Keren has already written a lovely post about it, but I still wanted to add a small tribute to Louise Rennison who died last month. Being part of the 'Georgia Nicholson generation', it was moving to see what seemed like the whole of Facebook (well, at least the female half of it) shedding tears, but also sharing the funniest extracts, at the news. It's difficult to think about Louise Rennison without smiling - even at such a sad time.
I've never actually read Georgia Nicholson's diary in English. In the early 2000s, when the first book was left for me under the Christmas tree by a prescient Santa, it was in the form of Mon nez, mon chat, l'amour et moi: "My nose, my cat, love and me": a much more prudish title than the original. I read, reread and rereread the whole series in French throughout my teenage years.
Thankfully, Catherine Gibert's translation for Gallimard was exceptionally good. It takes a bit of genius to translate funny books in general, but it takes a lot of genius to translate funny books for teenagers. To keep up with Rennison, Gibert had to make up many words (not an easy exercise in French), twist and break traditional syntax (even less so); she pretty much invented a 'funny teenage voice' in French.
The neon-coloured covers were a bit of a novelty in the very ivory/cream/white aesthetic of the French literary landscape of the time (even for children):
Gallimard had hired, to illustrate them, one of the punchiest and most famous French female cartoonists, Claire Brétécher, whose legendary renditions of slightly ugly, very endearing teenagers fit perfectly with the theme.
At the time, there were few authors in teenage literature who rang true, who were funny and modern and spoke to us. Louise Rennison was one of them, and my friends and I couldn't get enough of it. But interestingly, while everyone in the UK says that they found themselves in the books - that they identified with Georgia - for us French girls it was a very foreign world. We didn't have all-girls' schools, we didn't have uniforms, we had much less P.E. (seriously, I couldn't understand why Georgia was doing sports pretty much everyday - in France we had 2 hours a week, and spent them half-heartedly playing ping-pong). And, at least in Paris, we didn't have those residential streets with cats sitting on walls - though I was familiar with that concept from Harry Potter. And what??? teenagers drove motorbikes???
Only later (when I arrived in the UK) did I realise that Georgia Nicholson's diary also gently mocked the British suburban middle-class, with its bored yummy mummies, its numerous opportunities for gossip, its populations of slightly immodest teenage girls looking for love by rolling up their uniform skirts. All of this very British lore felt just as unreal to me as the daily routine of Narnian fawns.
Yet it was still hilarious, and I still identified, because there's no need for social reality to make immediate sense when everything about the characters and their reactions feels so true. Rennison's teenagers were entirely contextual, and absolutely universal. They could not have been anything else than British, and yet they were every teenager in the world's best friends.
Louise Rennison was a teenage-literature genius, a redeemer of sad days, an exquisite social satirist, one of the best comedy writers in this country. I'm very sad I never got to meet her and thank her in person.
_____________________________________
Clementine Beauvais writes in French and
English. She blogs here about children's literature and academia.
Showing posts with label Louise Rennison. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Louise Rennison. Show all posts
Monday, 28 March 2016
à plus, Louise Rennison! - Clémentine Beauvais
Labels:
Clementine Beauvais,
diary,
Funny Books,
Louise Rennison,
teen fiction
Tuesday, 8 March 2016
The Girl Power of Louise Rennison. By Keren David
One of the first things I did when I first began writing books for teenagers, seven years ago, was to sign up as a parent volunteer helper at my daughter's school library. It'd be interesting, I thought, to spend time with children who didn't find reading easy or attractive. If I could find out how to make them enthusiastic readers, I might learn something crucial when it came to writing for them.
The school, a big comprehensive in north London, wanted parents to come and help Y7 pupils deemed to have fallen behind with their reading.We were each assigned two students, who we'd meet on alternate weeks to talk about their reading, listen to them read aloud and generally find strategies to encourage them to read more fluently and more often.
One of my first readers was the lovely Keja. She steamed into the library to meet me, absolutely furious that she'd been chosen.
'I LOVE reading,' she declared. 'I LOVE books. I read all the time! I shouldn't be here!'
It turned out that Keja's love of books and reading was quite recent. Her aunt had given her a book for her birthday that she'd fallen in love with. Since then she'd read two more in the same series.One book was the key to a whole library for Keja.
Which book performed this transformation? Angus, Thongs and Full-Frontal Snogging by Louise Rennison, a completely hilarious account of one Georgia Nicholson's life at school, chasing boys, falling out with friends and battling with her parents.
Seven years on, and I'm now Patron of Reading at that same school. Last week I spoke at three assemblies for World Book Day. I told them about Keja and the way one book made her fall in love with reading. And I told them the terribly sad news that Louise Rennison's death had just been announced. There was shock and sadness on so many young girls' faces, testament to Louise's continued popularity.
Louise Rennison made girls laugh. She made me laugh so much that I fell off a sofa. In Georgia Nicholson, the girl who dresses up as an olive for a fancy dress party, she created someone who Keja and I both identified with, even though our schooldays were separated by thirty years. Georgia Nicholson is the female Adrian Mole - I think she's funnier - and her friends are a younger, girl version of the In-Betweeners.
I'd bet a large amount that Keja wasn't the only girl who fell in love with reading because of Louise Rennison. Her books - unpretentious, clever, honest, true and completely hilarious every time - dispensed a subtle feminism along with the snogging.
In America they gave her books glossaries, but her uncompromising Britishness didn't deter readers. The exuberant bounciness and inventive word play of Georgia's voice feels effortless as you read it - but as we writers know, that easiness takes a great deal of skill.
I am so sad that I never got to meet Louise, and tell her about the impact she made on Keja. We UKYA writers owe her a huge debt. I hope that the publishing world will find a suitable way to honour her memory. 'She who laughs last, laughs the laughiest,' she wrote. Louise was the laughiest of us all.
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| Best party outfit ever... |
The school, a big comprehensive in north London, wanted parents to come and help Y7 pupils deemed to have fallen behind with their reading.We were each assigned two students, who we'd meet on alternate weeks to talk about their reading, listen to them read aloud and generally find strategies to encourage them to read more fluently and more often.
One of my first readers was the lovely Keja. She steamed into the library to meet me, absolutely furious that she'd been chosen.
'I LOVE reading,' she declared. 'I LOVE books. I read all the time! I shouldn't be here!'
It turned out that Keja's love of books and reading was quite recent. Her aunt had given her a book for her birthday that she'd fallen in love with. Since then she'd read two more in the same series.One book was the key to a whole library for Keja.
Which book performed this transformation? Angus, Thongs and Full-Frontal Snogging by Louise Rennison, a completely hilarious account of one Georgia Nicholson's life at school, chasing boys, falling out with friends and battling with her parents.
Seven years on, and I'm now Patron of Reading at that same school. Last week I spoke at three assemblies for World Book Day. I told them about Keja and the way one book made her fall in love with reading. And I told them the terribly sad news that Louise Rennison's death had just been announced. There was shock and sadness on so many young girls' faces, testament to Louise's continued popularity.
Louise Rennison made girls laugh. She made me laugh so much that I fell off a sofa. In Georgia Nicholson, the girl who dresses up as an olive for a fancy dress party, she created someone who Keja and I both identified with, even though our schooldays were separated by thirty years. Georgia Nicholson is the female Adrian Mole - I think she's funnier - and her friends are a younger, girl version of the In-Betweeners.
I'd bet a large amount that Keja wasn't the only girl who fell in love with reading because of Louise Rennison. Her books - unpretentious, clever, honest, true and completely hilarious every time - dispensed a subtle feminism along with the snogging.In America they gave her books glossaries, but her uncompromising Britishness didn't deter readers. The exuberant bounciness and inventive word play of Georgia's voice feels effortless as you read it - but as we writers know, that easiness takes a great deal of skill.
I am so sad that I never got to meet Louise, and tell her about the impact she made on Keja. We UKYA writers owe her a huge debt. I hope that the publishing world will find a suitable way to honour her memory. 'She who laughs last, laughs the laughiest,' she wrote. Louise was the laughiest of us all.
Tuesday, 10 July 2012
3 - Keren David on "women's" & "girl's" fiction prizes
Should there be a literary prize specifically for women? Does the Queen of Teen award celebrate or denigrate? Keren tackles these questions and more, in a wonderfully nuanced and well-argued post that is our third most-read:
The link to most-read post number 2 will be here in an hour!
Labels:
Anthony McGowan,
Cathy Cassidy,
girls' books,
Hilary McKay,
Karen McCombie,
Keren David,
Louise Rennison,
Queen of Teen,
top five,
Zoe Marriott
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