Tag: children’s literature

  • Title: The Moomins and the Great Flood
    (Moomins #1)
    Author: Tove Jansson
    (Translated by David McDuff)
    Year: 1945
    Country: Finland

    Format: E-book
    Pages: 52
    Read: 21 – 24 February 2026
    First reading

    Moominmamma and her son Moomintroll are looking for Moominpappa, who hasn’t come back from his latest adventure. Their search takes them through forests, swamps and mountains, meeting various weird and wonderful people along the way. A heavy rainstorm almost spells disaster, but Moominmamma and Moomintroll survive the flood and eventually find Moominpappa—and a new place to call home.

    The Moomins and the Great Flood was Finland’s introduction to the Moomins, first published in 1945—but only translated into English in 2005. It was the last Moomins novel I read, and to me it feels very different from the rest of the series. For one thing it’s a much shorter book. It’s also less coherent, flitting from scene to scene without pause, like a small child breathlessly telling you a story: “And then this happened, and then this happened, and then this happened…” Tove Jansson’s illustrations are (as always) utterly charming, and there’s a faint glimmer of the magic that would come in later books. But this is easily my least favourite Moomins novel of the bunch, and certainly not one I’d recommend as an introduction. Much better skip ahead to the magnificent second book, Comet in Moominland.

    The edition I read did include some interesting bonus material though. There’s a nice foreword from the current Children’s Laureate, Frank Cottrell-Boyce, providing some historical context for the story. There’s also excerpts from Tove Jansson’s own notes about her characters, originally written to help prospective writers and directors of Moomins adaptations. So, while the novel itself was pretty disappointing, reading it still enhanced my apprecation for the other books in a series I’ve grown to adore.

  • Title: The Phantom Tollbooth
    Author: Norton Juster
    Year: 1961
    Country: USA

    Format: E-book
    Pages: 255
    Read: 17-29 December 2025
    First reading

    The Phantom Tollbooth is a children’s fantasy by Norton Juster, with charming illustrations by Jules Feiffer. Milo is a chronically bored kid. Then one day he receives a mysterious gift: a magical turnpike tollbooth. The tollbooth transports him to the Kingdom of Wisdom, a whimsical land of puns, where he ends up on a quest to rescue Princesses Rhyme and Reason. Accompanied by his new friends — a Watchdog called Tock and a grumpy beetle called Humbug — Milo encounters a host of eccentric characters who collectively teach him how to find joy in learning.

    My inner child was delighted by this book. I’ve been a fan of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland as long as I can remember, and The Phantom Tollbooth has similar vibes: a child is transported to a surreal land full of baffling eccentrics and outlandish wordplay.

    However Tollbooth has a more obvious moral than Alice. It aims to get kids excited about knowledge for knowledge’s sake — a noble cause! But my adult self tends to prefer children’s stories that are a bit less on-the-nose. (I spent much of this year becoming a fan of Tove Jansson’s Moomins.) So while I delighted in the wordplay (a car that runs on silence: it goes without saying), the Kingdom of Wisdom probably won’t linger in my imagination the way Wonderland does.

    It’s too bad I didn’t read this when I was Milo’s age.