Reviews

Invisible is a great thriller. I can’t say too much more about the plot because the twists and turns are the whole point of reading a book that wrong foots the reader at every turn . . . Christine Poulson kept me reading by giving out just enough information to intrigue and puzzle so that I had to read just one more chapter. That’s why, in the end, I just dropped everything else and read the last half of Invisible in one sitting.’

- I PREFER READING BLOG

Eight of my favourite books set in schools

31173Today I am blogging about books set in schools and Moira at Clothesinbook.com is doing the same. Our tastes are similar but don’t quite overlap, so I’m always fascinated to see what she has chosen.

There are very few fictional schools that one would like to have attended or to have sent one’s own children to, but Llanabba Castle in Evelyn Waugh’s Decline and Fall (1928) takes the biscuit. As Mr Levy of Church and Gargoyle, scholastic agents, explains to Paul Pennyfeather, ‘We class schools into four grades: Leading School, First-Rate School, Good School, and School. Frankly . . . School is pretty bad.’ And so it proves. Very dark and very funny.

As a child I didn’t go in for school stories, but this was an exception: Susan Coolidge’s What Katy Did at School (1873), her follow-up to What Katy Did. I adored this story of Katy and Clover and their year at a boarding school in Connecticut and I still enjoy it even now.

In Charlotte Bronte’s Villette (1853) Lucy Snow goes to teach at a girls school in Belgium and falls in love with Monsieur Paul. It is years and years since I read this, but I vividly remember the atmosphere of erotic longing and repressed emotion.

Muriel Spark, The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie (1961). Ah, Miss Brodie and her crème de la crème: the influence of a teacher – for good or ill – can be lifelong. An examination of good and evil through the prism of school life – but funny, too.

Nicholas Blake, A Question of Proof (1935). Closed communities such as schools, especially boarding schools, make excellent settings for crime novels. This one, set in a boys prep school, was the first crime novel by poet, C. Day Lewis, writing as Nicholas Blake, and is a Golden Age mystery with a difference: the detective, Nigel Strangeways, was based on W. H. Auden.

Robert Player, The Ingenious Mr Stone. Another crime novel, partly narrated by the bursar at a dreadful boarding school for girls. Ingenious, yes, and funny.

How to be Topp and Down with Skool by Geoffrey Willans with illustrations by Ronald Searle:   ‘Hurra for the botany walk! Now boys get into croc. Tinies at the front, seniors at the rear. Off for the woods and keep your eyes skinned. Ha-ha- what do we see at once but a little robin! There is no need to burst into tears fotherington-tomas swete though he be. Nor to buzz a brick at it Molesworth 2. Pause at the zebra, look left look right. Strate into the vicar’s bicycle. That’s all right we were none of us hurt and i canot believe the vicar really said that grabber . . . A dead bird, Peason? I don’t think that would find its place in the nature museum it is so very dead.’ I was a grown-up when I discovered Molesworth, ‘the curse of St Custard’s.’ The kind of book that is wasted on children. A perfect marriage of text and illustrations. Sublime.

Finally, Agatha Christie’s Cat Among the Pigeons, set in an elite girls boarding school. Not among her best – Poirot takes far too long to appear – but good fun all the same.

So that’s it. I’ll add a link to ClothesinBooks once Moira’s post is up.

Now it is: with surprising results! http://bit.ly/16X4I99

10 Comments

  1. moira @ Clothes in Books
    February 12, 2015

    Wow – it turns out we have remarkable similar tastes in schools-in-books, I’m surprised and impressed. And yes, I could easily have added your different ones to my list.

    Reply
    • Christine Poulson
      February 12, 2015

      I was surprised to see What Katy Did at School on your list (so I wasn’t the only little girl who came across it) and A Question of Proof – there is something delightful about so many books in common.

      Reply
  2. Carol in Maryland
    February 12, 2015

    As a retired teacher, I love books set in schools. One of my favorites that is not on your list is MISS PYM DISPOSES by Josephine Tey, set in a “college of physical culture”, preparing girls to be what we in the US would call physical education teachers. The author herself was a p.e. teacher for a while, so perhaps we can see this school as a reflection of her own – without the murder, I assume!

    Reply
    • Christine Poulson
      February 12, 2015

      Lovely to hear from you, Carol. I love Miss Pym Disposes, too, and it would certainly have been on my list if I’d included books set in colleges as well as schools. I think that will have to be for another time.

      Reply
  3. Gabi Coatsworth
    February 14, 2015

    I commented on Moira’s site, too. I loved the Chalet School books by Elinor Brent-Dyer. It was a Swiss school with girls of all nationalities, and I wanted to be one of them…

    Reply
    • Christine Poulson
      February 15, 2015

      Thanks, Gabi. This sounds like something I would have enjoyed, and I am wondering if I am not too old even now.

      Reply
  4. Sue
    February 15, 2015

    So agree about Molesworth – the brilliant spelling, the wonderful illustrations by Ronald Searle, the unerring ear for schoolboy jokes. Even now I still remember Hullo Clouds Hullo Sky and Fotherington Thomas.

    Sue

    Reply
    • Christine Poulson
      February 15, 2015

      Yes indeed – and ‘let me add my strength to yours’ … ‘Gaze in the mirror at your strange unnatural beauty’. . . ‘the gerund being led into captivity.’ Works of genius in their way, aren’t they?

      Reply
  5. Tracybham
    February 21, 2015

    Nice list of favorites. I did not realize it was not including colleges until I read the comments. It was interesting that you and Moira shared so many favorites.

    Reply
    • Christine Poulson
      February 23, 2015

      Glad you liked it, Tracy. Yes, it’s been a pleasure to become friendly with Moira online: we have similar tastes.

      Reply

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