Playing Beatie Bow is a popular Australian children's novel, written by Ruth Park and first published on 31 January 1980.[1] It features a time slip in Sydney, Australia.
Author | Ruth Park |
---|---|
Language | English |
Genre | Children's novel |
Publisher | Thomas Nelson |
Publication date | 31 January 1980 |
Publication place | Australia |
Media type | |
Pages | 196 |
Plot summary
editLynette Kirk has been a happy child, cheery about her parents and life, until the day her father leaves her and her mother Kathy for another woman. Lynette wants to distance herself from the life they have shared with her father and changes her name to Abigail.
Abigail goes down to the park with her young next-door neighbours, Natalie and Vincent. She finds the children there playing a game called "Beatie Bow". After becoming very interested in a "Little Furry Girl" who stands there watching them play, Abigail decides to follow her.
When Abigail's mother admits that she has been seeing her father again and would like them all to move to Norway, where he works as an architect, Abigail is furious and goes for a walk to cool off, again encountering the mysterious girl. She follows her back into the 1800s and is tripped up by the Little Furry Girl's father, resulting in a sprained ankle and a bruised head.
Further into the novel the character Granny (Alice Tallisker) tells Abigail that she is "the stranger" and has "the gift". "The gift" comes from a crocheted detail on her dress. The book later suggests that Granny will complete the crochet.
Abigail falls in love with Judah, who is betrothed to Dovey, and realises first-hand what it is like to love somebody but not be able to have them. This helps Abigail to realise that she should not be selfish towards her parents and let them have a second chance at life and marriage.
Abigail finally manages to return to her own time and discovers that her neighbours, Natalie and Vincent, are descendants of the Bow family. She also finds that Beatie will grow up to be a lady and well educated, and Judah will die at sea after marrying Dovey. After Abigail returns from Norway with her parents she meets Natalie and Vincent's uncle, who looks precisely the same as Judah. The two fall in love and Abigail tells him the story of how she went back in time.
Reviews
editAccording to a review by a scholar of today, Playing Beatie Bow falls somewhere between a children's book and young-adult fiction.[2]
Main characters
edit- Abigail Kirk, formerly Lynette Kirk
- In the present
- Katherine "Kathy" Kirk
- Weyland Kirk
- Grandmother
- Justine Crown
- Natalie Crown
- Vincent Crown
- Robert Judah Bow
- In 1873
- Beatrice May "Beatie" Bow ("The little furry girl")
- Alice Tallisker (Granny Tallisker)
- Samuel Bow
- Judah Bow
- Dorcas "Dovey" Tallisker
- Gilbert Samuel "Gibbie" Bow
- Dorothea "Doll" Victoria Brand
Locations
edit- The Bows' confectionery shop is located on the corner of Argyle Street and Cambridge Street, immediately to the east of the Argyle Cut, see maps at Wikimedia geohack.
- The fictional high-rise tower "Mitchell", where the Kirks and the Crowns live, is located on George Street to the south of "The Suez Canal" (approximate location on map). In real life the only high-rise building in the Rocks is the Sirius building, located much further north. This was used for the film.
- The Suez Canal, where Abigail was abducted, is located in between the Mitchell tower and the Cut (map). The name "Suez Canal" is said to have emerged as a pun on both "sewers", as the lane was one of the most disreputable places in the Rocks,[3][4] and the Suez Canal in Egypt.
Adaptations
editIn 1986, the book was turned into a feature film also called Playing Beatie Bow. Made by the South Australian Film Corporation, it starred Imogen Annesley as Abigail, Peter Phelps as Judah Bow and Mouche Phillips as the title character Beatie Bow.
On 22 February — 1 May 2021, the Sydney Theatre Company performed a play based on the book, written by the leading Australian playwright Kate Mulvany and artistic director Kip Williams, the duo responsible for the multi-award-winning 2018 stage adaptation of Park's book The Harp in the South.[5] It was sold out.[6]
Awards
edit- Won – CBCA Children's Book of the Year Award: Older Readers (1981)[7]
- Won – Parents' Choice Award for Literature, awarded by the Parents' Choice Foundation (1982)
- Won – Boston Globe-Horn Book Award[8] (1982)
- Honour Diploma – International Board on Books for Young People (Australia) (1982)
- Runner-up – Guardian Fiction Prize (UK) (1982)
- Won – Canberra's Own Outstanding List: Fiction for Older Readers Award (1994)
References
edit- ^ Playing Beatie Bow at Google Books
- ^ "Playing Beatie Bow". Reading Australia. Retrieved 5 November 2015.
- ^ "Telling The Rocks Stories - Historical Interpretation in The Rocks." 22 March 2010. In: Sydney Harbour Foreshore Authority, The Dirt on the Rocks, Government Blog. Retrieved 19 December 2020.
- ^ "Laneways of The Rocks." Without date. In: Pocket Oz Travel & Information Guide to Sydney. Retrieved 19 December 2020.]
- ^ "Playing Beatie Bow". Sydney Theatre Company. Retrieved 2021-01-12.
- ^ Sydney Theatre Company site.
- ^ "1980s award winners". Children's Book Council of Australia. Archived from the original on 3 May 2008.
- ^ "Boston Globe–Horn Book Awards, Winners and Honor Books 1967 to present". The Horn Book Inc. Retrieved 2021-01-08.