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Secret Gardens: The Golden Age of Children's Literature

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A golden age of childrens classics in one anthology. From Alice in wonderland to Winnie-The-Pooh; creating the secret gardens of childhood literatures.

235 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1985

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About the author

Humphrey Carpenter

98 books87 followers
Humphrey William Bouverie Carpenter was an English biographer, writer, and radio broadcaster. He is known especially for his biographies of J.R.R. Tolkien and other members of the literary society the Inklings. He won a Mythopoeic Award for his book The Inklings in 1982.

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5 stars
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4 stars
25 (33%)
3 stars
29 (39%)
2 stars
1 (1%)
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4 (5%)
Displaying 1 - 14 of 14 reviews
Profile Image for Skrivena stranica.
439 reviews86 followers
October 27, 2022
Prologue was an only good part of this book. Everything else... Author used positivistic approach to works of literary fiction and he always talked about authors' lives, who they slept with or wished to sleep with, if they had a need for a mother, father, or a grand-mother, and also, always, if they showed sadistic tendencies and if they were rejecting "conventional Christianity". These were the things that were more important to the author than anything else. So yeah, I learned more about possible pedophile and/or sadistic tendencies of the authors than I did anything about their book. Yeah, only literate thing was his idea that all of this books have some kind Arcadia in them, also inspired by the real life of an author (so once again positivism).
So... I don't care, one star.
Profile Image for Kristina.
446 reviews35 followers
March 27, 2020
This was a tough book to stay excited about. The author is very intelligent and knowledgeable but tended to allow his (seemingly) latent cynicism to overpower the narrative too frequently. This was a nice introduction to the authors of England’s renaissance of children’s literature and their most famous works. I couldn’t get past the overall gloom of the author, however, especially when he tried to portray the ultimate successes and epiphanies of the writers. Ultimately, this book would be best-served as a starting point for academic discussion of Victorian (or pre World War I) children’s lit.
Profile Image for Laura.
397 reviews20 followers
November 17, 2020
The author’s examination of these children’s books and their authors does not seem to suggest anything “Golden.” Lots of dirt, much innuendo or speculation about sex, and loads of anti-Christian explanation of what stories *really* meant on display here. But I suppose a subtitle of “The Murk, the Muck, the Icky of Children’s Literature from 1890 to 1930” might not have drawn many hopeful readers.
Profile Image for Becca.
437 reviews23 followers
June 2, 2020
I'm having a difficult time deciding how to rate this book. Some parts seemed accurate, some not so accurate, and others I knew nothing about before hand, and I couldn't decide whether they were ridiculously inaccurate or ridiculously accurate. All of it was fun to read: I enjoy literary criticism because it gives me the perspective of someone who hopefully knows more on the subject than I.

This includes mini biographies and short criticisms of the following Golden Age authors: Charles Kingsley, C. L. Dodgson, George MacDonald, Louisa Alcott, Richard Jefferies, Kenneth Grahame, E. Nesbit, Beatrix Potter, J. M. Barrie, and A. A. Milne. Many other authors are mentioned briefly, but these are the ones around which the book revolves.

Humphrey Carpenter views the first four authors on the above list as "destroyers." They paved the way for the Golden Age authors by destroying previous notions about literature (children's literature, in particular). Basically, they began the movement but did not fully realize it. The remaining six authors were "creators."

Most interesting to me was seeing how these authors are similar, and what the common thread is that connects their works. I do think some of Carpenter's opinions are a bit hasty and unjust --- including his opinions of George MacDonald. He doesn't comprehend MacDonald AT ALL, and that's all there is to say on the subject. I'm just afraid Carpenter also misunderstands some of the other authors, and I may never give them a fair chance because I read Carpenter's book before reading any of their books (those authors would be Charles Kingsley, Richard Jefferies, and J. M Barrie: I do intend to read The Water Babies and the Peter Pan books, but Richard Jefferies style would almost certainly NOT suit me, and I'll probably avoid his books.)

I was also interested in his suggestions that the Alice books are an outright mockery of God, that C. L. Dodgson had an unwholesome infatuation with beautiful young girls (as George MacDonald perhaps did too, according to him), and that MacDonald had a sadistic streak ( Of him, Carpenter says: "At times, indeed, he bears a resemblance to one of his wife's aunt's, of whom it was said that 'she could never lie comfortably in bed if she might not believe in hellfire and everlasting pains.'" That is irrefutable evidence that Carpenter knew nothing about MacDonald.). It was all extremely entertaining, and I scarcely believed a word of it.

Even though I don't agree with Humphrey Carpenter on many points (and the bit on Charles Kingsley and his wife Fannie was beyond what I'm comfortable reading about), this was entertaining and served as a reminder of some books I need to read!
157 reviews1 follower
June 1, 2017
I've had a second-hand copy of this book for ages but only just got around to reading it. It's well-written, as you'd expect from Humphrey Carpenter, and fascinating. Don't read it if knowing the peccadilloes of your favourite children's author is likely to put you off...
Profile Image for Helen.
1,279 reviews25 followers
April 13, 2015
Delightful if uneven. This was published 30 years ago, soon after (perhaps inspired by) his "Oxford companion to children's literature" (compiled with his wife Mati Prichard). The "golden age" is roughly 1860-1930, and the common motif linking the chapters, which are a mixture of biography and literary criticism, is the "other world" which occurs often in the classics of children's literature - the secret garden, the enchanted places, Never Never Land, etc. - all Arcadias of one sort or another. He touches on what went before and a little on what came after, but the main interest is the period mentioned (I did feel that some of the authors, important as they were, did not quite fit easily into the "Arcadia" theme - the ones whose world is more realistic, if idealised, such as Louisa Alcott). There are some interesting and in some cases startling insights into the lives of some of the authors (why were they so odd, especially the men?) His favourite of all seems to be "The wind in the willows". I am not sure I can follow him down every path (e.g. with some of the religious interpretations) but there is much insight here, as one would expect from this author.
Profile Image for Emily.
631 reviews83 followers
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February 1, 2013
-did not read whole book, just consulted introduction and one chapter for research.-
I must say I don't think it's worth reading this whole novel. The author takes a decided and presumptuous bias regarding J. M. Barrie, accusing him of manipulating everyone he knew, using the people he knew for the sole purpose of being able to write about them, and Carpenter even goes so far as to call Peter Pan a new "religion" Barrie invented.

Also, the facts are false in several occasions. He says that Peter can bring people back from the dead, using Wendy shot by an arrow as his example...Wendy didn't die from this; the basis of his argument is thus wholly false. This is one of several large and presumptuous errors in this one chapter alone. I was repeatedly disgusted with how horribly unfair Carpenter was to Barrie.

I have no desire to read any more in this book as one chapter alone of Carpenter's unprofessional tone and extreme bias make me doubt the value of this work as a whole. I was disgusted.
Profile Image for Juli Anna.
3,221 reviews
March 23, 2013
Insightful and engaging look at the writers and works from around the turn of the twentieth century that created children's literature as we know it. Part biography, part literary analysis, this book is a page-turner despite its being nonfiction. Highly enjoyable--books discussed include the Alice books, Little Women, The Wind in the Willows, Peter Pan, The Beatrix Potter tales, and more.
129 reviews10 followers
April 21, 2013
I also didn't read the whole book due to time constraints. I read the introduction, conclusion, and a couple chapters here and there. I do plan on returning to it for my honors thesis next fall. It was written really well and answered questions that I had been lingering on for quite some time. I really enjoyed it!
Profile Image for Elizabeth.
Author 1 book9 followers
September 3, 2016
A good treatment of English children's literature. As with any such treatment, each reader will be disappointed with the omission of some favorite work. Carpenter takes a Freudian angle at most of these works (and certainly the sex lives of some of the authors do seem to demand this), which can be tedious and also leaves out important elements in the structure of the stories.
Displaying 1 - 14 of 14 reviews

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