Green Knowe and Tolly and Ping and Susan and Jacob are Great New Friends
Some months back I was making the rounds of a bunch of Little Free Libraries I frequent, and I find something I had never heard of before, a children’s book called A Stranger At Green Knowe.
Turns out this is part of famous series of British kids books, The Green Knowe, and have been adapted several times, and the writer is a celebrity, the manor home featured is a tourist spot, and……
I had never heard of it.
So being an intrepid soul, I got all six books from my local public library and plunged into the world of Green Knowe and Tolly and Susan and Jacob and Ping and Ida and of course, the matriarch of this all, Mrs Oldknow. All written by the late L.M. Boston, who lived in the house the stories were based on.
With book one from 1954, The Children Of Green Knowe, we have young Tolly who is sent to stay for the holidays with his great grandmother Mrs Oldknow, who lives in the middle of nowhere in the huge manor house called Green Knowe. It is a ramblely, creaky place, and untold of centuries old, with Mrs Oldknow being the latest in an unbroken line of succession, and the keeper of the truths that she loves to tell to the attentive Tolly. And these stories include the power to communicate with the ghosts who inhabit the manor. Tolly interacts with several of these ancestor ghosts, who appear as children, and even becomes friends with Linnet and Alexander, who know he is from the future. He also gets a dog, Orlando, who can also play with these echoes. This is our introduction to the magic of this place, and so many of the things it can do, and it is interesting as well. You can tell other fantasy authors have read these books.
Months later, Tolly excitedly returns to Green Knowe for Easter and finds out from Mrs Oldknow that Green Knowe has financial difficulties. This, combined with more stories from hundreds of years past, leads Tolly to meet more ghosts from a different era, Susan and Jacob, and a mystery that might save the day. What makes book two, The Chimneys Of Green Knowe, so interesting is the liberal politics of the time on display. Jacob is a slave boy that Susan’s father, who finds slavery abhorrent, gives as a companion to his young blind daughter. They become like brother and sister, which really pisses off Susan’s actual brother. It is obvious Boston is trying to make a very progressive statement for 1958, when Chimneys came out, which is laudable but still feels somewhat stilted and slightly backwards. But she is trying, which is commendable.
And this trying leads to book three, the very different The River At Green Knowe, where the cast changes entirely with no explanation. Two old scientist woman have rented out Green Knowe and they are annoying as hell, but they take in several refugee children, Ping and Ida and Oskar, so they are not totally yucky. The kids spend their time going around the river on the property and meet all sorts of wild and colourful characters, maybe too much so for this series. I wonder if this was some sort Gulliver’s Travels idea, where each person represents some political idea Boston was parodying or outright mocking. And having refugee children making the point by humanizing the other side is a great idea, and the people of the time of 1959 probably understood it better since they knew the issues.
By 1961 and book four, Boston seems to have found a good common ground for her politics and a children’s story with A Stranger At Green Knowe. This is my favourite of the series, and interestingly enough, the only one with no magic in it. A gorilla is kidnapped from its tribe in Africa and out into a zoo, where he meets Ping, who was introduced in the previous book. Ping then sets out to Green Knowe to be with Mrs Oldknow, who is back with some explanation. At the same time, the gorilla Hanno escapes the zoo and winds up in, well Green Knowe of course, where Ping finds him and takes care of his new friend. This one is deeper with strong themes of friendship and loneliness and Mrs Oldknow is just perfect at the end with everything about her.
A crossover event happened in book five in 1964 with the darker An Enemy At Green Knowe, where Mrs Oldknow hosts both Tolly AND Ping! And the two boys get along like the best of buddies, loving adventure, exchanging tales, and of course protecting Mrs Oldknow. This is good because a mysterious woman moves in nearby Green Knowe and is very pushy trying to find something at the manor. Her persistence goes into crazy territory with hypnotism, ancient magic, and plagues of animals. But Tolly and Ping defend Mrs Oldknow and Green Knowe from all these attacks, until they finally defeat the enemy. This one had me laughing because of its dark humour and inventiveness, and many cool bits, which make this one just zip along.
The sixth and final book is The Stones Of Green Knowe, released in 1976, and is a tale largely set even further in the past then any of the other Green Knowe series. Roger is a young lad whose family is nobility, and they are building the home to be known as Green Knowe. While exploring the area, he comes across ancient thrones that might have belonged to elves or leprechauns, and without realizing it, he travels forward in time multiple times and meets the same ghosts, now just people, in their time periods, and becomes fast friends. He also learns to really appreciate the home his parents are building and how it last through the ages. Probably knowing this would be the last book, Boston gives us an Avengers Endgame style scene towards the end where Roger and Tolley and Susan and Jacob and so many more get together, but just to hang out, not fight a great battle. The themes of family and history and preserving nature and honoring the past is all through Stones, and it feels like a very fitting way to cap off the series. This is not surprising since L.M. Boston was 84 when this book came out, and she wanted one last chance to preach her thoughts on family and history and the magic of it all.
This magic should be a shoo-in for adaptations, and Green Knowe has been made into a radio drama and television miniseries and a movie. I have not consumed the radio show or miniseries, but the film, called From Time To Time, I have seen. It tells the story from Chimney, with Susan and Jacob, but it is not very good, with too many changes.
Boston might not have minded the changes, since she herself made so many to her own series along the way, with casts coming and going and themes always changing and evolving. Just like she did herself. L.M. Boston was born Lucy Marie Boston, who lived from 1892 to 1990, and in 1935 she moved into a manor home which she then fixed up. Years later at age 62, and inspired by the living history of her home, she writes the first Green Knowe story, making a total of six from 1954 to 1976. It is still their, as a testament to her stories, and tours are available.
It is fascinating to dive into and experience the power of such a legendary series, one that I had never heard of.
It is like seeing hidden magic.
Scoopriches