Kit's Wilderness

Kit's Wilderness
Author David Almond
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Genre Young adult novel
Publisher Hodder & Stoughton
Publication date
1999
Media type Print (hardcover & paperback)
Pages 233 pp (first edition)
ISBN 0340727160
OCLC 43342540
LC Class PZ7.A448 Ki 1999[1]

Kit's Wilderness is a children's novel by David Almond, published by Hodder Children's Books in 1999. It is set in a fictional Northumberland town based on the former coal-mining towns the author knew as a child growing up in Tyne and Wear.[2] It was silver runner up for the Smarties Prize in ages category 9–11 years, highly commended for the Carnegie Medal, and shortlisted for the Guardian Prize.

In the U.S. it was published by Delacorte Press in 2000[1] and won the Michael L. Printz Award from the American Library Association, recognising the year's best book for young adults.[3]

Synopsis

Thirteen-year-old Kit and his family have moved back to Stoneygate to be with his grandfather, who is succumbing to Alzheimer's Disease, after Kit's Grandmother dies. His grandfather, an ex-miner, tells him about the town's coal-mining days and the hardships and disasters that were a part of his youth. Kit meets Allie Keenan, full of energy and life, but also shadowy John Askew and the dangerous 'game' he plays – a game called Death. Through playing the game, Kit comes to see the lost children of the mines and begins to connect his grandfather’s fading memories to his, his friends’ and Stoneygate's history.[4]

The Watsons are known as one of the "Old families" [5] because they have ancestors who worked in the mines before they were closed, such as Kit’s grandfather. Askew surrounds himself with characters that are from families who worked in the mines including Kit. Now that he is a part of Askew’s group, Kit is invited to play the game Death, in which they reenact the death of children in the mines.

Once chosen for Death, Kit undergoes a change; snapping at Allie on multiple occasions. Noting this change, his teacher Miss Bush follows him and uncovers the game. Askew is expelled from school for being the leader, and to escape his father, who is an alcoholic, runs away and lives in an abandoned mine shafts. Angry at Kit for ending the game and getting him expelled, Askew sends Bobby Carr, another character from the "Old families"[5] group, to bring Kit to the cave where they confront each other in the book’s climax.

After some big arguments reveal Askew’s madness at Kit, Kit then tells Askew about a story he "wrote for you[Askew]."[6] The story mirrors Askew’s life from the perspective of an early man named Lak, and while telling the story to him, they see ghosts from the story. When the tale concludes, the ghost takes a "part of me[Askew]"[7] and he is no longer mad. Allie finds the two of them in the mine after getting their location from Bobby, and they go back to town. Askew is accepted back into school to take art classes, his father stops drinking, and at the end of the novel, Kit’s grandfather dies. After he dies Kit decides to move on, knowing that his grandfather will be with him forever.

Characters

Background

Many of the elements from the story were taken from the author’s own life. In an interview he talked about how, in the town he grew up in, “We had a monument...[and]an old graveyard...to a pit disaster”[12] just like in the novel. He also based the game death on "children’s games I played."[12] In addition he "based the book on his own childhood in a northeast England mining community."[13]

Major themes and style

Kit’s Wilderness included conflicting opposites and important relationships. The Horn Book Magazine noted some themes, including "Light and dark, of life and death, [and] of remembering and forgetting."[9] An interview with the "power of friendship."[12] He went on to note the, "bravery of children."[12] and how it had played a central role in his writing.

Kit’s Wilderness uses style as both a literary element and to add another layer to the story. Enicia Fisher noted the "rare break from story-telling tradition,[in which] David Almond gives the ending away at the beginning."[13] He also made a point of the “Web of stories”[13] in the book that resulted from Kit’s story within the story. Enicia Fisher also described the story as a blend of “Magic and realism."[13]

Reception

Kit’s Wilderness received both positive and negative reviews, by being praised and criticized by critics. A review in the Forecasts newspaper praised the novel as "Awe inspiring."[14] Enicia Fisher described the internal storytelling as an "Imagistic tale,"[13] though it has been said that reading this book required a “Suspension of disbelief.”[14] The book was also called “Convoluted"[9] by the Horn Book Magazine. And yet, the School Library Journal praised Kit’s Wilderness for its "Otherworldliness."[15]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 "Kit's wilderness" (first U.S. edition). Library of Congress Catalog Record. Retrieved 2012-08-22.
  2. Interview with David Almond in January Magazine, February 2002.
  3. American Library Association: Michael L. Printz Winners and Honor Books . Retrieved 8 July 2009.
  4. Adapted from the synopsis of the book at hodderliterature.co.uk
  5. 1 2 3 4 Almond, p.10
  6. Almond, p.188
  7. Almond, p.203
  8. Almond, p.55
  9. 1 2 3 4 5 Bloom, Susan (1 March 2000). "Kit's Wilderness (Book Review)". Horn Book Magazine 76 (2). Retrieved 14 March 2012.
  10. Almond, p.57
  11. Almond, p.15
  12. 1 2 3 4 Odean, Kathleen (1 April 2001). "Mystic Man". School Library Journal 47 (4). Retrieved 15 March 2012.
  13. 1 2 3 4 5 Fisher, Enicia (6 April 2000). "A Dark Light in the Coal Mine of History". Christian Science Mnitor 92 (94). Retrieved March 14, 2012.
  14. 1 2 Roback, Brown, Diane, Jennifer (3 January 2000). "FORECASTS: CHILDREN'S BOOKS". Publishers weekly. Retrieved 14 March 2012.
  15. Fader, Ellen (1 March 2000). "GRADES 5 & UP: Fiction". School Library Journal (Portland) 46 (3). Retrieved 15 March 2012.
Citations

Almond, David (2000). Kit's Wilderness. New York: Laurel-Leaf Books. p. 229. ISBN 0-440-41605-1. 

External links

Awards
Preceded by
Monster
Michael L. Printz Award Winner
2001
Succeeded by
A Step From Heaven
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