biography books journalism children's books links


Features
Being Burgled
The Independent
A Vicious Circle
Fighting back against yobs
The Sunday Times
On suffering
The Sunday Times
On reading aloud
The Times
Civilisation - teaching history
How i became a surrendered wife
The Sunday Times
Come Clean
Sunday Times
How I became a cretin
The Independent
Catwoman & Kickass Heroines
Sunday Times
The Child Whisperer
The Guardian
Fraudulent Secretaries
Sunday Times
Cover your face
The Author
Wife Swap
Sunday Times column
A Christmas Dog
The Guardian
Organic Families
Sunday Times
Strong Heroines
Sunday Times Style magazine
Creating Characters
The Times
My Favourite Children's Book
Guardian
Children's Fiction: The New Satire
Sunday Times
How to drive a reviewer crazy
The Bookseller
Think pink: what chick-lit's favourite colour means
Daily Telegraph
Male Menopause
Sunday Times
Tyrants in Tuscany or house party hell
The Daily Telegraph, July 2003
The perfect holiday
read

The Times, August 2003
Holiday Hell
The Guardian, July 2003
Breath of life
The Evening Standard, July 2003
Updating Shakespeare
The Sunday Times, July 2003
Porn Free: is this what it takes to get boys reading?
The Sunday Times
Living with a writer
The Author
Against Grim-lit
Mslexia
The Italian Baby Myth
Prospect
Writing as another sex
The Author 2001
 

Lectures
In defence of the domestic novel
Are we being served?
The elephant in the kitchen: women satirists
The uses of enchantment
A writers' life
 

Interviews
Eva Ibbotson
Michelle Paver
Robin Hobb
Lian Hearn
Ian Beck
Eoin Colfer
Diana Wynne Jones
Meg Cabot
Anthony Horowitz
Monica Ali
Malorie Blackman
Doris Lessing
Mark Haddon
Raymond Briggs
 

Book Reviews:
Beyond Black, Hilary Mantel
Divided Kingdom, Rupert Thomson
Old Filth, Jane Gardam
We need to talk about Kevin, Lionel Shriver
It So Happens, Pat Ferguson
Old Filth, Jane Gardam
Daphne du Maurier
Joan Barfoot, Luck
Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell
Valerie Martin
Alexander McCall Smith
Michele Roberts
Rose Tremain
Joyce Carol Oates
David Lodge
Great Expectations
  Revisited

JOAN AIKEN MEMORIAL SPEECH, ST JAMES’S, MAY 13 2004


Who can forget the timid Sylvia comforting her doll while the wolves of Willoughby Chase howl round her shattered train carriage? Who has not longed for a Necklace of Raindrops, with the magical power to bring rain to a parched land, or a Harp of Fishbones to make “a liquid murmur, like that of a stream running over pebbles, under a bridge”? Wolves and weather workers, dukes and devils, enchanted gardens that spring out of the back of cereal boxes and pies in the sky that can fly you somewhere better all became part of the world of childhood thanks to Joan Aiken.

To read a novel, or a story, by Joan Aiken is a unique experience. Many great children’s authors have described parallel worlds, whose history diverges from the one we know, or in which magic is possible and paupers become princes. Yet Joan’s fiction is immediately identifiable, like a certain taste or smell. The TES famously praised her “wild humour and imagination” and certainly wildness is an element, though that suggests a lack of control. She is a terribly funny writer – terribly in the old sense of the word, because her humour always has an edge of horror to it, and a gothic awareness of evil, madness and the dark. Like Dickens, whose love of orphans, grotesques and exuberance she shares, Joan Aiken makes her readers very aware of just how rare goodness and courage are, and how powerful wickedness. Some parents and teachers think children should be protected from this knowledge. I can only say that there are always many little girls – and boys – at the mercy of Miss Slighcarp, and they need to know that bullies, especially adult ones, can be defeated even if they wear your mother’s clothes and take over your home. If Joan’s stories are characterised by anything, it is by the searing passion for justice and for kindness that flames in a child’s heart. This passion was not wild, but channelled into her superb stories – erupting in their volcanoes, cannons, storms, music and of course wolves - and children recognise it at once as their own.

Joan Aiken emerged in the second flowering of children’s fiction, when The Wolves of Willoughby Chase was published in 1963. Her range, even for a children’s author, is quite astonishing. She can captivate an audience still on picture-books – my own daughter yearned so deeply for a Fog Hound with cloudy tail and coppery eyes that her stories were the first she read to herself – and she can hypnotise teenagers with sophisticated horror stories like those in The Windscreen Weepers, or brilliant pastiches of Jane Austen. Generations have grown up on the gentle quirkiness of the Arabel & Mortimer tales, about a small girl and her pet raven, which the BBC televised; parents, teacher and readers marvel over the vigour and ebullience of her imagination and prose. She had the energy of genius and her novels convey buoyancy and hope even when, as in Midwinter Nightingale, the body-count rises to nightmarish levels.


Although she was also the creator of memorable heroes such as Felix in Go Saddle the Sea, and Owen in The Whispering Mountain, it is the heroine of the twelve-volume Wolves of Willoughby Chase sequence who is unique and important. Dido Twite, the indestructable guttersnipe, is clearly descended from two other classic rebels of children’s literature, Mary in The Secret Garden and Jo in Little Women while, in turn, prefiguring Philip Pullman’s Lyra in His Dark Materials. Irreverent, rude and utterly loyal, Dido was the friend you’d want by your side in a pinch, and the first working-class heroine to appear in classic children’s fiction. To come across her bold disregard for convention was thrilling in the 1960s – and as I know from reading her adventures to modern children, exciting and inspiring, even today. Dido has an indomitable spirit of practical common sense that sees her through adventures in several continents, fighting flying aurocs, outwitting witches, confounding knavish Hanoverian conspirators against the House of Stuart and preventing St. Paul’s Cathedral from being blown up. The rude, dirty, neglected Cockney sparrow of Blackhearts in Battersea becomes a heroic girl-Odysseus, making the long journey home to an England disordered by political treachery which Simon, who once pitied her, must now rule as King. I urged Joan, just before she died, to make England a Republic in the last novel, which will be posthumously published: but failing that, Dido would make a marvellous Queen. We will have to wait and see. Even in death, Joan Aiken was a master story-teller, leaving us begging for just one more tale from the treasure chest of her imagination.

© Amanda Craig 2006