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The Borrowers #4

The Borrowers Aloft

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Pod, Homily, and Arrietty Clock -- the family of tiny Borrowers -- think they have at last found an ideal home. They've moved into a house in a miniature village built as a hobby by a retired railroad man. The village is the perfect size for the Borrowers, and after the hardships they've faced, the Clocks gratefully settle into the luxury of having a "proper" house. The easy life makes them careless.

Or, rather, it makes Arrietty careless. She befriends a "human bean," and the next thing Arrietty knows, she and her family have been kidnapped. Their captors are a greedy married couple, called the Platters, who have big plans for the little people. They have created their own miniature village in a glass case and plan to imprison the Borrowers within -- like animals in a zoo -- for the rest of their lives.

193 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1961

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About the author

Mary Norton

74 books832 followers
Mary Norton (née Pearson) was an English children's author. She was the daughter of a physician, and was raised in a Georgian house at the end of the High Street in Leighton Buzzard. The house now consists of part of Leighton Middle School, known within the school as The Old House, and was reportedly the setting of her novel The Borrowers. She married Robert C. Norton in 1927 and had four children, 2 boys and 2 girls. Her second husband was Lionel Boncey, who she married in 1970. She began working for the War Office in 1940 before the family moved temporarily to the United States.

She began writing while working for the British Purchasing Commission in New York during the Second World War. Her first book was The Magic Bed Knob; or, How to Become a Witch in Ten Easy Lessons published in 1943, which, together with the sequel Bonfires and Broomsticks, became the basis for the Disney film Bedknobs and Broomsticks.

Mary Norton died of a stroke in Devon, England in 1992.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 133 reviews
Profile Image for Heidi (can’t retire soon enough).
1,379 reviews273 followers
October 23, 2022
Read back in the old ages, I mean the 1970s. Loved the series but this was my favorite!!

I hope to revisit them again with (future-hopefully) grandchildren!
Profile Image for ☾❀Apple✩ Blossom⋆。˚.
969 reviews489 followers
June 25, 2019
Pod, Homily, and Arrietty finally reached the ideal village they risked their lives to get to. This turns out to be a miniature village built as a hobby by a retired railroad man. Arietty, made brave by the newly acquired stability, befriends a human bean and the family ends up being kidnapped. They will have to do the unthinkable to escape... again!



I enjoyed this series very much. I started reading it because I am a big fan of the anime, and I continued because I liked the books. Of course, you can tell they are "classics", and certainly they contain some references no child's book today would make (like to black slaves), but overall they were a cozy, wholesome read. I liked this last one all right, especially the first part.

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Profile Image for Chantal.
1,241 reviews181 followers
July 28, 2021
Again a great addition in this book series. I loved reading this book and imagine all what was going on. It makes me almost said to see that there is only 1 book left. There could have been more by this writer.
Profile Image for Trzcionka.
778 reviews98 followers
May 27, 2024
Naciągane dwie gwiazdki. W moim odczuciu autorka nie miała pomysłu na tyle części tej serii. Z czasem książki tracą urok i coraz mniej się w nich dzieje. Ta część była całkiem niespójna, oderwana od poprzedniej i brzmiała jak wymęczone w bólach zakończenie serii (a przecież jest jeszcze kolejny tom...).
Pierwsza połowa zapowiadała się całkiem nieźle i sugerowała całkiem fajną przygodę. Choć na początku było dużo za dużo historii bez udziału Pożyczalskich to było to dużo lepsze niż druga połowa. Wówczas nie dzieje się już praktycznie nic prócz budowania balonu okraszonego KILOMETROWYMI i NUDNYMI opisami najprostszych czynności i otoczenia. Nawet sam "odlot" - który powinien być emocjonującym wydarzeniem - przemknął jakby niezauważony. Cała historia w tej części zmierza w sumie donikąd, jest mało spójna - sama w sobie i z resztą serii - i nie jest wiarygodna nawet jak na historię o małych ludzikach. Spokojnie to wszystko mogło stanowić epizod w poprzedniej części serii. Nie wiem po co w ogóle ten tom powstał - nie powinien. Boję się co znajdę w piątej części, ale póki co jestem zniechęcona i zawiedziona.
Profile Image for Paul.
2,785 reviews20 followers
November 23, 2025
More fun adventures with the Borrowers. I was a little disappointed there was no follow-up on the sinister epilogue from the previous book, though.
Profile Image for Nicky.
4,138 reviews1,112 followers
August 28, 2010
I found this one so unsatisfying to reread. It goes nowhere, and it's becoming ridiculous how often the Borrowers just have to move on and move on and move on, never satisfied. I did like the touch of romance between Spiller and Arriety -- I hope the final book doesn't take that away -- and I do like the little details of the world Mr Pott and Miss Menzies create.

I'm sad that there's no sign of Mrs May or Kate anymore: they've vanished out of it, even though as far as I'm concerned they were as important to the story as the Borrowers, in their way. And the questioning element about their existence is totally gone. It isn't a story being told, but facts being laid out. The Borrowers are really captured, really about to be put on display... It could still have worked, with the right narrator to tell the story, but this book isn't framed that way. And somehow, it takes the uncertain enchantment out of it, rather than making it feel more real.

I do love the details of the world Mr Pott creates, and the loving attention he puts to it, and even the kindness of him and Miss Menzies. I always love the attention to detail, the thinking put into figuring out how these tiny people would survive, but...

Thinking about it now, in one way, the ending of this book is satisfying for that very reason. The harsh electric light in the Clocks' house that Mr Pott made, it isn't right for them, for the story. They have to go away and begin somewhere anew, somewhere they can make themselves, with their own hands and using their own skills. They have to go back to where they won't be seen, where they can flirt with the boundary between reality and fantasy.

It's nice to think of it that way.
Profile Image for Paula Vince.
Author 11 books109 followers
October 7, 2022
It's a bit sad not to start with Mrs May and Kate this time round, but we're plunged directly into the world of other humans. Mr Pott is the kindly man who built the model village of Little Fordham as his fun hobby. Miss Menzies is his enthusiastic friend who helps with craft work and fills the village with small plaster people. And across the water live the shrewd rip-off merchants Sidney and Mabel Platter, who aim to copy Pott's every move and make an obscene profit from their own tawdry model village, Ballyhoggin. One night, Mr Platter spies tiny live people running around in Mr Pott's village and decides to purloin them to inhabit his. They are, of course, our little Clock family, who don't dream what lies ahead of them.

As a subplot early on, Arrietty keeps a guilty secret from her parents, because borrowers aren't supposed to be 'seen', yet she relishes the pleasure of delighting lovely, harmless folk like Miss Menzies just by showing up. For her, there's always a tension between two good things. Adherence to her strong family traditions on one hand and the thrill of making someone's day on the other. The double life makes her a bit cranky, yet her father attributes that to her awkward age.

It's a slower burn than the first three books, since a huge chunk of the story sets the family as prisoners in the Platters' attic over a six month period. Mary Norton had to write it so their escape didn't seem a cinch, yet without bogging the story down with the technical details of creating and launching the balloon. She treads a fine line and I think her success depends on the tolerance of mechanical waffle of each individual reader. Personally I felt it dragged in spots, and the title and cover themselves comprise a plot spoiler, as any young reader will instantly see how the Clock family will eventually escape from the Platters' attic. Oh well, sometimes a story is more about anticipation rather than surprise.

One thing I liked is the sound credibility. The Platters would most certainly have the materials for building the balloon stored up there. After all, balloons and strawberry baskets are part of the afternoon tea hustle they run on the side. So that was all good. And I felt great empathy for poor Pod's hopeless depression, when he foresees the remainder of their lives living behind glass, snooped at and treated like zoo animals. For this time, their unlikely boyish guardian angel Spiller can't come to their rescue, since he has no idea where they are.

Outside of the attic, the simmering dynamics between Arrietty and Spiller are getting cute. I sense subtle attraction from both sides, along with the angst that so often goes with it. I love Arrietty's irritation because Spiller won't listen to any technical explanations about the building of the balloon unless they come from her father. (He suddenly seemed balloon crazy... there seemed no end to his curiosity which, for some masculine reason Arrietty could not fathom, could only be satisfied by Pod.)

For over twenty years this was the final book in the series, and I think it's a perfect place to stop and let our reader imaginations take over. Pod has talked Homily into agreeing with him that purposelessness sets in when everything is done for you by others, so he and she look forward to resuming their hands-on lifestyle elsewhere. There is a broad hint that Arrietty and Spiller will end up happily married which satisfies our hearts for romance. In fact the end of the book's older version leaves us in no doubt. What more do we need?

This neat sense of completion is why I face the fifth installment, The Borrowers Avenged, with trepidation. Surprise sequels way down the track are sometimes facepalms. I hope it won't be one of those cases where an author plunges way beyond where she should have stopped, and undoes all her good work. I'll soon find out.
Profile Image for Melody Schwarting.
2,133 reviews82 followers
March 28, 2022
The Borrowers Aloft worked a lot better for me than the previous installments, Afield and Afloat. The Clock family has a breather, gets back to traditional borrowing from humans rather than foraging in the wilderness, and makes a daring escape. (I love how detailed the cover illustration is--matches the book description exactly.) The first few chapters depart from the Clocks and explore humans who are just trying to make an honest buck by competing with each other via miniatures. Well, one set of humans is trying to make a dishonest buck, hence the whole plot of Aloft. Norton's characterizations and dialogue continue to be my favorite part of the whole series, and I love how much she can do with tiny nuggets of information.

The short story "Poor Stainless" takes us back to Homily's childhood, when the house was full of Borrowers and humans. It is quite cute and made me long for the prequel I wish Norton had written, but it sufficed. Since it's set in the world of the Borrowers, it was easy to slip into, and Norton kept previous characterizations true to earlier portrayals.

Content warnings: a weird section where the Borrowers question "who hunts humans" and mention cannibalism--just felt off somehow, and would have disturbed me as a child.
Profile Image for Smitha Murthy.
Author 2 books417 followers
October 31, 2019
The poor poor Borrowers. What a life! Forever trying to find home. Forever escaping. Borrowing. Scavenging for scraps. Sounds like my life.

In the fourth book in the series, Mary Norton sends her borrowers to a little village where they find what seems to be a nice home in a model village. Arrietty finds a human ‘bean’ for a friend, then finds herself and her family kidnapped before they escape breathlessly and try to find another home. I find that the series is losing its charm as I move through to the end.
Profile Image for Iryna Khomchuk.
465 reviews79 followers
March 30, 2018
Зустріч із героями книги, яка припала до душі, — те ж саме, що й зустріч зі старими друзями. От тільки цього разу родину крихітних чоловічків спіткала халепа. Здавалося б, усе нарешті у їхному житті налагодилося, з’явився справжній затишний дім і можливості для роздобутку, аж тут їх... викрали підступні люди.

Однак засмучуватися не варто: звісно, роздобудькам вдалося втекти з горища, де їх тримали у полоні. А для цього довелося неабияк постаратися, зібрати всю винахідливість і змайструвати... повітряну кулю. Якщо врахувати, що політ на повітряній кулі — одна з моїх, поки що нездійснених, мрій, то й задоволення від читання було присмачене уявним власним польотом понад вкритими весняною зеленню пагорбами та синьою-синьою рікою...

Так-так, часом падаю в дитинство, і це — чудове відчуття)))
Profile Image for Lostaccount.
268 reviews24 followers
August 16, 2020
The little thieves ...errmm I mean borrowers... finally settled in Little Fordham, the model village, get kidnapped by the owners of a competing model village for obvious purposes. They're kept in a loft, given milk laced with sprits (what! Perhaps that's why Homily keeps acting so mental) and plan an escape...

Half the book is from another perspective, Miss Menzies and Mr Pott, owner of Fordham Village, but that's not to fault the book, just that it's more interesting when we're in the borrowers' pov. It's quite inventive as they undertake a daring escape from capture, for about five minutes!

Slightly better than the previous book, but not as good as the first book.

Now for the last one, Borrowers Avenged. I'm like a kid again :)
Profile Image for Elinor  Loredan.
661 reviews29 followers
September 28, 2022
Mildly enjoyable, like Afield. I most enjoyed the beginning and end, but the middle I could not be very interested in. I most like the dialogue between the borrowers, especially when they are trying to make difficult decisions. I was hoping Mr. Pott and Ms. M would come back into the story at the end for more closure. I'm not sure if I'll pursue Afloat and Avenged. So far, the first volume is the best and the only one I would reread.
Profile Image for Lisa.
813 reviews31 followers
August 12, 2009
I read the Borrowers series once or twice as a kid, but they never caught on with me in the same way as other books. But now, on rereading, I find them completely charming: beautifully imagined, nicely framed (except for Afloat, which I don't like as much), and actually pretty philosophical. Of course, the Krushes' illustrations are delightful, as always. I'm so glad I rediscovered these books!
Profile Image for Kimberly Karalius.
Author 7 books231 followers
January 29, 2019
While this one was still good (Arrietty starting to have feelings for Spiller was very cute), not a lot happened and a big portion of the book was from the humans’ POV (the very beginning of the book), which was interesting but made me wonder when we’d get to the Borrowers themselves.
Profile Image for Nadine Keels.
Author 46 books244 followers
February 17, 2021
After being uprooted to escape danger more than once, the little Clock family—Pod, Homily, and their teenaged daughter Arrietty—have been settling into a comfortable life of borrowing in a miniature village. But a few human beings' interest in the Clocks puts the family back in jeopardy in The Borrowers Aloft by author Mary Norton.

While I enjoyed the first two Borrowers' books and two Borrowers' movies back in my childhood, this is my first time reading this far into this classic children's fantasy series. I think it's my fondness for the characters, rather than the story, that made me like this fourth book as much as I did.

I got a bit tired during the early chapters with humans talking about the borrowers; the story's focus could have turned to the borrowers themselves sooner. I was also a little disappointed about not getting to see Spiller until quite late in the book, though his significance concerning Arrietty snaps up a couple of notches. And the ending is a calm cliffhanger, not exactly a happy one, with a tearful (redundant?) promise from Arrietty that I found dissatisfying, anticlimactic, and maybe pointless.

Even so, it's great how the Clocks work together, all three using their heads for the escape they need to make. Plus, I always like the thought-provoking tidbits in their conversations and reflections that truly show their borrower ideology. (Like, the fact that humans hunt humans absolutely appalls borrowers, which I 1000% understand.)

I'm hoping for a fulfilling series conclusion in the next and last book.
___________
Update after reading The Borrowers Avenged, the fifth and last book of the series:

I'd recommend either getting your hands on an original copy of Book Four, The Borrowers Aloft, or finding Book Four's original conclusion online somewhere. Then let that original ending be The End.

A few more of my thoughts are here.
Profile Image for Rasha | رشا.
442 reviews60 followers
October 14, 2023
قرأت ان ماري عادت وغيرت نهاية الرواية لتسمح لنفسها بكتابة جزء جديد. تنتهي هذ الرواية بزواج سبيلر واريتي وعيشهم في شجرة.
851 reviews7 followers
July 2, 2020
I absolutely adore this series. I wish I had read it as a kid. I already spent ages outdoors making little caps out of acorns for fairies and other diminutive items; this would have been right up my alley.

I really love the way that the Borrowers figure out how to build a hot air balloon using items in the attic in which they've been imprisoned.

Also love the part in which Arietty declares that she's going to marry Spiller one day and she supposes she'll have to tell him that at some point.

I'm sad we only have one volume left in the series. It's been fun inhabiting the world of the extremely resourceful and clever Borrowers.
Profile Image for Bibliothecat.
1,745 reviews77 followers
December 20, 2020



I'm still not warming up to this series, no matter how I like the general idea and the Ghibli adaptation. Nonetheless, I enjoyed this fourth instalment more than the third.

The stakes are set higher - this one felt like the biggest peril the Borrowers have been in so far. But somehow, this book still managed to bore me. I still feel as though the author gets lost in details.

Purely in terms of the story, though, I am surprised to find that I like Homily more and more. Pod, on the other hand, I've reserved my opinion on him for a while as I felt it would be more of a negative one. By volume four, I am compelled to say that I don't like him. I'm all for ladies-first-etiquette and am much more forgiving than most when it comes to feminism, but goodness, I can't stand how he always makes it sound like he is the man in the house and Arrietty and Homily have to obey his every command. Good on Arrietty for not following them.

I also wasn't too happy how Arrietty did quite a lot in this instalment and was given zero credit for it, no thanks to Pod. On the contrary, Pod is so stubborn about his opinions - I've just about had enough of him being so extremely anti-human, Homily has grown a whole lot more backbone by comparison.

Being the romance fan that I am, I was pretty well pleased to see a bit of something finally coming out of Arrietty and Spiller - I wouldn't mind some more of that! Let's see what the fifth and final volume brings...
Profile Image for Dawn T.
306 reviews1 follower
February 18, 2023
I enjoyed this one in the Borrowers series too, but it felt more like a long prologue and then a chapter or two than a full book. If I hadn’t read the others in the series first I don’t think this one would have held my attention long enough to finish.
Profile Image for Shelly♥.
716 reviews10 followers
February 7, 2012
This is the fourth book in "The Borrowers" series, the children's story that supposes that little people who live under the floor take all the things that are missing. In this book, our little Borrower family - Pod, Homily and Arriety - move into a miniature village called "Little Fordham". A rival mini village proprietor and his wife steal them away intending to put them on display for all to see. As the cage is prepared, the Borrowers are locked away in an impossibly high attic. How will they escape?

This was a very good book. I loved the twists and turns in this tale and the introduction of yet another "bad intention" human trying to profit from the little folks. The ingenious of the Borrowers is truly imaginative in this book as they explore the attic to maximize their captivity and try and plan their escape. My boys loved it, too. There were nights towards the end that we read extra chapters to move the story along.

Classic children's series for sure!
3,181 reviews
January 13, 2021
After the Borrower family is kidnapped by humans, they escape in a balloon.

As usual in this series, it takes dozens of pages before the story really begins. I enjoyed the part where the characters are trapped in an attic and the ingenious ways they think about how they could use the room's contents to get out. I wasn't a super fan of the ending, but all the books end with them fleeing to a new home. This is the next to last book in the series. I don't have the fifth and am ok with this being the end of reading about the Borrowers.

This was a joint read with my 89-year-old mom, who said it was 'pretty good'.
Profile Image for Brandon Kitchen.
Author 3 books4 followers
February 26, 2018
Very slow moving and very different from the first three in the series. I was quite disappointed that half the book doesn't even deal with the Borrowers, but instead focuses on the Borrowers being talked about. There are things that aren't quite explained and remain this way the entire book. The ending is very open ended and kind of sad. If you think that the Borrowers are going to get what they want and live happily, you're quite mistaken.
Profile Image for Melody.
2,668 reviews308 followers
August 11, 2009
Another solid entry in the saga. I found this and its immediate predecessor to be much stronger, much more engaging than the first two. I love the ingenuity the borrowers show, I adore that Pod listens to Arrietty with respect and admiration, and Spiller is almost (dare I say it?) sweet. Homily is a pain, but in a realistic way.
Profile Image for Laura.
4,224 reviews93 followers
January 3, 2015
I've always liked "hidden" sequels, ones that most people don't read and/or know existed (like those to Pollyanna. Norton doesn't disappoint Borrowers fans with this one, which is more about their lives than their borrowing.
4 reviews
January 5, 2010
This book is a funny life-changing book that keeps you from putting it down. I learned that there are people under our noses who use the stuff we lose when they find it.
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