RANDOM JOTTINGS


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I remember Miss Collins, who was in charge of the junior library when I was a little girl, used to get quite confused and puzzled at my choice of reading.   She actively tried to discourage me from borrowing Jane Eyre when I was about ten, telling me I would not undertand it. Well of course I didn't but I did enjoy the first part about Jane's childhood and her wicked Aunt Reed and all the trials and tribulations she underwent. Later on when I was older I returned to it and this time understood more.

She was also rather alarmed when I borrowed and read Old St Pauls and The Tower of London – two novels by W Harrison Ainsworth and, looking back, I am not surprised. Full of horrid gory details about the CrBlack Death and other ghastly things and when I tried to re-read them years later found them turgid beyond belief. The Waterbabies by Charles Kingsley, a rather odd book to say the least, made me avoid chimneys for a while and At the Back of the North Wind by George Macdonald made me check that my bedroom window, in the fourth floor flat we then lived in, was firmly closed at night.  The Cuckoo Clock by Mrs Molesworth was another Victorian delight as was Black Beauty though I wept buckets when poor Ginger died. Seems I was wedded to this era of writing even then.

And now I come to The Coral Island which puzzled Miss Collins even more. 'But it's a boy's book!" she cried. No matter I loved every single page of it.   How exciting I thought to be stranded on a coral island, to shelter under the coconut trees, to live off bread fruit and fish and to dive into the lagoon every morning and see the glories of the underwater world.

I have just re-read a new edition of this title issued by Hesperus Press and my thanks to them for being so kind in sending me a copy. It must be fifty years since I last read it but I loved it all over again and the first part describing the beauty of the island was still as magical as I remember:

"I shall never forget my surprise and delight on first beholding the bottom of the sea….we found ourselves in what appeared to be an enchanted garden….the branching coral was a lovely pale pink colour…seaweed of the most graceful forms while innumerable fishes, blue, red, yellow, green and striped, sported in and out among the flowerbeds of this submarine garden"

The castaways are Jack, a manly, brave boy of the Play up Play the game school of heroes, the narrator Ralph more serious and of a religious turn of mind and Peterkin the jester of the three and though totally different, form a close unit throughout all their adventures.

The first half is pure Boy's Own stuff as they learn to climb trees, build a shelter, then a boat in which to explore, hunting wild boar and piglets and cooking them on their fire and swim in the clear waters every morning and generally seem to have such a wonderful time that the reader wishes they could be castaway with them. I know I did when I first read it.

Second half is a bit more bloody when a pirate ship comes ashore and kidnaps Ralph and he becomes involved in the warfare between them and the natives who live on the other islands. Cannibalism and torture are rife and Ballantyne certainly does not hesitate to give the gruesome details of the battles.

The Coral Island is very much a 19th century novel. Boys like Jack, Peterkin and Ralph just don't exist any more and would not last five minutes in such a situation especially if they found they had lost their iphone or there was no internet. However, as is pointed out in a very good introduction by John Boyne, this story had a direct influence on William Golding's Lord of the Flies in which we had a group of boys in a similar situation but with a totally different result.  I discovered that the two protagonists in this title are Ralph and Jack and the two books could not provide a more perfect illustration of how the world has changed and how hedged about young people are today.

Terrific read and if you love Victorian literature as I do, then this is for you. Hesperus Press reissued one of my all time favourite L M Montgomery titles, The Blue Castle, last year and I understand will also be publishing A Tangled Web in April so keep an eye out for that one too.

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21 responses to “The Coral Island by R M Ballantyne”

  1. LizF Avatar

    That’s very kind Elaine. Thank you and will do!

  2. Elaine Avatar

    Well we are talking some time ago! Even if your copy of The Blue Castle has a ghastly cover, ignore it, there are treasures within!!

  3. Karen K. Avatar

    Great story about your childhood librarian, though the idea of someone telling you “it’s a boy’s book” sets my teeth on edge!! I actually have “The Water Babies” and “At the Back of the North Wind” on my to-read shelves. I’m also hanging my head in shame because I’ve never actually read “Black Beauty.”
    The Coral Island sounds interesting and as soon as you started describing it I made the connection to “Lord of the Flies.” It sounds reading for at least the first half anyway. And I must look for the Hesperus copy of “The Blue Castle.” My unread copy is the mass-market paperback with a silly Harlequin-romance type cover, which always puts me off reading it.

  4. Elaine Avatar

    I read Catriona after Kidnapped, which I loved, but could not get on with Catriona at all. I have never managed to get through Treasure Island either.
    I loved those kind of young versions. I had David Copperfield at junior school and it ended when he went to live with Aunt Betsy. I did not realise there was more until a few years later and I then read the whole book. It is still my favourite Dickens (and Bleak House). I also had a copy of Tales from Shakespeare by Lamb which set me off on a Shakespeare binge.I used to sit and read the plays all the way through, not understanding half of it of course but these sort of explortions as a child do get you thinking

  5. Elaine Avatar

    Oh do give it a go Myrtle and let me know what you think

  6. Elaine Avatar

    It was pure nostalgia reading this again and I loved it. OK second half a tad dubious in places but you cannot view a book written in a different time with mordern eyes. I remember reading or trying to read the Three Musketeers but gave up on it. And yes, I do remember the reading in class and the teacher always used to let me read a bit longer than the others. We had some girls whose reading aloud was sheet torture, they were so bad and I hated it. Gosh I must have been a pain…

  7. Sandy G Avatar
    Sandy G

    I used to be chided for reading ‘boys’ books, too – just as well times have changed!
    I didn’t read Coral Island, but did manage to work my way through Catriona, not understanding most of it.
    My favourite book for years was a young person’s version of the Arthurian legends, which led me onto the various versions as I got older. I also enjoyed, when I was about 11, The Moonstone which made a lot more sense when I re-read it as an adult!

  8. Myrtle Avatar
    Myrtle

    ‘Coral Island?’ I thought, and went to look on my shelves – and there it was – an Octopus edition from 1980. Never read though I’m afraid, unlike Jane Eyre, which I read for my Guide reading lover badge at age 10.
    You’ve made Coral Island sound unmissable, so I may have to dust it down and give it a whirl!

  9. Nicola Slade Avatar

    Ever since I read The Coral Island I’ve always fancied trying breadfruit but still haven’t got round to it, must see if I can fish the book out from wherever it’s lurking. As a fan of Old Girls’ books, this was the only one for boys that I read so it stands out.
    I had trouble with librarians too: I borrowed a book one Saturday morning, when the library opened, read it all day and took it back just before closing time, only to be told I couldn’t possibly have read it. Oh yes I could… My uncle found me reading the Three Musketeers when I was about 8, can’t imagine I understood much of it though and never read it since! We read the first part of Jane Eyre in class – remember those lessons where you stood up in turn and read a passage? I used to be miffed when I had to stop and sit down.

  10. Elaine Avatar

    Oh dear another Ginger sufferer!!! I, too, loved factual books and used to take shedloads home from the non fiction section. As I have explained above in another comment, Miss Collins had a soft spot for me and I was allowed the free run of the library. There was a series of books about the great composers as well and I read them all. And yes I remember the Kon Tiki expedition as well

  11. Elaine Avatar

    I re-read Black Beauty recently and cried all over again. Death of Beth in Little Women has the same effect, ditto Matthew dying in Anne of Green Gables. Treasure Island I have never been able to get on with, preferred Kidnapped.
    Are you in the UK Liz? if so email me offblog and I will send you my copy. I already have an older edition on my shelves so will be happy to pass this onto you

  12. Elaine Avatar

    She was a real sweetie. I remember one day she came back to the counter having been to the loo and she had her skirt caught up in her knickers which were knee length pink silk! The children in the library started sniggering and I felt so sorry for her I whispered in her ear and told her. She was very embarrassed but after that more or less allowed me the free run of all the books and sneaked new ones to me as well!!

  13. Elaine Avatar

    Yes the second half is a bit gory but the first half is pure enchatment and I loved it all over again

  14. Elaine Avatar

    In the end Miss Collins gave up and, bless her, allowed me to take two books out on every ticket as I got through so many so quickly. I have fond memories of that library which was at the bottom of a tower block of council houses. When I went back some years later it was closed and had been vandalised…

  15. Elaine Avatar

    I dont know about the Milne play but as a tall girl at school I used to end up in roles like that!

  16. Margaret Powling Avatar
    Margaret Powling

    I confess to not reading much fiction as a child, only when I started on Enid Blyton and the Famous Five did I begin to appreciate ‘stories’. I loved encyclopedias and any factual book … I had an encyclopedia which showed the planets and the parts of the orchestra and how electricity was discovered. Now I write, it’s still on factual matters, not fiction! But I loved my comics and, living in a newsagent’s shop, I read all the magazines of the day, too: Picture Post, John Bull, Illustrated London News, Everywoman, Woman’s Journal, and all the lovely house ‘style’ magazines. There was also a small library in my parents’ shop, so I had access to romantic novels, thrillers, westerns (not that I read those), and also my parents belonged to a book club so that I had access to such titles as The Kon Tiki Expedition, which I loved. I can’t read Black Beauty because of Ginger!

  17. Liz F Avatar
    Liz F

    If anyone can read Black Beauty and not cry at Ginger’s death then they definitely possess the sensibilities of a block of stone! Fifty years on I start welling up when I am pages away!
    I remember reading Jane Eyre when I was around ten too and was off school with tonsilitus although in my case it was the physical book which fascinated me first as it turned out to be a second edition which had belonged to my great grandmother. I remember being lost in the first bit of the story and then the story losing me although I did persist to the end and it is still one of my favourite books. I rather liked The Water Babies too – yes it is rather strange and I do wonder what Charles Kingsley might have been ‘on’ when he wrote it but it provided me with my role model for life, Mrs Do-As-You-Would-Be-Done-By!
    Never read Coral Island (or Treasure Island come to think of it) but that cover is very enticing however since money is in short supply I might wait until ‘A Tangled Web’ comes out as I think that it is much more likely to be my cup of tea(green tea with apple and pear – trying to be healthy!)

  18. Robin Avatar
    Robin

    I love that you can remember your childhood librarian’s name. I only remember the first name of the sweet little lady on the other side of the counter, it was Virginia. I just read ‘A Tangled Web” by L.M. Montgomery last year. I started to keep track of how many characters were in that book and lost track about 70. One of my favorites too.

  19. GeraniumCat Avatar

    I liked this too as a child, but I’m rather put off now by the second half. I really like the covers Hesperus are using for their children’s classics – I might try re-reading Coral Island just for the pleasure of how it looks.

  20. Margaret Stedman Avatar
    Margaret Stedman

    The first librarian who befriended me (or was that the other way around?)unsuccessfully tried to select books for me. Eventually she gave me the best advice ever – read anything you like but have variety – which I have endeavoured to follow in the fifty years since!

  21. Margaret Powling Avatar
    Margaret Powling

    A great review, as always, Elaine. I never read this although I knew of it. Isn’t there a play by A A Milne about an island? I recall when I was at my small private primary school we gave excerpts from such a play – there was a cassowary in it, and the tallest girl was cast as the cassowary!

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