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Monday, October 1, 2012

CLOSED FAIRYLAND BLOG TOUR: Guest Post & Giveaway from Catherynne M. Valente!



Happy Monday, my darlings! I know, I know, Mondays are universally known for suckage, BUT I'm here to help brighten this particular Monday (with the help of Catherynne Valente) by kicking off the FAIRYLAND blog tour!
I'm pleased as gumdrops to be welcoming you into Fairyland with a little chat on one of my favorite topics: nonsense! So without further delay, here's Cat on writing very sensible nonsense indeed:


Nonsense and Sensibility
~ A guest post from Catherynne M. Valente


In our culture, nonsense is often a derogatory word. “Oh, that’s just nonsense,” the lady sighs, and we know she has no time at all for such rubbish. Nonsense tries one’s patience. It’s foolishness, ridiculous, meaningless.
And of course, it’s easy. Just write down whatever comes into your head and you’re as good as Edward Lear, right? There’s no skill to it. Just throw any old thing at the wall and you’re golden.
Well, the Fairyland books are full of nonsense. And I’m here to tell you, it isn’t easy. If you want high-octane, concentrated, sushi-grade nonsense, you have to work like a frumious bandersnatch. Because nonsense, the kind you find in children’s literature, the kind that sticks in your mind and still makes you laugh decades later, isn’t really nonsense at all.
Any annotated Alice compendium will show you that there was incredible depth in the silliest parts of Lewis Carroll’s tale. They weren’t a lion and a unicorn because that’s a funny, cool image. They were a lion and a unicorn because of the folksong starring those two magnificent and symbolic beasts. And they weren’t just a lion and a unicorn—they were Gladstone and Disraeli, two rival politicians of Carroll’s age. But a child, especially an American child who has probably never heard of either the folksong or the the politicians, sees only something delightful and strange and funny.
This is a hard trick to pull off. But good nonsense must have a foundation of sense to be memorable, to have weight, to press buttons in the reader, even if the reader doesn’t exactly know why. The two Fairyland novels reference all kinds of things: folklore and myth from every corner of the world, Narnia, Alice, The Wizard of Oz, T.S. Eliot, Ingmar Bergman, alchemical theory, Emily Dickinson, Charles Babbage and his Difference Engine, Peter Pan, Shakespeare, and Christina Rossetti, to name a very few. The novels directly engage with the history of children’s literature, its beauties and its troubles, and practically any other literature, film, politics, or fairy tale they can get hold of.
Nonsense is in the eye of the beholder: in The Girl Who Fell Beneath Fairyland, September must face a Sibyl in order to get into the underworld of Fairyland-Below. Is it whimsical nonsense that the Sibyl’s head is surrounded by golden and silver boughs, that she herself is half golden and half silver? That when asked what she wants, the Sibyl proclaims that she wants to live? Well, yes, but it is also a nod to Frazier, author of The Golden Bough, a seminal work concerning ancient kingmaking cycles, and Virgil, author of the Aeneid, whose Sibyl was crowned with silver boughs. It is a wink to Eliot, who was himself winking at Petronius, a Roman author whose Sibyl so famously announced to a group of schoolchildren that she wanted to die. In The Girl Who Circumnavigated Fairyland, The Green Wind is the very mouthpiece of delightful if only loosely coherent verbiage—but he is also firing off some of the oldest rules of dealing with fairies in human storytelling. Mixed in with the garbage pick-up schedule.
Will a child understand that nest of interactions, that conversation between books? Probably not—although a 7th grader asked me this year if I liked The Seventh Seal (a 1957 black and white Swedish film) because in my book, Death plays chess, just like in the movie. I could have hugged him, I was so impressed. Children love nonsense because their whole world is nonsense—they don’t understand the rules yet, they are constantly throwing things at their own walls to see what sticks, adults are always speaking too fast and about things both arcane and fascinating. They like to see their perception of the world reflected in books.
Will adults get it? Maybe. But it doesn’t matter. The rhythm of the language, the vividness of the images, the upside-down logic carries them through, and even pings long-forgotten connections in their minds. Reminds them how The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe ended. Reminds them how odd it always was that Dorothy wanted so badly to go home to her Dust Bowl orphan’s life. Just as you don’t need to read Latin to find Carroll’s endless Latin puns funny, because they are funny in themselves, drawing a veil of joy over the sly play of an author amusing himself. (Hint: in the Latin alphabet, jam begins with an I.)
So if you ask me how to write nonsense, I’ll tell you: it’s never nonsense. It’s madcap, it’s 100 mph manic verbal acrobatics, it’s reading so much for so long, every fairy tale, every magical novel, every scrap of broken Greek (I’m not kidding, that’s what I majored in) I could get my hands on, until what came out of my head when I reached for something light and silly was laced with the stuff of Deep Story, Deep Magic From Before the Dawn of Time, the folkloric building blocks that make the human brain vibrate so strongly that they have lasted thousands of years and show no signs of stopping. It’s foolish, it’s ridiculous—but it’s not meaningless.
It’s nonsense, but it’s also a game I play with my readers. I put my hands over my eyes sense disappears; I pull them back and sense shows its face again.  And back and forth we go.
Aye, madness, but there is a method in it.


About the book:
The Girl Who Fell Beneath Fairyland and Led the Revels There by Catherynne M. Valente
Amazon | Goodreads
Fantasy, 272 pages
Expected publication: October 2nd 2012 by Feiwel & Friends
September has longed to return to Fairyland after her first adventure there. And when she finally does, she learns that its inhabitants have been losing their shadows—and their magic—to the world of Fairyland Below. This underworld has a new ruler: Halloween, the Hollow Queen, who is September’s shadow. And Halloween does not want to give Fairyland’s shadows back.

Fans of Valente’s bestselling, first Fairyland book will revel in the lush setting, characters, and language of September’s journey, all brought to life by fine artist Ana Juan. Readers will also welcome back good friends Ell, the Wyverary, and the boy Saturday. But in Fairyland Below, even the best of friends aren’t always what they seem. . . .



***GIVEAWAY***
To celebrate the release of the second Fairyland book (and thanks to the awesome folks at Macmillan!), I have a paperback copy of The Girl Who Circumnavigated Fairyland in a Ship of Her Own Making AND 1 hardcover copy of the sequel, The Girl Who Fell Beneath Fairyland and Led the Revels There to giveaway to 1 lucky winner!

  • US/CAN only
  • Runs through October 7th, 2012
  • Fill out the Rafflecopter form below and leave a comment to enter!!
  • See Rafflecopter for full giveaway Rules and Regualtions.
  • Good luck!!
Don't forget to stop by my review of The Girl Who Fell Beneath Fairyland and Led the Revels There!!
And find Catherynne online at her website and her twitter!
Want more chances to win? Make sure you check out the other tour stops for the Fairyland Blog Tour!



a Rafflecopter giveaway

30 comments:

  1. You majored in scraps of broken Greek? That's what I want to do! Yay for classicists (and great guest post, by the way).

    ReplyDelete
  2. LOVE this post. I think it's the mark of a truly great author when I can enjoy their work, even when I don't see all the references to other things interlaced throughout the text. I picked up on a lot of the references to other children's lit. classics in Circumnavigated, but I'm sure there are a SLEW I missed as well -- but it didn't hamper my enjoyment of the book's nonsense and whimsy at all. I seriously can't wait to get my hands on Fell Beneath, and if I don't win this giveaway, you can bet I'll be out there buying it on the day of its release. :)

    ReplyDelete
  3. I love this post! I love the use of the words "frumious bandersnatch', and for some reason, as I read them, I sounded it out in my head with an british accent lol!

    I love reading your reviews for books like these ones Misty, you can read your enthusiasm on the screen, I would die to be able to formulate reviews like you can.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Ha! All it takes is some serious procrastination skills, a penchant for talking to yourself, and some hectic, furious typing...

      Oh, and frumious bandersnatch us from the Jabberwocky. =)

      Delete
  4. Nonsense is serious work -- and you do it so well!

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  5. I love Cat's nonsense. My favorite examples actually come from outside her works for kids in The Orphan's Tales.

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  6. "Deep Story" is exactly the phrase I've been looking for in conversations with friends over the last few weeks. Books that tap into the Deep Story have a certain feel to them that's difficult to duplicate.

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  7. Kids love "nonsense" and so do I!

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  8. Well thanks Cat. That was the best explanation of nonsense in classic, and modern, literature I've ever read. Very enjoyable indeed.

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  9. Some days are just meant to be nonsensical. Thanks for the article.

    Gayle
    scmema at yahoo dot com

    ReplyDelete
  10. This was a great post. I can't wait to read this book! I am so excited. I completely agree that kids love nonsense. One of my favorite quotes from Alice in Wonderland is "If I had a world of my own, everything would be nonsense."

    -Laura

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  11. Wonderful post. I really enjoyed how nonsense was defined. I loved The Girl Who Circumnavigated and I am very excited to read this one.

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  12. LOVE this whole post! Nonsense really is a derogatory term but good nonsense is great, which is what Valente has shown. Thanks for sharing. :D

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  13. Great guest post! And I've been wanting to read this series basically since I heard the title of the first one, so I'm super-psyched for a chance to win.

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  14. This post was beautiful and inspiring and made me even more excited for this series.

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