Swallows and Amazons
is the first book in the Swallows and Amazons series by English
author Arthur Ransome; it was first published in 1930, with the
action taking place in the summer of 1929 in the Lake District. The
book introduces central protagonists John, Susan, Titty and Roger
Walker (Swallows) and their mother and baby sister, as well as Nancy
and Peggy Blackett (Amazons) and their uncle Jim, commonly referred
to as Captain Flint.
At the time, Ransome
had been working as a journalist with the Manchester Guardian, but
decided to become a full-time author rather than go abroad as a
foreign correspondent. He did continue to write part-time for the
press, however.
The book was
inspired by a summer spent by Ransome teaching the children of his
friends, the Altounyans, to sail. Three of the Altounyan children's
names are adopted directly for the Walker family. Ransome and Ernest
Altounyan bought two small dinghies called Swallow and Mavis. Ransome
kept Swallow until he sold it a number of years later, while Mavis
remained in the Altounyan family and is now on permanent display in
the Ruskin Museum. However, later in life Ransome tried to downplay
the Altounyan connections, changing the initial dedication of
Swallows and Amazons and writing a new foreword which gave other
sources. In 2003, the novel was listed at number 57 on the BBC's
survey The Big Read.
The book relates the
outdoor adventures and play of two families of children. These
involve sailing, camping, fishing, exploration and piracy. The Walker
children (John, Susan, Titty and Roger) are staying at a farm near a
lake in the Lake District of England, during the school holidays.
They sail a borrowed dinghy named Swallow and meet the Blackett
children (Nancy and Peggy), who sail a dinghy named Amazon. The
Walkers camp on an island in the lake while the Blacketts live in
their house nearby. When the children meet, they agree to join forces
against a common enemy - the Blacketts' uncle James Turner whom they
call "Captain Flint" (after the character in Treasure
Island). Turner, normally an ally of his nieces, has withdrawn from
their company in order to write his memoirs, and has become decidedly
unfriendly. Furthermore, when the Blacketts let off a firework on his
houseboat roof, it is the Walkers who get the blame. He refuses even
to listen when they try to pass on a warning to him about burglars in
the area.
In order to
determine who should be the overall leader in their campaign against
Captain Flint, the Blacketts and the Walkers have a contest to see
which can capture the others' boat. As part of their strategy the
Walkers make a dangerous crossing of the lake by night, and John is
later cautioned by his mother for this reckless act. The Walkers
nevertheless win the contest - thanks to Titty who seizes the Amazon
when the Blacketts come to Wild Cat Island. During the same night
Titty hears suspicious voices coming from a different island -
Cormorant Island - and in the morning it transpires that Turner's
houseboat has been burgled. Turner again blames the Walkers, but is
finally convinced that he is mistaken and feels he was wrong to
distance himself from his nieces' adventures all summer. The
Swallows, Amazons and Turner investigate Cormorant Island, but they
cannot find Turner's missing trunk.
The following day
there is a mock battle between Turner and the children, after which
Turner is tried for his crimes and forced to walk the plank on his
own houseboat. They agree at the post-battle feast that on the final
day of their holidays Titty and Roger will go back to Cormorant
Island while the others go fishing. Titty finds the trunk, which
contains the memoirs on which Turner had been working, and is
rewarded with Turner's green parrot.
James Turner appears
in some ways to be modelled on Ransome himself. The story, set in
August 1929, includes a good deal of everyday Lakeland life from the
farmers to charcoal burners working in the woods; corned beef, which
the children fancifully refer to as pemmican, and ginger beer and
lemonade, which they call grog, appear as regular food stuff for the
campers; island life also allows for occasional references to the
story of Robinson Crusoe.
A British film
Swallows and Amazons is scheduled for release in 2016, with director
Philippa Lowthorpe. The film features Sherlock's Andrew Scott, plus
Teddie-Rose Malleson-Allen as the renamed Tatty.
Swallows
and Amazons review – sails on merrily, despite spy ballast
3 / 5 stars
Children
messing about in boats is not enough for this adaptation, which
injects an adult espionage twist more Famous Five than Arthur Ransome
Peter Bradshaw
Sunday 24 July 2016
17.30 BST
Arthur Ransome’s
wholesome prewar classic of children’s literature is all about
fresh-faced girls and boys sailing dinghies around the Lake District
with no health-and-safety nonsense about flotation jackets. The 1930
novel is now given a good-natured, if self-conscious period
adaptation that grafts on a new grownup plotline of treachery and
derring-do, probably closer to Enid Blyton’s Famous Five or John
Buchan.
It is as if the
children’s innocent fantasy world of pirates and adventurers isn’t
enough. The action must be ramped up. They have to get real baddies
to vanquish, but this new and implausible line in melodrama is taken
at the same pace and treated the same way as the children’s
innocuous high-jinks. There is even a frankly bizarre and not
entirely logical chase sequence aboard a train in which sinister
trench-coated figures behave strangely – to say the very least –
though somehow without drawing attention to themselves.
Kelly Macdonald
plays Mrs Walker, who is taking her boisterous four children away for
a summer holiday in the idyllic Lakeland fells while her husband, an
officer in the Royal Navy, is away in the far east. They are Susan
(Orla Hill), Roger (Bobby McCulloch), John (Dane Hughes) and Tatty
(Teddie-Rose Malleson-Allen) – her name was “Titty” in the
original, and rather coyly changed.
On the way, the
children chance across the mysterious Mr Flint (Rafe Spall) who
appears to be being hunted down by an equally enigmatic figure played
by Andrew Scott – and the casting of these two principals should
probably tip us off as to which of them is the good guy.
The family arrive at
their cottage run by a hatchet-faced comedy yokel couple, Mr and Mrs
Jackson, played deadpan by Harry Enfield and Jessica Hynes. And the
children beg to be allowed to sail to an island in the middle of the
lake in Mr Jackson’s dinghy, the “Swallow”, and camp there –
only to find that two other children, Nancy (Seren Hawkes) and Peggy
(Hannah Jayne Thorp) have already staked a claim to it, and have a
dinghy of their own, called the “Amazon”. A high-spirited battle
commences, complicated by the unlikely danger they are in from the
adult world of espionage.
Swallows and Amazons
was always treasured for its innocent charm, and maybe Golding’s
Lord of the Flies made this kind of story unfashionable even before
our modern preoccupation with the danger that unaccompanied children
can be in. There’s no point updating the story, of course, and in
fact the girls do in any case take a reasonably bold and assertive
role in the adventure. Perhaps what there is to like about it is the
simple, almost action-free shots of people sailing their little craft
across the rippling lakes. And in fact nothing in the film rivals the
very real catastrophe of the children’s wicker basket full of
picnic food being lost overboard. This is despite the deployment of a
failed “man overboard” rescue manoeuvre – although in trying
this out, the children have in fact perfected it, and it is to come
in useful when there is a real man-overboard emergency.
This Swallows and
Amazons is decent enough: but probably best savoured on the small
screen after tea on a rainy Sunday.
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