They told Madeleine
L’Engle her book was too strange. Nevertheless, she persisted.
In the summer of my thirteenth year, my
family moved to the country, away from the small town where I’d lived my whole
life. Away from my little friends. Our small town was urban, right outside of
Philadelphia. Our new place was in the country. Sure, it smelled wonderful,
like pine trees. Sure, wild strawberries grew in the fields, but there weren’t
any kids in sight. I wanted to go back to my little town, where playmates were
always right outside the front door.
My mother could see I needed company. Her solution was
inspired. She handed me a book, A Wrinkle
in Time by Madeleine L’Engle. I was already an avid reader, but I had never
encountered anything so absorbing, the beginning of my obsession with science
fiction and science fiction fantasy. My imagination was on fire. My mind was
racing. The heroine was a 13-year-old girl just like me! I read it once, then
immediately twice. This book taught me about heroism, about love. I wanted to meet
the happy, gentle centaurs that populated one of the book’s fantastic planets.
Recently, I gave my step-granddaughter a copy of A Wrinkle in Time. My granddaughter is a
cool kid. Climbs to the tops of mountains. Excellent at mathematics. What
better book for her than the story of Meg, a brave girl close to her age, also
great at math? Meg rescued her father from a planet enslaved by an evil disembodied
brain with powerful telepathic abilities. The brain, known as IT, exerted
hypnotic control over the inhabitants’ minds.
Meg had the help of her classmate Calvin, her brother
Charles and her friendly neighbors Mrs. Whatsit, Mrs. Who and Mrs. Which, who
were actually alien centaurs disguised as humans. This crew used the
“tesseract,” (sound familiar?) to bend the space-time continuum and slip
through a wrinkle in time to search for Meg’s long-lost father. Through all
their dangerous adventures, Meg comes into her own. When Charles is in danger,
Meg steps up to show how strong she’s become.
I hope my granddaughter loves this book as much as I do. I
hope it helps her develop a life-long love of reading. And if she tells me she
likes it, I’ll tell her the challenge faced by Madeleine L’Engle to get it
published. She was rejected by 26 houses. According to a well-sourced Wikipedia
article, publishers thought the book was too unusual, with too much science. They
thought its stark presentation of evil was too dark for young adult fiction. In
fact, several paragraphs comparing the enforced conformity of the evil brain’s
planet to totalitarian regimes were cut from the final draft.
L’Engle has also explained that female protagonists were
rare in science fiction at the time, making it a hard sell.
Lucky for the Science Fiction Romance Brigade, those days
are over! And thank the writing gods that Madeleine L’Engle persisted. Her book
went on to win the Newbery Medal and, according to Wikipedia, has been in
continuous print since it was published. The book even got a shout out at the 2016
Democratic National Convention, when Chelsea Clinton mentioned it as a book
that influenced her as a child. From one generation to the next. I should tell
my granddaughter about Chelsea, too.
The views expressed in this post are those of the author, Libby Doyle, and don't necessarily reflect those of the SFR Brigade.
Check out Libby Doyle's website here: http://libbydoyle.com
Books by Libby Doyle:
Thanks for hosting me today, Brigadeers!
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