Anna Rutgers van der Loeff (1910–1990) was a Dutch writer of children's novels.
Some of her works have been translated into other languages, including English.
Possibly her most popular novel was the 1963 Children on the Oregon Trail (De Kinderkaravaan), an account of a family of children traveling with a pioneer caravan to Oregon in the mid-19th century, loosely based on the real incident of the Sager orphans.
I read this book at school in the early 70s and since I've begun to study children's literature I've had this vague notion of revisiting the books of my childhood - especially the school set books that, frankly, I didn't enjoy much at the time. It will be interesting to see how these books stack up against contemporary children's fiction.
I really like stories of plucky isolated children overcome natural disasters, but this one fell short....it was mostly the characters being shunted from one avalanche to another, with little chance for them to actually do anything interesting (except for a few isolated instances).
I am not sure what I was expecting of this book. I have fond memories of Children on the Oregon Trail, An Rutger van der Loeff's other famous book - a children's adventure story where kids save themselves, and I suppose on the face of it this is somewhat similar. The plot involves a group of war orphans on a skiing holiday in the Swiss Alps who become caught up in an avalanche. We follow them as they engage with locals, try to evade hazards, navigate the aftermath of a disaster, and help with the rescue efforts.
The sections where the children are in immediate danger are the most powerful and pacey, but they are unfortunately interspersed with a couple of sections of people kind of milling around aimlessly in the aftermath of the disaster dealing with their own personal issues. It's not until a fresh character is introduced that the pace picks up a bit.
I felt that it didn't quite work either as a children's book, or for adults. For children, the introspective stuff was somewhat overworked at the cost of the action. Are kids really going to engage with Werner's career goals or Aunt Augusta's loneliness, or would they rather have more life or death situations? On the other hand, read as an adult, I enjoyed the final chapter where you see some real character development of the main players - but there was too little too late.
I could absolutely envisage this being read in a classroom in installments, where the suspense would be built day by day, but I got strangely disengaged in the middle of the book. Perhaps I'm just too old for it.
Gouden griffel 1954. (destijds "kinderboek van het jaar"). Goed geschreven boek. In het taalgebruik hier en daar wat gedateerd. Spannend verhaal over de mensen in een dorpje die te maken krijgen met lawines en de gevolgen daarvan. Onder hen bevindt zich een groep oorlogswezen. Kan het boek nu nog steeds voorgelezen worden? Ik zeg ja, met een kleine "maar". Er is wel wat achtergrond nodig, even uitleggen dat dit zich in het verleden afspeelt, geen computers etc. en dat het Pestalozzi dorp daadwerkelijk bestaat en dat de reacties van de jongens in het boek soms 'vreemd' aandoen, maar dat het oorlogswezen zijn die (zoals dat heet) het een ander meegemaakt hebben (nog steeds actueel). Jonge mensen die ooit op wintersport geweest zijn, zullen zich nog meer kunnen inleven in wat een lawine is en wat het kan doen (natuurkrachten).
Ik begon met vrij hoge verwachtingen aan het voorlezen van dit boek. De opzet is avontuurlijk en belooft veel, en van der Loeffs 'de Kinderkaravaan' had ik eerder met veel plezier met mijn kinderen gelezen. Toch vonden we 'Lawines razen' wat tegenvallen. Er zitten zeker spannende stukken in, maar deze worden (te vaak) afgewisseld door soms lange, lege conversaties en saaie delen. De kwaliteit is niet consistent hoog - ik en mijn kind vonden het boek duidelijk minder leuk dan 'de Kinderkaravaan'. Ik weet niet zeker of ik dit boek in de toekomst ook aan mijn jongere kind wil voorlezen.
This book was really good, but I'm docking it half-a-star because. . . More on this in a bit.
This is the story of Werner Altschwank, who lives with his parents in Urteli, Switzerland. It's winter and the village is about to be evacuated because of avalanche danger when an avalanche happens and buries several families, including Werner's.
Werner
And that brings me to the end, which left me feeling dissatisfied. Werner
I didn't like this ending because. . .I guess we're supposed to imagine Werner getting the job and everyone living happily after? I would rather have seen Werner get the job and be congratulated by all of the boys.
The reason why I'm docking this story a half-star is because there was an awful lot of yelling going on. In the beginning, we were told, on page 13, that. . . "Even a shout can suddenly loosen the treacherously piled mass of snow..." And this was after the son of someone "shouted," and then later when the boys were hiking and digging and whatnot, in villages under threat from avalanches, they shouted, too! And nothing happened!
Every time Paolo or Klaus or one of the other boys raised their voices, I expected an avalanche to come along and bury them. But time after time, nothing happened. I found this very disappointing after the earlier warning from page 13. :-(
This is a book I wanted to read for years. It was awarded in 1955 and I remember it was in the school library, but I never was able to borrow it, because it was always lent. It's a book for older children, but not YA. For years I remembered the title, but as I grew older I focused on books. Thanks to internet I could buy a second hand copy with exactly the same dust jacket I remembered.
It is a story with a happy end which was normal during the period when it was written and there also a moralistic background story: never give up hope, and friends should always help each other, but it was a nice read. I enjoyed it.
Read this in 1968, long before I saw On Her Majesty's Secret Service (which contains an avalanche). I don't remember much, but I remember I kept checking it out of the library, so I must have wanted to finish it. I'm a slow reader. Sorry.
I read this back in 1968 or 1969 when I was a 5th grader. I remember feeling great suspense knowing that the big avalanche was coming up, somewhere on one of the next pages.