Philip Pullman is a powerful storyteller. He leaves subtle fingerprints of magic on everything he touches. A little hint of shimmer and glitter spills in between the words that he forms and the stories that he writes. I will always consider him and his writing as a childhood-treasure.
I was delighted to find out, that these four tales in fact are fairy-tales. Simple traditional tales, with a hint of the unexpected and the untraditional elements that are so essential to Pullman's writing.
"The Firework-Maker's Daughter" is the first tale in the collection, and it also happens to be my favorite. It is constructed as a very typical fairy tale and clearly aimed towards the slightly younger audience. It is filled with growing wonder, and a timeless morale of standing up for what you believe in, being yourself and trusting your instincts. Endearing and sweetly old-fashioned, it was a delight to read.
The next tale, "I Was a Rat!", puzzled me. While I liked the premise of the story, I perhaps found it a bit too long in certain places. However this tale truly shows how brilliant a storyteller Pullman is. "I Was a Rat!" is a fairy-tale about another fairy-tale, an intricate glimpse of a story that has never been told before. I didn't fully realize this until I reached the end of the story and everything came so gracefully together. What a pleasant surprise.
"Clockword" was something else entirely. A disturbing fairy-tale hiding within a beautiful framework, as a story-within-a-story. It almost felt gothic - and I adored it, even though it sent shivers down my spine. Pullman has clearly been inspired by Pinocchio, but he has taken the well-known tale and turned it into something entirely different and entirely his own.
I didn't particularly like "The Scarecrow and His Servant". It felt too long, too repetitive and a bit too silly at times. With an almost Quixotic storyline, this is a tale of a living Scarecrow and his actual human servant. The Scarecrow is not too clever, and the servant is a frightful, yet sensible, young thing. Together they go on many adventures and solve a deceiving mystery in their small-town village.
While I read this last story, I seemed to keep losing my focus and my concentration. It is not that it is a badly written story - it is just one I have heard too many times before.
Overall, I really enjoyed this book. It reminded me of Pullman's inarguable talent, his beautiful way with word and his careful attention to detail. I adore his way of giving old tales a new twist, and softly weaving hidden references of well-known childhood stories into every aspect of his writing.
I'm simply just saddened by the fact, that the two longest tales were the ones I liked the least; I desperately wanted to love every word of every page. But as it happens, I still got to spent some time in the imaginative fairy-tale world of one of my favorite writers of all-time. And that in itself is delightful enough.