[From the vaults at stabenow.com, Jul 19, 2010]
They are finally.
Finally.
Bringing Betty Macdonald’s Nancy and Plum back into print. And with illustrations by Mary GrandPre, the illustrator of the Harry Potter books, no less.
So for six years Nancy and Plum endure the burned oatmeal and the stewed prunes at Mrs. Monday’s Boarding Home for Children, the eye-wateringly tight braids, the ragged, hand-me-down clothes, the endless chores, and the sworn enmity of that sneaky tattletail, the wooden-head-with-the-shaving-curls, Marybelle Whistle.
We meet them alone on Christmas Eve, when all of the other orphans are gone for the holidays and they lock themselves out of the Home and have to sleep in the barn, where the food and the company is altogether better. But they have to go back into the house sometime, where an increasingly abrasive series of confrontations with Mrs. Monday lead to an escape by night.
This is not a story of high adventure, it’s just two kids doing the best they can to make it through one more day, and Nancy and Plum are such good company. Nancy is the little lady who imagines a family for them when the going gets too tough in real life, and Plum is the tomboy whose ambition is to be a cowgirl so she can ride up to the library and lasso books off the shelves. They’re not whiners or quitters, these girls, they’re proud and they’re smart and they’re survivors. There are other wonderful characters, the horrible Mrs. Monday herself, made finally and barely human by her brother, Old Tom, their ghastly niece, Marybelle Whistle, Mr. Harris the bus driver, Miss Waverly the teacher, Miss Gronk the Sunday school teacher, Miss Appleby the librarian and, later, Mr. and Mrs. Campbell. There are many, many funny scenes, too, including but not limited to Marybelle and the goldfish bowl, the Sunday school picnic, and Plum’s play “Revenge.” Not forgetting the chicken air mail. And of course there is a happy ending, at least for Nancy and Plum. How could it be otherwise?
Nancy and Plum comes from a continuing story Betty Macdonald told her daughters, Anne and Joan, every night before they went to sleep. Which may explain why this book may be one of the best read-aloud books every written. It is dedicated to them.
Book Review Monday Chatter Anybody Can Do Anything Betty Macdonald Nancy and Plum Onions in the Stew The Egg and I The Plague and I