About Books Movies Discussion Support Support Support
 
MuggleNet | The Book Trolley - The Story of the Treasure Seekers - Reviewed By Robbie Fischer.


The Story of the Treasure Seekers
by E. Nesbit


Edith Nesbit's first children's novel is also one of her best-known and most popular. I have found references to the Bastable children in books by Edward Eager and C.S. Lewis. Set in the London suburb of Lewisham in about 1899, it is a story so warmly and wittily told, filled with such delightful characters and memorable events, that it seems filled with magic even though nothing at all "supernatural" ever comes into it.

The narrator is one of the six Bastable children, whose mother is dead, and whose father's time is taken up trying to keep his business afloat after a crooked partner ran away with a lot of the firm's money. They can't afford to go to school, and to look after them at home they have only Eliza, the general servant, who must single-handedly cook, keep house, and (ahem) suffer the children.

From the eldest to the youngest-- and you have to find out for yourself who the narrator is-- the children are Dora, Oswald, Dicky, sweet Alice and her frail twin brother Noël, and H. O. (Horace Octavius). And each child has a fool-proof idea for how to restore the family's fallen fortune-- or at least, earn a little pocket-money, since their allowance was one of the first things to go.

Those who know only a little about this story will instantly form a mental picture of the children digging for buried treasure in their backyard, but this is only the first of many adventures of these young treasure-seekers. They also try being detectives, bandits, and newspaper editors. They sell some of Noël's poems, and they try to sell mail-order wine. They meet a real princess and a money-lender (to understand the multi-layered irony going on here, it helps to know that G.B. also stands for "Golden Balls"-- a term for pawnbrokers that is about as flattering as calling your doctor a "sawbones"). They rescue a rich man from mortal peril, they foil a break-in, and they use an umbrella as a divining rod. And in spite of rash ideas and unintended trouble, they prove to be generous, noble, brave, and honest.

Of course, they don't get along perfectly. In fact, they are about as beastly to each other as six siblings ordinarily are. In the voice of her narrator, Nesbit has achieved a remarkable combination of affection, honesty, and satire that place her among the foremost practitioners of the art form known as picaresque. I especially loved hearing her narrator say that he disapproved of letting women smoke because it would give them ideas (knowing that Nesbit herself was both an outspoken feminist and a heavy smoker). And when things turn out unashamedly like a story out of Dickens, you can't help feeling that the comparison works out in Nesbit's favor.

Perhaps recollections from Nesbit's own childhood contribute to the sense of loving detail and self-effacing irony in this story. It couldn't hurt that she was simply a good writer. But her love for these characters is shown, and our love for them is gratified, in that she wrote two other books featuring the Bastable children: The Wouldbegoods and New Treasure Seekers. The tough part is finding them in print!

Robbie Fischer
Arizona USA

Recommended Age: 8+

If you would like to contact Robbie, you may do so here.


 
Most Commented
Big
News
Top Commentors
Loading...
Which stars next film are you looking most forward to?

 

Woman in Black - Dan
Perks of Being a Wallfower - Emma
Into the White

 

October 19, 2007 - At her second reading in New York City, Jo answers many anticipated questions about various characters and also reveals that Professor Dumbledore was gay.
 
 

Please login to participate in MuggleNet's Daily Trivia Competition!

He had just made Harry feel rather better by telling him how he told the examiner in detail about the ugly man with a wart on his nose in his crystal ball, only to look up and realize he had been describing his examiner's reflection.

Order of the Phoenix, Chapter 31, Page 717
Dementors don't breed but grow, like fungus, where there's decay.
 
 

BAFTA & Grammy Awards
February 12

MegaCon with Tom Felton
February 17-19

Academy Awards
February 26

Studio Tour
March 31, 2012

Username :
Password :
 Sign Up
 Forgot Password ?
 
 
 
Happy Holidays 2011   Pottermore: Slytherin   Pottermore: Hufflepuff   Pottermore: Ravenclaw  
Pottermore: Gryffindor   Quidditch World Cup   Halloween 2011   DHnagini  
DHelderwand   DH2cast   DH1Trio   DH Voldemort  
DH_Trio   Deathly Hallows - Hermione   Burning Hogwarts   Wizarding World  
Draco   Half-Blood Prince Trio   Harry   Hermione  
LEGO Harry Potter  
 
 
Change Background
 
  Twitter   Facebook   RSS   Tumblr