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Bezig met laden... In Thunder's Pocketdoor Joan Aiken
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Is opgenomen inBone and Dream door Joan Aiken
When Ned is sent to stay with aunt and uncle in Thunder's Pocket, he's not very pleased. But fom the moment a bird flies into the train carriage on his journey there, Ned realises this isn't going to an ordinary seaside holiday. Has the eccentric sculptor, Marlot Corby, really put a curse on Ned's aunt? What secrets will he find in Marlot's house and garden ? Life in Thunder's Pocket is going to be anything but dull... Geen bibliotheekbeschrijvingen gevonden. |
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Google Books — Bezig met laden... GenresDewey Decimale Classificatie (DDC)823.914Literature English & Old English literatures English fiction Modern Period 1901-1999 1945-1999WaarderingGemiddelde:
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In Thunder's Pocket is the first of a trio of novelettes for younger readers. Set in Cornwall and featuring Ned Thorne, it is described as 'a St Boan mystery' -- but it is equally a ghost story, a supernatural tale, as are the two sequels; in fact the official Joan Aiken site categorises the trilogy as Magic & Mystery.
Thunder's Pocket is an epithet for the town of St Boan because of its storm-prone microclimate. We're told St Boan is based on the fishing village of St Ives, perhaps as it was in the mid-fifties when the author and her young family lived in Cornwall. Even then it will have been not only a haunt of artists and the occasional holiday visitor but also a place set apart from the rest of the world. It's a feeling it retains to this day.
St Boan (dedicated to a non-existent Cornish saint, perhaps a meld of Welsh surname Bowen and the prehistoric stone circle at Boscawen-Un) was the home of Malot Corby, a cantankerous sculptress of abstract forms who took offence against Ned's Aunt Lal. After her death Lal has never been quite the same, letting her hair grow and displaying a vacant manner. It's up to Ned to find the connections between Malot and her cousin Lal and just what needs to be done to remove the curse on his aunt.
(Maybe Malot was partly based on the artist Barbara Hepworth, who had returned to St Ives in 1954; this was a year before Joan Aiken had to move back to London from Cornwall so quite possibly their paths crossed.)
At the most obvious level this spooky story is firmly focused on the magic and mystery promised. But Joan Aiken also knows what ingredients to include and how to mix them up to make her concoction feel authentic. The evil entity that survives in an egg is straight out of Russian folktale; malevolent birds emerge straight out of North European lore but are here brought up to date, with the feathered bane of seaside tourists replacing carrion crows and ravens; keys, especially when made of iron, were not only a means to reveal secrets but also to guard against malign influences; and combing hair is supposed to be a sure way to ease trauma, just as cutting it is said to excise negativity.
Ned's relationship with his Aunt Lal opens the way to shared psychic experiences, a bond that is followed up in the sequels. Ned's more intellectual side is perhaps encouraged and emphasised by his Uncle Adam who runs the bookshop in the town. And yet overall there is a dreamlike atmosphere pervading the narrative, a parallel reality suggested but never made explicit, which perfectly suits the brevity of the tale.
Without a doubt it firmly appealed to the child in me, a child who totally identified with Ned, the sensitive yet resourceful protagonist. ( )