By Francis X. Rocca on 9.20.02 @ 12:03AM
Celebrating a hero who transcends the generations.
Back in the United States for a couple of days last week, I
found a few minutes to visit a bookstore and stock up on
English-language story material for our one-year-old son. Naturally
I went straight to the titles by H.A. Rey, author of
Curious George.
I found two shelves-full, including what seemed to be dozens of
small-format paperbacks with unfamiliar names like Curious
George and the Pizza. Further inspection revealed that the
publisher has spun off a line of sequels by other authors. Like
everything else these days, Curious George is a brand.
Not having enough time to evaluate the later efforts, I stuck
with the 1941 original. Of all the books from my childhood, this
tale of a trouble-making monkey is the one I remember most
fondly.
One reason, surely, are the cheerful illustrations. All the
creatures in George's world -- even the butterflies, flowers and
fish -- are usually smiling. This would be cloying if it weren't
tempered by the occasional exception, most grimly the scene of a
frowning George in jail. The crayon-and-watercolor artwork is vivid
yet soothingly soft, and the images of the title character, in
oversized pajamas or with his head sticking out of a game bag, are
irresistibly cute.
Yet even the most delightful pictures can't hold a kid's
attention if the story is dull. The key to the charm of Curious
George is plot.
In at least one respect, this plot is shockingly dated. You
don't have to be politically correct to feel uneasy about the "man
with the big yellow hat" spotting George in his natural habitat
(which the text specifies as "Africa") and blithely deciding to
ship him off to a foreign zoo. A latter-day children's book writer
would no doubt depict the hunter as at best a misguided First
Worlder, or at worst an imperialist oppressor.
As told by H.A. Rey, the capture of Curious George is a game.
The man puts his yellow hat on the ground and hides behind a tree.
Inevitably the monkey comes to try it on, gets his head stuck
inside, and that's that. Afterwards, the author informs us, "George
was sad, but he was still a little curious." An illustration shows
the captive being taken away in a row boat, gaping at the novel
sight of fish in the water.
It's easy to see why kids would find this both exciting and
comforting. Again and again, George finds himself in scary
situations -- falling overboard, going to jail, floating over the
city with a bunch of helium balloons -- that ultimately cause him
no harm, and manage in the meantime to be terribly interesting.
Such episodes must be deeply (though unconsciously) encouraging
to someone facing his first day of kindergarten or a visit to the
pediatrician. They also exemplify an indomitable spirit. Even when
physically restrained, George remains an active observer of his
environment.
Yet George is famously more than an observer. Like the human
children who adore him, he is by nature incapable of leaving any
unfamiliar object alone or staying out of any area where he isn't
supposed to go. In his first use of a telephone, he unwittingly
calls in a false fire alarm. Tossed behind bars as punishment, he
escapes and goes on a unplanned balloon ride. The spectacle of a
flying monkey causes havoc across the city, and his landing leads
to a traffic jam.
Nothing in the story condemns or even discourages such behavior.
On the contrary, the book glories in a quality that society -- and
society's first representatives, mother and father -- typically
find inconvenient. Here is the subversive, not-so-hidden message of
a story that superficially justifies civilization's mastery of the
wild. George's nature, as defined by his Homeric epithet, will not
be suppressed.
The last scene is of our hero in happy captivity at the zoo
("What a nice place for George to live!"), surrounded by the other
animals, with whom he's shared his balloons. It would take the
dulled faculties of an adult to accept this image at face value.
Even the least alert kid knows that George won't sit tamely in his
tree, but will be soon be over the fence, looking at everything and
inevitably messing it up.
topics:
Environment, Books, Africa