The Woodland Idyll In Art And Illustration

Pookie (1946) was my mother’s favourite series of picturebooks when she was very young, and she has a hardback copy held together with yellowed sticky tape. This one before me is a much later version, which has come out since in soft cover.

I wonder if fairies will make a true comeback. The illustrations in this book are marvelous. Like many fairy books of its time, the world Pookie inhabits is magical, with woodland creatures living happily in treetrunks, and magical little creatures in mushrooms. It reminds me of the illustrations in The Magic Faraway tree, which was brought to life in colour by Georgina Hargreaves. The language is Blyton-esque, with character names such as ‘Nommy-Nee’ and ‘Primrose-Dell’, in a world where you’re likely to run into a ‘pie-man’ who easily loses his temper because you don’t have any money. Like Blyton, Wallace makes use of popular rhymes and older fairytales. Ivy Wallace was also no doubt influenced by Beatrix Potter. “Mother rabbit said Pookie was more trouble to her than Wiggletail, Swifflekinds, Twinkletoes, Brighteyes, Tomasina, Bobasina and Weeny-One all put together!” At one point Pookie meets a man who would like to turn him into a pie. It’s easy to forget that until Beatrix Potter, animals hadn’t really been personified in picturebooks. She started a trend which only now is starting to wane a little bit. Talking animals dressed in clothes are no longer novel in themselves.

As for the story of Pookie, I’m not sure it holds up so well for modern children. I think ideally it would benefit from fewer words to go with those stunning pictures. I wonder if post-war children were still interested in fairies at a slightly older age, when they could cope with all of those words, or if post-war children had longer attention spans due to an absence of television. Maybe both.

Pookie is a rabbit fairy: two cute things in one. He sets out to ‘seek his fortune’ even though he has no idea what a fortune looks like. Along the way he learns that ‘fortune’ means different things to different people. He is eventually taken in by a very kind human-looking girl called Belinda who exclaims, ‘Why, his tiny heart is broken!” She then mends him with a kiss and Pookie knows that he has found his fortune.

It would be unusual these days to find a picturebook in which a fairy rabbit is male gender, in which ‘goblin tailors sat cross-legged on their toadstools, stitching away at filmy fairy frocks made of scented flower petals’, but this story isn’t otherwise gender-bending. The working world (teachers, merchants) is of course typical of its time — populated with men —  and it would have to be a girl (a perfect wartime nurse in training) who tends to Pookie and mends his wounds, since kindness and love were not desirable traits in a man right after manly men saved us all in that war. Indeed, Belinda’s is a level of kindness I haven’t seen in any gender much, and even in modern children’s stories, kind boys are much more rare than kind girls, unless they’re also the introverted, shunned type. (The kind no boy would really want to emulate.)

And with lines such as, “Oh, Pookie, look at your wings now! All they needed was Love, Pookie! Look at them now!” this story is just a little bit twee for modern tastes. Or maybe just for my tastes. But I see why my little-girl-mum would have liked it.

Where Have You Been by Margaret Wise Brown with illustrations by Barbara Cooney, 1952
Fritz Baumgarten, Hoppel und Poppel, 1957
Fritz Baumgarten, Hoppel und Poppel, 1957
Fritz Baumgarten, Hoppel und Poppel, 1957
Fritz Baumgarten, Hoppel und Poppel, 1957
1979 THE ADVENTURES OF TIMOTHY AND NICKY – MARILYN NICKSO frontispiece
1979 THE ADVENTURES OF TIMOTHY AND NICKY – MARILYN NICKSO All the forest folk had a gay time at the party
1979 THE ADVENTURES OF TIMOTHY AND NICKY – MARILYN NICKSO All the forest folk had a gay time at the party
Rene Cloke (1904 – 1995) Little Folks’ Book of Nursery Rhymes (1962)
Woodland stories, Rene Cloke
Woodland stories, Rene Cloke
Molly Brett (1902-1990) Goodnight Time
I Can Read A Rainbow by Rene Cloke
Butterfly Land a picture book by Sibylle v. Olfers, text adapted from German by Helen Dean Fish 1931
Little Princess In The Wood 1909 Sibylle von Olfers, German Roman Catholic nun and illustrator
Little Princess In The Wood 1909 Sibylle von Olfers, German Roman Catholic nun and illustrator
Little Princess In The Wood 1909 Sibylle von Olfers, German Roman Catholic nun and illustrator
Little Princess In The Wood 1909 Sibylle von Olfers, German Roman Catholic nun and illustrator
Sibylle von Olfers illustrator for Mapje en Papje in het Hazenbosch (Map and Papje in the Hazenbosch) by Marie Hildebrandt Amsterdam 1900-1920

If you love the art nouveau borders of Sibylle v. Olfer’s illustrations, see more of her work in Beautiful Cosy Underground Scenes.

Butterfly Land a picture book by Sibylle v. Olfers, text adapted from German by Helen Dean Fish 1931
Butterfly Land a picture book by Sibylle v. Olfers, text adapted from German by Helen Dean Fish 1931
Butterfly Land a picture book by Sibylle v. Olfers, text adapted from German by Helen Dean Fish 1931
Angus Clifford Racey Helps (1913–1970)
CONTEMPORARY FICTION SET IN AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND (2023)

On paper, things look fine. Sam Dennon recently inherited significant wealth from his uncle. As a respected architect, Sam spends his days thinking about the family needs and rich lives of his clients. But privately? Even his enduring love of amateur astronomy is on the wane. Sam has built a sustainable-architecture display home for himself but hasn’t yet moved into it, preferring to sleep in his cocoon of a campervan. Although they never announced it publicly, Sam’s wife and business partner ended their marriage years ago due to lack of intimacy, leaving Sam with the sense he is irreparably broken.

Now his beloved uncle has died. An intensifying fear manifests as health anxiety, with night terrors from a half-remembered early childhood event. To assuage the loneliness, Sam embarks on a Personal Happiness Project:

1. Get a pet dog

2. Find a friend. Just one. Not too intense.

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