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The Daydreamer (novel)

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Country
  
United Kingdom

Publication date
  
1994

Pages
  
144

Originally published
  
1994

Illustrator
  
Anthony Browne

Publisher
  
Jonathan Cape

3.7/5
Goodreads

Language
  
English

Media type
  
Print

ISBN
  
0-224-03671-8

Author
  
Ian McEwan

Page count
  
144

The Daydreamer (novel) t1gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcTt5GAmXzg7svaPfX

Genres
  
Fiction, Fantasy, Children's literature, Speculative fiction

Similar
  
Works by Ian McEwan, Anthony Browne books, Fiction books

The Daydreamer is a 1994 children's novel by British author Ian McEwan. Illustrated by Anthony Browne. The novel was first published by Jonathan Cape. It draws its plot directly from the Rankin/Bass movie, The Daydreamer (1966) in which a young boy daydreams and enters a world of Hans Christian Andersen stories. It is considered to be McEwan's first book for children, or second if taking into account the picture book Rose Blanche (1985). Critics praised McEwan's imagination, but noted that the book had high "sweetness-and-light levels".

Contents

Synopsis

The book comprises seven interlinked stories about a young boy, Peter Fortune, whose daydreams place him into various fantastic situations: he discovers a cream that makes people vanish and makes his family disappear; conquers a bully on the thought that life was a dream so he had nothing to lose but to wake up, transforms into a cat and fights off a new tabby stray, transforms into his baby cousin and experiences the joys of being a toddler, a doll and gets his arm and leg ripped off to match a mangled doll, and, in the last story, an adult in which he discovers how boring adults are compared to kids. He is 10 years old at the start of the novel and 12 at the end.

Publication

The novel was first published by Jonathan Cape and has been translated into several languages. It has been reprinted by Vintage, amongst others. It is considered to be his first book for children, or second if taking into account the picture book Rose Blanche (1985), both illustrated by Anthony Browne.

McEwan read the stories to his children as he wrote them. In an interview he compared his child self to Peter, saying he was "quiet, pale, dreamy" and was someone who preferred having close friends.

Analysis

Eva Maria Mauter in her 2006 MA thesis Subjective Perspectives in Ian McEwan's Narrations writes that The Daydreamer gets neglected in treatment about McEwan's works because it is a children's novel.

David Malcolm in Understanding Ian McEwan (2002) writes that in the novel Peter, in his unconstrained world, moves between ordinary and impossibly fantastic situations. He compares it to First Love, Last Rites (1975), McEwan's first collection of short stories, because they both contain exciting, frightening, and loose worlds.

Reception

American novelist David Leavitt in The New York Times praises McEwan's imagination, but writes that "fantastic passages" are infrequent and a larger portion is devoted to charting the "everyday calamities of Peter's suburban life", that the staples of the genre "get dutifully dragged out for a rehash." He opines that like most authors of adult fiction who then went on to write children's books, McEwan has a tendency to talk down to the reader. Ending the review, Leavitt concluded that McEwan is at his best when he simply writes, not when he is "writing for children". Paul Taylor writes in The Independent that McEwan, whose early novels concerned "dark and deviant" material, was "too strenuously engaged in keeping the sweetness-and-light levels high". Robert Winder in the New Statesman calls the novel a "lovely children's book ... which captures the gulfs between children and grown-ups more vividly than he does [in Atonement]". Tom Shone in The New York Times writes that the book "had a nice Roald Dahl-like streak of malice to it".

The book was marketed as an adult book in Italy, where it sold well.

literacymatters.com includes the book as part of a lesson plan for primary school teachers.

The book was adapted for BBC Radio by Ivan Jones in 2008.

References

The Daydreamer (novel) Wikipedia