It was with terrible sadness that I read the news that Eva Ibbotson died yesterday.
Ellen Potter's The Kneebone Boy
and Suzanne Selfors
's novels continue of the tradition of "magical whimsy" that Ibbotson did so well.
I never read an Ibbotson novel that I didn't love.The closest I've ever come, as an adult, to recreating that time of reading "unconscious delight" that I knew as a child was when I was reading her works.
Reading Ibbotson is like taking a vacation to a time and world apart. Luckily I have still not read them all. I have many more trips to look forward to.
Yes, such sad, sad news. I loved The Secret of Platform 13 (and still recommend it to Harry Potter fans, all the time) and so many of her other works.
ReplyDeleteMM - I agree. She was just wonderful. The descriptions of food in Star of Kazan and literally mouthwatering.
ReplyDeleteI've loved her books too.
ReplyDeleteSomeone who's on the Maud Hart Lovelace listserv I've been on for years sent us a link to a marvelous piece in the Manchester Guardian she wrote several years ago about what libraries had done for her. It might have made a good book itself!
LL- what a fantastic article! Thank you so much for sharing it.
ReplyDeleteI just recently discovered Eva Ibbotson myself, and I have been thoroughly delighted by her books. I'm currently reading The Dragonfly Pool (another one with Kevin Hawkes cover art), and it's just darling so far.
ReplyDeleteI'm sad to hear of her passing. Thanks for a great post.
Andrea- I have not read The Dragonfly Pool yet. I'm glad I still have more of her books to discover. Her books for teens/grownups have a nostalgic sweetness and that same canny humor. I have many of those still to read too.
ReplyDeleteThe Mental Floss blog linked to her obit in the NY Times. Last paragraph is hysterical:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/28/books/28ibbotson.html
@anonymous. The last paragraph: Good gad!
ReplyDelete