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Five Children on the Western Front

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The story looks at the war but also Psammead's past crimes as a God and his need to find redemption before he can get his powers back. The other approach would be to take these children more as symbolic of a generation, to use the iconic nature of these characters to serve as avatars of a generation, heightening the experience of a generation into this idea of four carefree moppets plunged into the worst ind of adult reality. With short, accessible chapters, this is the story of how a stray dog, a self-obsessed cat and a war-ready pigeon named Bomber embark on a perilous mission for the sake of two orphaned children. Nowhere in the book do I really find these two ideas of the Edwardian child and the 1910s adult being brought to bear on each other. We've skipped ahead a decade and along with Cyril, Robert, Anthea, Jane and The Lamb (real name Hilary!

The idea was that the children and their friends all conveniently represented people that the Psammead had wronged in the past -- warrior maiden, escaped slave, scholar, etc -- and the Psammead could make amends through them. Starting off a caring young girl, and becoming a hospital nurse in London, Anthea is a very sweet character. Transplanting these familiar characters – bookish Robert, cheerful, decent Cyril – into the trenches tugs at the heartstrings in a way that bare statistics can't.There is another main character, who, if you think about it, is the most important character of all. And in Saunders' book the four older children from Nesbit's books (Cyril, Anthea, Jane and Robert) have all reached young adulthood, ranging from 16-21 at the start of the story. No lessons, no underlining moral, no didactic tone relating to what children should and should not do. The sand fairy of their childhood has become a creature of stories and memory - until he suddenly reappears.

Have you ever wondered what happened to the Five Children and It characters when the First World War began?The Psammead’s confessions mirror what is happening in the background of the children’s lives - the Great War, which is where Cyril is fighting. sometimes I get into stupid dumb idiotic moods where I desperately look for a good book to read bc I read/watched something that completely changed my brain chemistry (in this case it was Why Didn't They Ask Evans? It should come as no surprise that WWI affects them, although somehow you don't think of that when you read the original books. Before this last adventure ends, all will be changed, and the two younger children will have seen the Great War from every possible viewpoint – factory-workers, soldiers and sailors, nurses and the people left at home, and the war’s impact will be felt right at the heart of their family.

She refuses to think less of the Psammead, whatever he has done: ‘I’ll never think less of you’ and when the Psammead finally prepares to leave, Edie’s words will break a little piece of your heart off: ‘I’m sorry, I can’t help crying… It’s just that I love you so much! One expects a book containing fairies to be filled with magic and wonder; much like the original, except in this one, the fairy has lost his magic. Suddenly we’ve an author who dares to meld the light-hearted fantasy of Nesbit’s classic with the sheer gut-wrenching horror of The War to End All Wars.

There's a somewhat heavier book locked away in this one, and I can't help thinking it would have been just a little bit more satisfying. There's no sharp contrast felt either in the worlds of the original books - that golden, Edwardian, Kentish summer, and the world of a Britain at war. This is the saddest of the books with the focus on World War I and how it impacts the Pemberton family, but there are still adventures for the younger children with the Psammead. One afternoon, when the children are granted one more wish, they find themselves in the study of their old friend, the Professor named Jimmy in the year 1930. In this centenary year, Faber has reissued Nesbit's Five Children and It alongside Saunders's sequel, Five Children on the Western Front.

I absolutely loved the 5 Children and It series when I was younger, and avoided reading this book for a while as I didn't want to tarnish my memories of the original. I am truly sorry to say this , I mean no offence to the lovers of this book,but I dont reccomend this book. Their fifth and sixth siblings are a good deal younger, still children as we find them: Hilary/the Lamb (only a baby in Nesbit's books) is 12 as the book proper starts.There are lots of humorous bits mixed in with the more sober moments, and the scenes of war are not a so graphic that they will scare young readers. This fits in nicely with the originals but I must admit, it was blindly obvious to me that a character that was supposed to be a cockney, was coming out with these kind of archaic sayings too!

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