Charming time travel adventure for kids
I don’t read much children’s literature, but occasionally I’ll try a classic book that was intended for a juvenile audience. Children’s literature prior to World War I was generally written at a higher reading level than much of today’s kid-lit (think Treasure Island, for example), so today those children’s books of old mostly appeal to adult readers. I had read good things about E. Nesbit’s The Story of the Amulet, published in 1906, and decided to check it out. Nesbit (1858–1924; the E. is for Edith) was a prolific British author of fiction for both kids and adults. Unbeknownst to me before I started, The Story of the Amulet is actually the third novel in a trilogy. The events of the first two novels are briefly recapped in the first couple chapters of this third installment, so it’s not hard to figure out what’s going on. In this trilogy, four juvenile siblings discover a creature called the Psammead, or sand fairy, a kind of furry rodent-slug who can talk. The Psammead has the power to grant the children wishes, which leads them into all sorts of adventures.
In The Story of the Amulet, the kids are stuck at home with their nanny for the summer while their mom and dad and baby brother are out of the country. Their biggest complaint is boredom, and they long for their parents to return home to London and pay attention to them. (That’s rather ironic, because every good kid-lit adventure happens while the parents are away.) The children are reunited with the Psammead after finding him in a pet store. For some reason, the Psammead is unable to grant their particular wish, but he informs them of a wish-granting magic amulet, one half of which exists nearby. The children must find the other half for their wishes to come true. The half that they acquire in London, however, does have some powers, including time travel, so they use the first half of the amulet to search for the second.
Nesbit’s writing is really very lively and clever. The kids are quite likable and realistic. They are polite and intelligent without being saints or geniuses. The Psammead also has a fun personality, haughty and condescending, like a cross between The Odd Couple’s Felix Unger and that alien genie who used to hang out with Fred Flintstone and Barney Rubble (the Great Gazoo, for those old enough to remember). The story has a touch of Bill and Ted’s Excellent Adventure to it, but smarter. The fish-out-of-water scenarios of time travel generate much amusing humor.
The plot has its faults. It reads more like a meandering series of scenes rather than a cohesive novel. The premise of the amulet is used as an excuse to put the children into time travel situations, but overall, it doesn’t really make much sense. What I mean by that, in the case of a fantasy book, is that it defies its own internal logic. Throughout the book, the Psammead is granting wishes left and right, but for some reason he can’t satisfy the children’s desire to bring their parents home? Likewise, the magic amulet exhibits an almost limitless power to transport people through time and space, but for some reason it can’t help them find what they’re looking for? The final chapter amounts to a weak ending. What happens in the conclusion leads the reader to ask himself: What was stopping this from happening ten chapters ago? Of course, that would have cut short the adventure, and it’s the ride that matters here. The book is good clean fun, and the characters are enjoyable. If you like classic children’s literature, The Story of the Amulet is worth a look-see.
In The Story of the Amulet, the kids are stuck at home with their nanny for the summer while their mom and dad and baby brother are out of the country. Their biggest complaint is boredom, and they long for their parents to return home to London and pay attention to them. (That’s rather ironic, because every good kid-lit adventure happens while the parents are away.) The children are reunited with the Psammead after finding him in a pet store. For some reason, the Psammead is unable to grant their particular wish, but he informs them of a wish-granting magic amulet, one half of which exists nearby. The children must find the other half for their wishes to come true. The half that they acquire in London, however, does have some powers, including time travel, so they use the first half of the amulet to search for the second.
Nesbit’s writing is really very lively and clever. The kids are quite likable and realistic. They are polite and intelligent without being saints or geniuses. The Psammead also has a fun personality, haughty and condescending, like a cross between The Odd Couple’s Felix Unger and that alien genie who used to hang out with Fred Flintstone and Barney Rubble (the Great Gazoo, for those old enough to remember). The story has a touch of Bill and Ted’s Excellent Adventure to it, but smarter. The fish-out-of-water scenarios of time travel generate much amusing humor.
The plot has its faults. It reads more like a meandering series of scenes rather than a cohesive novel. The premise of the amulet is used as an excuse to put the children into time travel situations, but overall, it doesn’t really make much sense. What I mean by that, in the case of a fantasy book, is that it defies its own internal logic. Throughout the book, the Psammead is granting wishes left and right, but for some reason he can’t satisfy the children’s desire to bring their parents home? Likewise, the magic amulet exhibits an almost limitless power to transport people through time and space, but for some reason it can’t help them find what they’re looking for? The final chapter amounts to a weak ending. What happens in the conclusion leads the reader to ask himself: What was stopping this from happening ten chapters ago? Of course, that would have cut short the adventure, and it’s the ride that matters here. The book is good clean fun, and the characters are enjoyable. If you like classic children’s literature, The Story of the Amulet is worth a look-see.












