![]() But a temp worker starts stalking him, all the things he's worked so hard for are placed in jeopardy. Here is a kindred spirit for the small child.Veransi: Obsessed: A successful asset manager, who has just received a huge promotion, is blissfully happy in his career and in his marriage. Her books give voice to this childhood sense of vulnerability. Mary Norton never forgot what it was to be small, timid and vulnerable. They shake like frightened mice at the merest hint of change or danger. It is easy for grown-ups to forget how small and vulnerable a child can feel in a fast-paced world where adults appear as giants and even managing to climb into a seat at the dinner table can be a challenge. ![]() Pod and particularly Homily feel afraid, vulnerable in a land of forces beyond their control. This theme of smallness and vulnerability strikes me as one of the most significant lasting impacts of Norton’s book. ![]() Speaking about her imaginings, Norton says,”What would it be like, this child would wonder, lying prone on the moss, to live among such creatures - human oneself to all intents and purposes, but as small and vulnerable as they?” In a 1966 letter included in the front of the 50th anniversary edition of the work published by Harcourt, Norton says that the inspiration for her imagination was due in large part to undiagnosed nearsightedness which left her to contemplate the small things nearby while the grand vistas in the distance remained vague and indistinct. As a child, Norton was drawn to careful examination of small details and hidden things. Mary Norton had time to look around her drawing room and imagine how the little people, who must live behind the great clock in the hall, would have climbed up the furniture to gather the leavings from the afternoon tea. ![]() It is easy to forget in this world of fast-paced electronics, instant media, and entertainment-based consumption how quiet and contemplative the life of a child growing up in Britain during the Great War would have been. Thus, it seems appropriate to use the best meanings of the word precious to describe her work. In recent times that word has taken on important and powerful ironies to make some clear points, but Norton writes before these ironies came to give the word notes of condescension. In a word, Norton’s book can best be described as precious. From these items they make a life and a home. So as not to arouse suspicion, they take only things which will not be missed, such as sheets of blotting paper and old cigar boxes. Pod and Homily Clock care for their adventurous daughter Arrietty by borrowing what they need, and a little more, from the human “beans” who live up above. The Borrowers tells the story of a family of little people who live beneath the kitchen floor of a deteriorating English country home. The success of the book led to five sequels, including The Borrowers Avenged, published in 1982, 30 years after the original. The Carnegie is the British equivalent of the American Newbery award. At its release, The Borrowers won the prestigious Carnegie Award for children’s literature in Britain. However, The Borrowers cemented Norton’s career as a children’s author. Before she wrote The Borrowers, Norton, who died in 1992, wrote Bed-knob and Broomstick, which later went on to inspire the 1971 Disney film. The book which inspired Miyazaki’s film was written by Mary Norton and published in 1952 under the name The Borrowers. The English language version of the Studio Ghibli film The Secret World of Arrietty arrives in theaters today (check out Matt Blum’s review and Kathy Ceceri’s perspective on the film’s science). One of Diana Stanley’s Illustrations for the 1952 British Editions of The Borrowers by Mary Norton ![]()
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