"This is Halloween Halloween Halloween
This is Halloween
Halloween Halloween Halloween Halloween"
Okay, wrong reference, sort of, because surely Ray Bradbury's Tom Skelton of "The Halloween Tree" influenced Tim Burton's Jack Skellington, star of "The Nightmare Before Christmas." What I know is both are brilliant. What I didn't know is Bradbury first wrote The Halloween Tree as a script for an animated screenplay that was never made, then he had it published as a book and ultimately wrote a different script for a feature-length animated version that was produced in 1993 which I only just learned exists. And there's candy left to eat while watching!
It's a charming book suitable for tweens or younger (only you know your children's abilities and maturity levels) and older kids, say, in their nineties. This is a classic, a must-read for everyone who loves Halloween, a great adventure and/or lovely writing. At times Bradbury's prose is beautifully poetic. That's hard to sustain for an entire book and he can't, but it makes the best passages that much more special and surprising and they're throughout the story so you don't have to wait long.
Eight boys set out on their annual trick or treating trek but missing their beloved leader, Pipkin. They go towards the town's very haunted-looking house which Pipkin scoped out and pass The Halloween Tree, lit with a bounty of carved pumpkin faces and somehow sings a song to greet them. From there it's on to the creepy old house with its gargoyles and parapets where once inside theymeet the very tall, bony man named Carapace Clavicle Moundshroud.
"'A fine name,'" said Mr. Moundshroud. "'Lads, look at yourselves. Why are you, boy, wearing that Skull face? And you, boy, carrying a scythe, and you, lad, made up like a Witch? And you, you, you!'" He thrust his bony finger at each mask. "'You don't know, do you?'"
He promises to help them find Pipkin and show them "'The Undiscovered Country. Out there. Look long, look deep, make a feast. The Past, boys the Past. Oh, it's dark, yes, and full of nightmare. Everything that Halloween ever was lies buried there...'"
And so begins their journey through the history of Halloween from the discovery of fire to ancient Egypt, Druids, Witch hysteria, the building of Notre Dame (where we're treated to especially lovely language when the gargoyles are added) and more until, after joining a Day of the Dead feast, they're deposited back home. On every journey through time Pipkin proves elusive, can be heard or seen or in between, adding mystery to the history. In the end all is solved and sorted, none of them will ever be the same and Halloween will be even more special.
I've read this many times but it's been too long. The original illustrations are my sentimental favorite but Gus Grimley's here add a different take and they're fine folk art, some black and white and some in color. There is prose and proems and songs and chants and I'm never going to go so many years without reading it again because it tickles the memories, seduces the senses and while reminding us of its origins brings every past Halloween into the present with all its sweetness and joy. This is Halloween!
It's a day you can be anything you want and stuff yourself with candy till you're sick. Then on to flirty costumes and fun parties and maybe TP'ing the nasty neighbors' trees. One day some will have the fun of costuming and taking their own littlies trick or treating. And later on, when the sun is going down, if you're lucky you'll get to sit on the porch surrounded by carved pumpkins and delight in the kids coming up the steps to collect their candy corn and chocolates. This is Halloween!