A garden of lilies: Improving tales for young minds by Judith Rossell
ABC Books, 2017. ISBN 9780733338229
(Ages: 9+) Recommended. Themes: Morality tales, Social life and
customs, Manners, Alphabet books. Judith Rossell's award-winning
novel Wormwood Mire, referenced the cautionary tales of the
fictional Victorian writer Prudence A. Goodchild. Young Stella
Montgomery's aunts had gifted her with this little book 'full of
depressing stories of children who did wrong and met with tragedy.'
Reminiscent of Hilaire Belloc's witty parodies containing sage
advice on children's manners and life skills, Rossell's short volume
written in alphabetical order is beautifully written and beautifully
presented. From the black hardcover with the title debossed in gold,
surrounded by a bouquet of lilies to the marbled endpapers and
detailed sketches of Victorian life, this is a visual delight. Each
of the children are given delightful Victorian names, Drusilla,
Zenobia, Yaxley and Hubert and the settings redolent with period
features.
Each tale begins with a large letter entwined with foliage and ends
with a witty and pertinent moral. When Florence and Gilbert wander
off the path to the way to their grandmother's cottage, they are
'unexpectedly eaten by an escaped tiger from a nearby circus.' The
moral reflects their untimely choices:
'Always go the way you should
When you are walking through a wood.'
Horatio's untidiness and grubby clothing sends him below deck to
change and unable to advise the ship's captain of impending
disaster, a crash with an iceberg. Euphemia's dreadful table manners
and her inability to use the correct cutlery lead to her
disappearance, tumbling into an oubliette, a secret dungeon.
Rossell's dark humour is creatively demonstrated by the choice of
the children's fates, gobbled by an enormous fish, whirled away in a
waterspout and squashed by a marble bust of Prince Albert. As a
counterpoint, the author includes household hints, recipes, crafts
and parlour games perfect for the nineteenth century child.
Stella Montgomery read this 'vivid and rather unpleasant book' three
times on her long train journey to the boarding school. Judith
Rossell's A Garden of Lilies: Improving Tales for Young Minds
opens up conversations and discussions comparing children's lives
and their social life, etiquette and customs with current norms and
lifestyles. Inspirational, humorous, a little tongue in cheek,
Judith Rossell's Victorian short novel is picture-perfect, just
right to share across the generations.
Rhyllis Bignell