Tuesday, June 25, 2013

The Children Who Lived in a Barn by Eleanor Graham


I've been hard at work on my Back to the Classics Challenge!  Recently I needed a fun, light read after some fairly heavy books.  This was a children's classic, a Persephone, and a book on my TBR shelf.  Plus it was nice and short, with some cute illustrations.

Though it's a British children's classic, I'd never heard of The Children Who Lived in a Barn until I started collecting Persephone books.  It's very much in the same vein as the American series The Boxcar Children, one of my childhood favorites. 

Anyway, here's the setup:  sometime in the 1930s, the Dunnet family of seven are living in rural England, though they've just moved into a small village and hardly know anyone.  The parents get a telegram that the grandmother, who's off somewhere in Switzerland, has taken ill.  Without much thought, the parents drop everything and literally fly away, leaving the kids to manage by themselves.  Then the parents mysteriously disappear, possibly in a plane crash over the Alps, and Susan, 13, and Robert, 11, must take charge of themselves and their younger siblings, twin brothers who are 9 and a little 7-year-old sister.  Their unscrupulous landlord evicts them, but a kind farmer offers to let them stay in the barn in exchange for helping out.

At first it seems like a childhood dream to be on their own, but it quickly becomes obvious how hard it is to keep a household running, especially with a limited budget.  Susan and Robert try to make do with odd jobs and a small amount of money allocated by the bank, but things are tight, especially after school starts.  Some local busybodies have decided they'll keep an eye on the children and are none too sympathetic, mostly more judgmental than helpful.  It's the local village folk who are kinder, especially when they see how hard the older children are trying.

The beautiful endpapers from the Persephone edition

The children even rig up something called a "hay box" to keep their food warm during the day, kind of a makeshift slow-cooker.  Here's an illustration of something similar:

The hay-box probably looked something like this.
Eventually, the situation becomes dire but all turns right in the end, as this is a children's book.  I really enjoyed this -- some of my favorite childhood books are those in which the adults are out of the picture and the children are forced to take charge, like the Narnia books and the Boxcar children.

I thought the only weak point is the explanation of what happened to the parents, which seemed extremely unlikely and tacked-on.  Their characters aren't terribly well-developed and they were more immature than Susan and Robert!  However, it was a delight to read and I really enjoyed it.  I have two other classic children's books published by Persephone, The Runaway by Anna Elizabeth Hart and The Young Pretenders by Edith Henrietta Fowler.  I haven't read either of them yet but I hope I'll like them as much as this one.  Has anyone else read this book?  What about other children's classics -- which are your favorites?

14 comments:

  1. I've never heard of this one, but it sounds wonderful! The Boxcar Children is one of my favorites.

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    1. It was really charming. I loved the Boxcar Children and my girls do too. I love all the cooking parts. The best children's books have good food in them.

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  2. As soon as I saw the title, I thought of the Boxcar Children too! This does sound fun. I had no idea Persephone did children's books too.

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    1. They have a few children's classics, this is the first one I've read. They do have an interesting mix of books, not just domestic fiction. I've read about half of the Persephones and they include nonfiction, mysteries, thrillers, and even a dystopian book.

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  3. I hadn't heard of this one! I reading some of The Boxcar Children series in second grade and remember liking it but don't remember the details. I love Persephone books, I currently have one Dorothy Whipple's Someone at a Distance which I really enjoyed.

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    1. Dorothy Whipple is wonderful -- I really loved Someone at a Distance. I have all her books published by Persephone and I'm slowly reading all of them. I don't want to read them all at once so I'm stretching them out. I think I have three left.

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  4. I love books like this, where you know it will end alright, eventually. There's an Enid Blyton too - I think, The Secret Island - where a group of children run away to fend for themselves when their parents disappear while off exploring.

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    1. I've never read Enid Blyton!! I don't think it was that popular here in the States. I've heard she's one of the bestselling authors of all time, so I think I need to look for them.

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  5. I'm so glad you reviewed this book. It's been on my radar for quite a while and you've made me want to read it now.

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    1. It was really delightful. I love children's classics and I still have some E. Nesbit and some Victorian classics I've never read. Summer's probably a good time for that. I have a nice copy of The Railway Children, I should try it soon.

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  6. This definitely sounds like the kind of book I would have loved as a kid. I'm sorry I never encountered it. I'll put this on my list to consider for a Classic Children's challenge.

    Really enjoyed your review and the illustrations--that food warmer sounds intriguing.

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  7. I’m so glad I found this page, after hunting for this book for years. I read it when I was a kid, 60 years ago, and have often looked for it fir my own children and, now, my grandchildren. I couldn’t remember what it was called but did recall the hay box, the drawing on sugar sacks to earn some money, and the family slogan ‘Dunnets dunnit!’ Now to track down a copy! Cheers!

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  8. This was one of my favourite books as a child. It was a birthday present & I first read it 67 years ago. It was one of those books that I kept going back to. Would love to read it again.

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  9. This was a favorite as a child and still is . And is family favourt. One of the best books I have read.

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