A Watcher in the Woods

A Watcher in the Woods

First edition cover art
Author Florence Engel Randall
Country United States
Language English
Genre Young-adult fiction, science fiction, Gothic, mystery
Publisher Atheneum Books
Publication date
1976
Media type Print (Hardcover)
Pages 229
ISBN 0-689-30511-7
OCLC 1530915
LC Class PZ7.R1565 Wat

A Watcher in the Woods is a 1976 mystery novel by Florence Engel Randall that was published by Atheneum Books.

It was re-released by Scholastic Book Services in 1980 a new title, The Watcher in the Woods (ISBN 0-590-31334-7) to tie-in with Walt Disney Studios' film adaptation with this new, slightly altered name.

Plot

The Carstairs family needs a house and the big old brick and stucco place in the country seemed perfect. Why then was Jan so unhappy about it? What was she afraid of? What was in woods beyond? She had felt it the very first day, walking up to the door. She had known the watcher was there as they knocked and waited for Mrs. Aylwood to come. And the little old woman, glancing at the woods, had known it was there too. Of course they bought the house. Jan had known they would. It was her mother's kind of house. Yet it was Jan who had made the purchase possible. Mrs. Aylwood, who was selling the house only because she had to, had talked to Jan and said, "I'll have to take a chance on you." What chance was that? Moving in, Jan felt the watcher still, but the only concrete evidence was a rash of broken mirrors-all with a large X across the middle. Not until the family went on a picnic near the old pond on the property did more clues come, and then they came as puzzles to be solved, as mysteries to be understood, as incredible facts to be absorbed, and as desperate need begging for prompt action. The universe is full of surprises, and Jan's watcher was one of the most amazing.

Characters

Jan (Janet) Carstairs: the fifteen-year-old daughter, she had the ability to "sense" the watcher. The main protagonist of the story, she struggles diligently to find out who or what the watcher is.

Ellie (Eleanor) Carstairs: the seven-year-old daughter, she has the ability to "hear" the watcher but when she transcribes the watcher's messages, they appear in a form of mirror writing (reversed).

Professor Paul Carstairs: the father of the family, it was his acceptance of a position at a Massachusetts university that caused the family to move from Ohio. Along with Jan, he is witness to the watcher's ability to communicate using a television set. He's fond of midnight snacks.

Mrs. Paul (Kate) Carstairs: the mother of the family, her original concern was that she find a house with a kitchen large enough to eat in, a fireplace in the living room, and a separate dining room. She discovered the first broken mirror with an X after her compact fell out of her purse. A practical woman, she doesn't want to think about the happenings in and around her household, but she can't stop herself.

Mrs. David (Anne Sinclair) Aylwood: the unwilling seller of the house, she has the ability to "see" the watcher. A widow. Her daughter Karen disappeared fifty years before the Carstairs family moved in. Mrs. Aylwood taught the concept of the alphabet and words to the watcher soon after she appeared because she believed the watcher "came from Karen". She moves into a nearby convalescent home after selling her house to the Carstairs. At the end of the story, she goes to the watcher's world.

Karen Aylwood: a fifteen-year-old who vanished without a trace one morning. A bright and popular young lady, she was known to love the pond in the woods on her family's property. At the end of the book she's still in the Watcher's world. Its believed she and her mother were reunited there.

Mark Fleming: the nineteen-year-old neighbor boy who is hired to redo the kitchen floor. Mark gives Ellie the puppy which she christens "Nerak". He provides a sounding board for Jan when she tries to solve the mystery of the watcher. He brings Mrs. Aylwood back to her former home and prepares a wheelchair to carry her into the woods.

Mr. and Mrs. Fleming: Mark's parents and the Carstairs' nearest neighbors. They have a farm with chickens. Mrs. Fleming tells Jan the story of Karen's disappearance, as she heard it from her mother-in-law.

Mrs. Thayer: the real estate agent, she is aware that there is something unusual about the Aylwood place but she tries to dismiss the stories as local gossip.

Wilbur Middleton: a local carpenter, he is convinced that a dryad inhabites the woods. (Mentioned by name only)

The Watcher: a female alien humanoid-child. She was described to have a pointy chin, an upturned nose and wore a long flowing robe. Fifty years before, her parents had taken her to a ceremonial coming-of-age ritual on their home planet in which she was to view earth, but Karen, during her walk, was too near the portal when it opened and the two changed places. She is here as an observer and communicates with her race through telepathy. She is able to communicate with Ellie because they are both children. Fifty years on our planet equals only a day on hers. Her attempts at communication are meant to convey that the door between both worlds will soon be open. The watcher opts to stay until the next opening of the portal in order for Mrs. Aylwood to use this "going-forth" to reunite with Karen in the alien's home world.

Release

A Watcher in the Woods received its first edition printing by Atheneum Books in March 1976.[1] The book was reprinted under the title The Watcher in the Woods in 1980 as a tie-in with the film version by Scholastic Books.

Reception

Kirkus Reviews gave the film a negative review, criticizing the protagonist of the novel, and saying: "The watcher has something to do with time warps and immortality and, ultimately of course, God, but Jan's responses are so sophomorically wooden that one longs for the comparatively forthcoming poltergeist of The Almost Year (1971). A step backwards. . . into the void."[2]

Film adaptation

The novel was adapted to film in 1980 by Walt Disney Pictures. The Watcher in the Woods is now considered by many to be a cult classic, and is further known for the rewritings, re-shootings, and re-editings of the film's conclusion after it was pulled from theatres, as well as the removal of the original opening credits, which were replaced by new scenes filmed by a different, uncredited director.

References

  1. "A Watcher in the Woods: Florence Engel Randall". Amazon. Retrieved March 9, 2016.
  2. Staff (March 15, 1976). "A Watcher in the Woods by Florence Engel Randall". Kirkus Reviews. Retrieved March 9, 2016.
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