Thursday, June 23, 2016

On the Coffee Table: Diana Wynne Jones

Title: Charmed Life
Author: Diana Wynne Jones
via Goodreads
Charmed Life is the first book of The Chronicles of Chrestomanci series, at least according to the author's own suggested reading order.  Diana Wynne Jones has long been my daughter's favorite author and when I asked her for her favorite book, Charmed Life is the one she handed to me.

Eric and Gwendolyn Chant are orphaned when their parents drown in a boating accident.  Gwendolyn seems to have inherited all of her parents' magical powers while Eric (referred to as Cat by his sister) appears to have none.  Eventually, they come under the care and tutelage of Christopher Chant, better known in the wizarding world as Chrestomanci.

Being a Miyazaki fan, I am more familiar with Jones's Howl's Moving Castle series.  Charmed Life was actually written first, though anyone who knows the Howl books will notice common narrative elements.  For starters, Howl and Chrestomanci are similar characters: tall men in flashy clothing, powerful wizards, not especially verbal, intimidating to everyone around them.  Travels between parallel worlds are important to both stories and in both cases, one of the worlds is our own.

Now that I've read it, I'm a little surprised at my daughter's fondness for it.  Not that it's not good.  It is good.  But for a long time, I've worked under the assumption that she preferred stories with female protagonists - not the case here.  In fact, Gwendowlyn turns out to be highly objectionable indeed.  My daughter does love stories about magic, though, and there's plenty of it here.  It's a fun read.  I'm definitely interested in reading more of the series.


9 comments:

  1. Howl's has been suggested to me by many a middle schooler, but I haven't gotten to it yet.

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    1. I think it's better than this one, but both are good.

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  2. Interesting. I wonder if it would intrigue my 2nd grader.
    I'm honestly terrified of reading Howl's Moving Castle and not loving it--because I might could like the movie better.

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    1. The two stories are subtly different from each other. The story of Miyazaki's adaptation is actually very sweet. He was fully conscious of changing the story and invited Jones to a screening to get her blessing. She gave it.

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  4. I have seen Howl's Moving Castle and read the book. They are both the same but yet so different. I loved them both but maybe I liked the book better ? tough call.

    cheers, parsnip and thehamish

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  5. It sounds like a book that I could recommend to some youngsters I know who like myth and magic.

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    1. Definitely. She's a great author to know if magic's your thing.

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