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Casting a spell

W I L D++T H I N G S+

BY ANDREA GOLLIN | Great children's books -- great books, for that matter -- are those that "cast a spell so subtle and overwhelming that it has overpowered the reader's imagination, carried him outside all the rules, before he has noticed what is happening." Those are the words of author Susan Cooper, and she should know, because it's a feat she has accomplished again and again in more than 15 books for children.

If someone were to ask me to list the best contemporary writers of children's literature, Susan Cooper's name would appear on that list. And if someone -- a parent, for example -- were to ask me what books to give to an 8- to 12-year-old child of either gender to keep him or her engrossed for the rest of the summer, I would tell them to choose anything and everything by Susan Cooper.

Cooper is the author of the acclaimed five-book series "The Dark Is Rising," which is among the best fantasy series ever written. These tales of good vs. evil are filled with magic, mystery and darkness as, on his 11th birthday, Will Stanton, the seventh son of a seventh son, learns that he is the last of the Old Ones -- immortals dedicated to defeating the Dark. These epic battles are waged in distant times and places, so Will's life becomes split between everyday activities as a normal boy in England and otherworldly activities as an Old One. The good characters, including Will, are honorable (as well as interesting) and the evil characters are terrifying. ($19.75 for boxed set of 5 paperbacks; for ages 8 to 12, from Aladdin Paperbacks)

I have read the "Dark Is Rising" series both as a child and an adult, and never for a moment has my suspension of disbelief been broken. I have dreaded turning the last page and returning to the mundane world; I have never questioned the veracity of the worlds that Cooper creates.

Her new novel, "The Boggart and the Monster," is a sequel to "The Boggart," which was published in 1993. Both books feature Cooper's seamless blend of the fantastic and the real as they relate the tales of a boggart -- a kind of spirit, "a very ancient, mischievous thing ... Born of magic as old as the rocks and the waves" -- in a Scottish castle and his very large cousin Nessie, who just so happens to inhabit a loch. These books are more lighthearted than "The Dark Is Rising" series, but are just as full of wonder and magic.

Boggarts (pronounced with a short "o," as in "dog") are often invisible, but they are shape-shifters. They can do pretty much whatever they want, except pass through closed doors with iron locks. Above all, boggarts love to play tricks. They'll eat the food off your plate, sew your pants' legs together while you're asleep, pull the dog's tail -- harmless fun. However, in "The Boggart," the boggart of Scotland's Castle Keep gets stuck in a roll-top desk with an iron lock and is inadvertently transported to Canada, where he wreaks havoc like getting into traffic light wires and making them go haywire. Eventually, savvy children figure out how to send him back to Scotland, without the clueless adults catching on. ($3.95; for ages 8 to 12, from Aladdin Paperbacks)

"The Boggart and the Monster," which takes place two years later, features the same appealing characters from "The Boggart." Here, Castle Keep's boggart and the children rescue another boggart, aka the Loch Ness monster, from a very un-boggartlike future of loneliness and despair. There's plenty of sly humor here -- Nessie, in addition to being lonely, is insecure, and has to be cajoled and encouraged to change shape from the monstrous creature he's been for centuries into a more maneuverable form. Time is of the essence, because a gang of determined scientists is on the rampage, determined to capture, catalog and define the monster once and for all. Without giving away the ending, I will say that, in Cooper's books, wisdom and magic always triumph over greed and stupidity. ($16; for ages 8 to 12, from Margaret K. McElderry Books)

Adults intrigued with Cooper's fiction may want to further explore her work in "Dreams and Wishes: Essays on Writing for Children," published in 1996 ($18; Margaret K. McElderry Books). The collection includes this description of her state of mind when writing, a description that's very similar to reading her work: "I exist in a state of continual astonishment ... And I am always overcome by wonder, and a kind of unfocused gratitude, when I arrive."
July 31, 1997

Andrea Gollin is a freelance writer living in Miami Beach.


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