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Maze in the Heart of the Castle door Dorothy…
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Maze in the Heart of the Castle (origineel 1983; editie 1991)

door Dorothy Gilman

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Consumed by grief after the deaths of his parents, sixteen-year-old Colin accepts the challenge of the maze of Rheembeck Castle and begins to unravel the mystery of the maze within himself.
Lid:litlbit71
Titel:Maze in the Heart of the Castle
Auteurs:Dorothy Gilman
Info:Fawcett (1991), Mass Market Paperback
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The Maze in the Heart of the Castle door Dorothy Gilman (1983)

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Toon 3 van 3
This book reminded me of The Phantom Tollbooth by Norton Juster & I suspect that if I had first read Gilman's book at the same age as when I first read Juster's, it would have become a favorite. Both books are allegorical but I think Juster's book stands up better to adult reading (having more humor & the wonderful illustrations by Jules Feiffer helps!). Gilman's allegory is a touch more heavy-handed, or perhaps just more serious about itself.

Colin, grieving and angry, wants someone to explain to him why such things as his parents' deaths happen. The Grand Oldum (the wizard in the blurb) warns that many who enter the maze never reach the center where answers possibly may be found in his country of Galt.

Once in the maze, Colin first meets the Wos, a group of people who gave up trying to find their way through the maze and created a community in which they "celebrate" their troubles (woes) in turns. This is a good example of the type of allegory found throughout the book (though they aren't all quite so obvious). Through the various tribulations that befall him during his trip, Colin learns that his thoughts control his emotions and that he could learn to control them in order to let go of his anger & grief:

"It came to him, standing there, that he could choose for himself what thoughts he might carry down this mountain with him, for if his future lay in the valleys below, then to take his past with him was to walk backward into that future, always looking over his shoulder and stumbling. There had to be something better ahead--there already was, he realized: the first green that he'd glimpsed since he rode out of the forest..."

Eventually, in his darkest time of trial, he finds that his life-force/soul/essence/spirit is part of the life all around him & if he allows it, he can soar with the birds even if his body is trapped in a cage.
This idea is one that Gilman expressed in several of her non-Pollifax books such as Caravan or The Clairvoyant Countess. ( )
  leslie.98 | May 9, 2018 |
Originally, I read this book when I was 11 or 12 years old, and since then, I've always remembered two things: first, the great title (I do like a nice long title), and second, the gnawing sensation that it went a little bit over my head at that time. Nearly two decades later, I decided to give it another try, along with its companion volume, The Tightrope Walker. The Maze in the Heart of the Castle is a strange meta-fictional conceit in that quotes from it, and descriptions of sequences from it, first appear in Tightrope Walker five years earlier, where Gilman treats it as the product of another author and the protagonist's favorite book. It's made out to be a sort of ur-children's book, a beautiful old tome with important allegories to return to again and again.

By actually sitting down and writing Maze for real, then, Gilman fashioned a pretty good rod for her own back. This is a very slim book, really - it's 220 pages of large print - but it's clearly written to be "weighty." The prose has a vaguely Arthurian tone that tends to be reserved for much shorter fables and legends; it's more than a little pompous in places, and there are parts where Gilman is baldly saying, "Hey kids! You should be learning something important about life here." It's not subtle at all, and it frankly lacks the engaging quality of The Phantom Tollbooth or The Last Unicorn, which I think it may be trying to emulate. (There are sequences that bring both of those earlier novels to mind.)

That said, it's not awful. It does actually pick up as it goes on and more dialogue becomes involved. There's at least one encounter that I really enjoyed - one with a character called the Conjurer. (They're all named things like that.) Overall, though, I can't shake that feeling that Gilman was trying to write a philosophical book for kids, and because she set out with that goal, the result got bogged down with its own importance. It's really too heavy for a small child - say, under 10 - but the story is too simplistic for most preteens. I can completely see, now, why it left me discomfited in my own childhood. While I had expected that to be an indicator of my own inexperience at that age - emotionally, I was a very "young" 11 or 12 - I think, really, it just showed up the limitations of the novel. I probably needed a Last Unicorn at that age (a book I never actually read as a child) - not The Maze in the Heart of the Castle. ( )
  saroz | Dec 22, 2015 |
The Maze in the Heart of the Castle is written more as an allegory than a novel so many of the people that Colin, the hero of the tale, meets are more symbols than they are characters. So they are not developed very well and lack depth but they serve their purpose and get the point across. The journey Colin goes on is one of self discovery and he must face all the different thing that will stop him if he lets them. And because, once again, things seem to be more symbols than anything else many of the situations he finds himself in develop and end rather quickly. The pared down characters and situations let Colin encounter many things and go on a long journey without having the novel weighed down with lots of details but still giving the reader the ideas of and the feel for them all. The setting is vaguely medieval with transportation by horse and fighting with slingshots and daggers but he had a penknife and a joke book which didn’t seem to fit in with some of the other things so it was hard to get a time period for the book. It isn’t exactly nonstop action but the narrative does keep the plot moving along at a good pace. It can be read as just a quick easy adventure story or, more in keeping with the allegorical feel of the book, you can look for the moral and follow Colin as he deals with his grief, anger and confusion and learn with him what it means to get through the maze at the heart of the castle. ( )
  bedda | Aug 18, 2009 |
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Colin was sixteen, a golden boy, when his mother and father died, both on the same day.
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Consumed by grief after the deaths of his parents, sixteen-year-old Colin accepts the challenge of the maze of Rheembeck Castle and begins to unravel the mystery of the maze within himself.

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