have. They’re very fanciful stories, and… cuuuute. ( )
  Allyoopsi | Jun 22, 2022 |
Published in 1924, brother and sister Anne and Dillwyn Parrish's The Dream Coach was one of two Newbery Honor Books selected in 1925 - the other being Anne Carroll Moore's Nicholas: A Manhattan Christmas Story - and follows the eponymous Dream Coach as it visits four children in different parts of the world. Although written almost a quarter-of-a-century into the twentieth century, it hearkens back to the Victorian fairy-tale fare of the nineteenth, both in its vision of the innocent child, and in its exotic portrait of the east.

It opens with the brief poem, The Dream Coach, originally contained in the authors' 1923 book, Knee-High To A Grasshopper: "If you have been unhappy all the day, / Wait patiently until the night: / When in the sky the gentle stars are bright / The Dream Coach comes to carry you away." Four original fairy-tales follow, each featuring a child's experiences with the Dream Coach.

The first of these is The Seven White Dreams of the King's Daughter, in which little Princess Angelica Mary Delphine Violet Candida Pamelia Petronella Victoire Veronica Monica Anastasia Yvonne (and so on) experiences a singularly unhappy birthday, hemmed in by the excessive formalities of court life, and goes to bed crying. When an angel witnesses her unhappiness, he and his fellows send her seven white dreams, and the princess becomes: a daisy in a field, a little white cloud in the blue sky, a little white lamb skipping through a field of lilies of the valley, a white butterfly floating in the breeze, a small white egg in a soft nest, and a snowflake dancing. All experiences involving freedom in the wide world - everything she is denied is her waking life.

The second tale is Goran's Dream, which follows the adventures of a little Norwegian boy, living with his grandmother over the waters of a deep fjord. When grandmother must go to the village to buy their winter supplies, six-year-old Goran is left on his own, entrusted with the care of the animals. Worried that the snow, which starts shortly after she leaves, will prevent his grandmother from returning, Goran distracts himself by building a snowman. Later, lulled by the warmth inside his little house, he falls asleep, dreaming that his animals - Nanna the goat, Gustava the hen, Mejau the cat - as well as the house geraniums and the old grandfather clock, can all speak, and that the snowman and the Queen of Clubs (from a colorful playing card he once found) have come alive. After a surreal party that resembles a scene from Alice in Wonderland, Goran awakens to find that he had fallen asleep in his chair.

The third selection - which has some strong thematic similarities to Hans Christian Andersen's The Nightingale - is A Bird Cage With Tassels of Purple and Pearls (Three Dreams of a Little Chinese Emperor), in which the Dream Coach, rather than relieving sadness, or distracting from worry, must educate and correct. In this tale, the young emperor has imprisoned a little songbird, who, in sorrow at its captivity, will not sing. In a series of dreams, the emperor experiences life in a cage, surrounded by massive birds many times his size, as well as the hardship of looking for food in a barren winter landscape, and the terror of fleeing from a predator. Now able to empathize with his captive, the little emperor grows kinder, and when summer comes, he releases the bird.

The fourth and final story is "King" Philippe's Dream, in which a young French boy, visiting his grandparents, and meeting his far-traveling Uncle Pablôt for the first time, falls asleep towards the end of his stay, dreaming that all his kin are transformed into different natural forces. Grandmother, who refers to the rising river as her son, becomes Grandmother Rain, while Uncle Pablôt becomes Uncle Wind. Grandfather is changed to Grandfather Snow, while little cousin Avril becomes Spring herself. Still sleeping and dreaming, Phillipe is returned to his parents...

The tales contained in The Dream Coach were mildly entertaining, but I found myself wondering, as I read through them, what extraordinary quality the Newbery Committee discovered in them, that made them worthy of special recognition.. Mild, sweet (sometimes too sweet), a little bit exotic (the "Chinese" selection), they are better in the summary, than in the reading. Then again, I'm generally not a great fan of Victorian fairy-fare. The black and white illustrations, both full and partial page, were probably the most appealing aspect of this book, which is apparently the first of three Newbery Honors for Anne Parrish! I'll have to see if I like Floating Island or The Story of Appleby Capple any better. ( )
  AbigailAdams26 | Jul 18, 2013 |
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Anne Parrishprimaire auteuralle editiesberekend
Parrish, Dillwynprimaire auteuralle editiesbevestigd
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The Dream Coach - Fare: Forty Winks Coach leaves every night...for no one know where. And here is told how a Princess, a little Chinese emperor, a French boy, and a Norwegian boy took trips in this great coach. With pictures by the authors.

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