Unlike thousands of children in the then Soviet Union, I didn't read Geoffrey Trease's books as a child. Trease's first novel for children, Bows Against the Barons, was published in 1934 by a small left-wing press. It was a Marxist-Leninist take on the Robin Hood legend and it didn't make much headway at first, possibly because of the frontispiece illustration of a mutilated corpse hanging 'from a Sherwood oak' which many parents told Trease they had to tear out before giving the book to their children. George Orwell liked the book when he eventually discovered it in 1940, and also admired Trease's 1940 adult novel Only Natural. Unfortunately a warehouse containing every copy of Only Natural was destroyed by a German bomb. The children's novel, Cue for Treason, met with a similar fate, though this book went on to be very successful. But Bows Against the Barons was not going to find its way into British classrooms either. As Trease says in his autobiography, 'Teachers felt safe only with authors who had been a long time dead.'
Not so in the Soviet Union. Bows Against the Barons was published there in English in what we might call today a pirated edition, as Russia had never subscribed to the international copyright convention. Royalties were earned, but they were in roubles and they were frozen in Russia. The only way to spend the roubles was to go to the Soviet Union and so Trease and his wife, Marion spent five months there, travelling extensively and giving talks and lectures. While he was there his book was translated into Russian and 100,000 copies were printed by the state publisher.
Trease wrote three volumes of autobiography and in the first of them, A Whiff of Burnt Boats, he sets out with remarkable clarity his own view of childhood and of writing for children. He says: 'My becoming a children's writer was an accident, for it was in politics, not children, that I was then mainly interested. I wrote because there was something I wanted to say, a respectable motive when writing for adults, but at that period suspect in a children's author . . .'
He goes on to say that he has 'never shared the common English view that the young of any species is inherently more interesting and important than the mature. I was never concerned with children as a separate (and in many eyes enviable) race absorbed in a special and limited world of their own.'
The result of this is that Trease feels a good deal of freedom to indulge his own points of view and perhaps even hobby-horses in his children's fiction. This became very clear to me when I found a copy of Under Black Banner in a second-hand bookshop. I was pleased to find it because the books in the Black Banner series are hard to find and expensive. I was on a bit of a roll with finding Geoffrey Trease books as I'd found a lovely copy of The Red Towers of Granada a few weeks before. Not only was this book almost like new, but it was signed by the author with an inscription to Evelyn Shrifte.
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The red towers of Granada with the Sierra Nevada behind. |
Evelyn Shrifte was the president of the New York publishing house Vanguard Press for 36 years from 1952 until 1988. She was one of the first women to head a publishing company and published the first books of Saul Bellow, Joyce Carol Oates and Dr Seuss. She was also the US publisher of many of Geoffrey Trease's books, including The Red Towers of Granada.
I'd love to know how a completely pristine copy of the book, complete with inscription, ended up in the Oxfam bookshop in Marlborough. And if you want a bit more about The Red Towers of Granada I wrote about it on this blog a few years back.
The Black Banner series came about as a result of a meeting with some girls after a school visit:
"Two schoolgirls buttonholed me afterwards. 'Do you ever write school stories?’ 'No' I said. 'Haven’t you got enough already? All those midnight feasts in the dorm, those secret passages and hooded figures -’ They cut me off with grave courtesy, 'They didn’t mean that stuff. Why didn’t I write true-to-life stories, about real boys and girls, going to day-schools as nearly everybody did? No one seemed to write that sort.' Out of that five-minute conversation came, a year or two later, No Boats on Bannermere and eventually its four sequels, three hundred thousand words, the writing spread intermittently over nine years, I was glad I had been to Millom." (from Laughter at the Door, 1974)
The funny thing about these books is that, unlike with Trease's historical fiction, the voices of the children sound dated. I suspect this is because, when Trease came to write a modern school story, he relied too heavily on his own experience at Nottingham High School in the 1920s. For example:
'I liked Nelson. He was rough—lots of our chaps are, and never take a very high polish—but he always struck me as dead straight.'
Or this: 'I groaned. Had the girl no sense? How can a chap in the same school ask another chap for his autograph?'
I thought this seemed odd, so I looked at one of my favourite books from the period set in a boarding school—William Mayne's A Swarm in May—and there the boys talk without any kind of affectation, just the occasional school catch-phrase and a good deal of punning. So, that was the first thing that struck me about these Black Banner books— that while setting out to be modern they somehow managed to be very old-fashioned.
The second thing I noticed, and you can hardly fail to notice this, was the degree to which the author is pushing various agendas. One of these is a matter that was clearly of great importance to rural communities at the time that Under Black Banner was published: the return to farmers of land seized by the military for training during the war years. At the same time, Trease is very keen to put over a mountain safety message, and at one point here I felt a strange sensation of deja-vu.
Some years ago I wrote a series of novels for the Scout Association. They were published under the name Jonathan Rock (not my idea) and presented their writer with the same problems that Trease faces in his book. The Scouts have to get into difficulties without being too stupid or reckless and then get themselves out of trouble. Messages have to be got across without damaging the excitement of the story. I can only think that in these books Geoffrey Trease was still learning his trade, because, by the time he wrote The Red Towers of Granada in 1966 he had completely succeeded in blending message with thrills. As you can see from the following quote, he was far from achieving that in 1951 with Under Black Banner.
'It was Tim who taught us not to sit on a hill-top and chuck stones over the edge: there might be someone climbing up, out of sight, and quite a small stone would kill them if it had fallen far enough. [ . . .] He had stopped us, too, from yelling our heads off for the mere fun of hearing echoes: people a mile off might mistake our yells for shouts of distress. [ . . .] We used to think Tim was rather an old fuss-pot, but we don't now . . . Thoughtless people can be an awful nuisance, up on the fells.'
Excellent messages, but definitely not thrilling. More like a public service announcement.
Under Black Banner is illustrated by Richard Kennedy and I strongly recommend his memoir A Boy at the Hogarth Press. There's a Slightly Foxed edition of this book. Kennedy went to work for Leonard and Virginia Woolf in Bloomsbury in 1926. Just a few years later Geoffrey Trease was in Bloomsbury too, trying to scrape a living as a writer.
If you're interested in Geoffrey Trease there's an excellent website called The Trease Project, and there is plenty more about this influential and very prolific author to be found online.