Jan. 27th, 2012

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Although this work was first published in the twentieth century, I am sneaking it in as it began its life as an illustrated letter sent to a sick child in the 1890s.

As is well known, Potter lived a life of extreme isolation. Her parents’ ideas of what a middle class girl should do precluded pretty much every human activity, except, as it turned out, keeping small pets and doing watercolour illustrations of them. So she obsessively studied animals (including dissecting them and reconstructing their bodies - which her parents did not know about) and practised drawing.

Which I suppose is all to the good for the world because eventually it occurred to her that her little tales could be printed. She paid for the first edition herself and then it was picked up and she became a publishing phenomenon.

The nicest thing about the Peter Rabbit books is, I think, that they are deliberately designed to be small enough to be held by a small child. This fits with her aesthetic which includes many extreme close ups done in miniature.

The illustrations are, of course, fabulous and, I believe, reliable best sellers in postcard form at the Tate. They show anatomical exactness and plausible animal behaviour, while being in a fantasy world. The moment when Peter loses his shoes and runs on all fours and goes faster is an example of the merging of the two worlds.

The prose is also great, with only a spare sentence or two on each page. Her style echoes the James version Bible, especially her fondness for semi-colons.

Potter does not talk down at all. There is a death joke on third page. And the vocabulary is great. I love the sparrows who implore him to exert himself.

Sleep

Jan. 27th, 2012 08:35 pm
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Had a hideous day yesterday. Not enough sleep the night before, then nowhere to go in the hideous heat on a public holiday so stuck at home with the cranky kids.

I was stuck at the bottom of the Mazlo hierarchy of needs, so tired that I literally kept nodding my head down and then jerking back from the micro-sleeps. I was just above the need for oxygen, water and not having a bullet in the head.

Ruby just went off in the evening - not sure what went wrong (except that I was tired and in a terrible mood) but two and a half hours of screaming when she was held, screaming when she was not held and screaming when she was patted. Jesus.

Absolutely rotten parenting on my behalf, dealing with it with anger and resentment. Poor Pearl also unable to sleep in her new room next to the banshee.

Have yet to decide if it is a good idea to have them in together. Pearl calms down if I sit in the room with her quietly; if I do that Ruby gets excited. Very bad combination.

All the books on decluttering talk of the feeling of satisfaction in clearing things away, but frankly I just feel exhausted and unsure.

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