The Book of Story Beginnings
by Krisitn Kladstrup
Lucy Martin has just moved into a century-old farmhouse in Iowa, overlooking
the Missouri River bluffs, which her father inherited from his Aunt Lavonne.
It seems like a nice place for her parents to work out problems in their
marriage. But what will Lucy do? Why, Lucy will have an adventure.
The adventure begins when Lucy finds journals belonging to her long-lost Uncle
Oscar, who disappeared in 1914. This is the reason Aunt Lavonne took such an
interest in magic; she believed her brother's disappearance had to do with
magic. But no one ever believed Lavonne's story that she woke up one night,
found the house surrounded by an ocean, and watched her 14-year-old brother
row away in a small boat, never to return.
After reading Oscar's journals, Lucy still has no clue as to what became of
him. But then she finds a rowboat in the shed - the boat that had turned up
empty some time after Oscar disappeared - and hidden nearby, an old "book of
story beginnings." Some of the story beginnings are written in Oscar's hand,
including one where a boy realizes that the farmland around his house has
turned into the sea. Lucy adds her own story beginning to the book -
something about a girl whose father was a magician - but before she can
write further, she finds herself living in the middle of the story she has
begun.
The book, you see, is magical. Whatever story you begin to write in it must
be finished, not by writing it, but by living it. The book also judges what
you write, so that if you try to bring your story to a too-neat conclusion,
the book may erase what you have written. So you're stuck in the story until
you find out how it ends.
Next thing Lucy knows, her father has turned himself into a bird and flown away.
Oscar, who should be elderly or dead, turns up exactly as he was when he
disappeared. The two children realize that they have to see all the stories
they have started through to the end if they want things to return to
normal. And they have to do it before Lucy's mother gets too concerned about
her father's disappearance. It may be too late to save Oscar's family from a
lifetime of grief and uncertainty, but Lucy is determined not to let that
happen to her family.
If the fantasy concepts of The Great Good Thing, Thursday Next, Inkheart, and The Neverending Story
intrigued you, you will especially enjoy this book. The story that Lucy
and Oscar fall into is full of quirks, dangers, and surprises. The
characters, both in their real lives and in the story-within-the-story, are
treated with an affectionate warmth that you, too, will feel toward them.
And the idea of a story taking over your life may challenge you to think
strange thoughts about the boundary between reality and fiction.
Robbie Fischer
USA
Recommended Age: 12+
If you would like to contact Robbie, you may do so here.