Thursday, March 26, 2026

Daisy Johnson / ‘I wasn’t a fan of David Szalay, but Flesh is a masterpiece’

 

The Booker-shortlisted author on a momentous teenage encounter with The Bone People, getting a buzz from Peter Høeg’s Miss Smilla, and trying to avoid The Lorax


Daisy Johnson

Friday 13 March 2026


My earliest reading memory
Memories from my childhood are opening up as I read to my own young children at the moment. Something in the pictures of Helen Cooper’s The Bear Under the Stairs or Lane Smith’s The Big Petstakes me back to being four years old and being read to.

Ben Markovits / ‘I used to think any book concerned with people falling in love can’t be very good’



Ben Markovits: ‘I used to think any book concerned with people falling in love can’t be very good’

The British-American author on arguing about Jane Austen, the joys of Jerome K Jerome, and revising his opinion of Philip Roth


Ben Markovits

Friday 27 February 2026

My earliest reading memory
I used to read Donald Sobol’s Encyclopedia Brown stories with my mother. It’s a classic American kids’ series about a boy detective and his brilliant sidekick, Sally, who protects him as they tackle their arch enemy, Bugs Meany, a kind of high school bully version of Professor Moriarty. We’d sit in the kitchen together and try to solve the crimes. Of course, for me it was also an opportunity to hang out with my mom. I’m one of five kids; attention was hard to come by. But I was also drawn to the picture Sobol paints of small-town all-American life, which I don’t think I ever felt a part of. We moved around too much.

The books of my life / Saba Sams

 


The 

Books

 0f my 

life


Saba Sams: ‘I’ve no interest in reading Wuthering Heights again’

The Send Nudes author on rereading Lorrie Moore, finding Dodie Smith at the right time, and the enduring brilliance of Muriel Spark


Saba Sams

Friday 6 March 2026


My earliest reading memory
I remember reading Jacqueline Wilson aloud to my mum in the car. I think it was The Illustrated MumMy mum couldn’t believe it was a children’s book, and I felt so proud. I always found most children’s books overly virtuous and safe, but Wilson’s never were. I love her for that.

Wednesday, March 25, 2026

The Impact of Hans Christian Andersen on Victorian Fiction

 

Hans Christian Andersen


The Impact of Hans Christian Andersen on Victorian Fiction

Jacqueline Banerjee

[This is the third of three edited and updated excerpts from an essay entitled "Hans Christian Andersen and the Victorians," which appeared in translation in Literature, Culture and History in Victorian England: A Festschrift for Professor Matsumura (Tokyo: Eiho-sha, 1999. 68-89).]

Of Hans Christian Andersen's two hundred and more short pieces, less than twenty appeared in volumes subtitled "Told for Children," and these volumes were the first few, published when the young and impecunious Danish author was desperate for a share of the market (see De Mylius, 168-69). His dedications to Dickens soon confirmed that he had no intention of limiting his audience to children. In the event, many other eminent Victorians besides Thackeray were greatly taken with his work. Not all were put off, as Dickens eventually was, by his personal gaucheness and egotism. Indeed, Elizabeth Barrett Browning's last poem, inspired by Andersen's visit to Italy in 1861, extols him not only as a "seer" with "a poet's tongue," but also as "a man of men" ("The North and the South"). Consequently, Andersen as well as the Grimms had a pervasive and profound effect on Victorian fiction throughout the period. Fairy tales were written even by major figures like Ruskin ("The King of the Golden River") and even the major novels "are moulded by fairy-tale themes and structures" (Wullschläger 101). Like the drenched girl who knocks on the city gate in a storm at the beginning of Andersen's "The Princess and the Pea," the plainly dressed Jane Eyre wins the hero by her extraordinary sensitivity; like the ungainly chick in "The Ugly Duckling," Maggie Tulliver in The Mill on the Floss is one of many plain or tomboyish young heroines who turn into beauties. And even though successive Victorian translators sought to push his tales further and further into the nursery, one of the writers most directly influenced by Andersen was working at the very end of the period. This was Oscar Wilde, whose own fairy tales play more elaborately, sometimes less successfully, but always intriguingly on ideas, themes and motifs introduced by the Danish author.

How guest Hans Christian Andersen destroyed his friendship with Dickens

 

Hans Christian Andersen


How guest Hans Christian Andersen destroyed his friendship with Dickens

This article is more than 8 years old

The Danish writer’s behaviour on an extended visit killed the authors’ friendship, letters show


Hans Christian Andersen / Bedtime stories


Vanessa Thorpe

Sunday 10 September 2017


It was not, to say the least, a successful visit. The burgeoning friendship between a pair of literary stars, Charles Dickens and Hans Christian Andersen, had looked set to last. But it could not survive an overlong stay by the Danish author at the British novelist’s family home in Kent. Just how bad things became, on one side at least, has been revealed by a surprisingly frank letter sold at auction on Saturday.

Sprung From Poverty, the Tales of Hans Christian Andersen Endure




Hans Christian Andersen

Tuesday, March 24, 2026

Hans Christian Andersen / The Elf of the Rose

 

Illustration by Veronica Dye Johnson


THE ELF OF THE ROSE

A fairytale by Hans Christian Andersen




In the midst of a garden grew a rose-tree, in full blossom, and in the prettiest of all the roses lived an elf. He was such a little wee thing, that no human eye could see him. Behind each leaf of the rose he had a sleeping chamber. He was as well formed and as beautiful as a little child could be, and had wings that reached from his shoulders to his feet. Oh, what sweet fragrance there was in his chambers! and how clean and beautiful were the walls! for they were the blushing leaves of the rose.

Hans Christian Andersen / The Storks




THE STORKS

The Old God is Still Alive)


A fairytale by Hans Christian Andersen



In the last house in a little village the storks had built a nest, and the mother stork sat in it with her four young ones, who stretched out their necks and pointed their black beaks, which had not yet turned red like those of the parent birds. A little way off, on the edge of the roof, stood the father stork, quite upright and stiff; not liking to be quite idle, he drew up one leg, and stood on the other, so still that it seemed almost as if he were carved in wood. “It must look very grand,” thought he, “for my wife to have a sentry guarding her nest. They do not know that I am her husband; they will think I have been commanded to stand here, which is quite aristocratic;” and so he continued standing on one leg.

Hans Christian Andersen / The Flying Trunk



THE FLYING

TRUNK 

(The Old God is Still Alive)


A fairytale by Hans Christian Andersen




Here was once a merchant who was so rich that he could have paved the whole street with gold, and would even then have had enough for a small alley. But he did not do so; he knew the value of money better than to use it in this way. So clever was he, that every shilling he put out brought him a crown; and so he continued till he died. His son inherited his wealth, and he lived a merry life with it; he went to a masquerade every night, made kites out of five pound notes, and threw pieces of gold into the sea instead of stones, making ducks and drakes of them. In this manner he soon lost all his money. At last he had nothing left but a pair of slippers, an old dressing-gown, and four shillings. And now all his friends deserted him, they could not walk with him in the streets; but one of them, who was very good-natured, sent him an old trunk with this message, “Pack up!” “Yes,” he said, “it is all very well to say ‘pack up,’” but he had nothing left to pack up, therefore he seated himself in the trunk. It was a very wonderful trunk; no sooner did any one press on the lock than the trunk could fly. He shut the lid and pressed the lock, when away flew the trunk up the chimney with the merchant’s son in it, right up into the clouds. Whenever the bottom of the trunk cracked, he was in a great fright, for if the trunk fell to pieces he would have made a tremendous somerset over the trees. However, he got safely in his trunk to the land of Turkey. He hid the trunk in the wood under some dry leaves, and then went into the town: he could so this very well, for the Turks always go about dressed in dressing-gowns and slippers, as he was himself. He happened to meet a nurse with a little child. “I say, you Turkish nurse,” cried he, “what castle is that near the town, with the windows placed so high?”

Monday, March 23, 2026

Hans Christian Andersen / God Can Never Die

 


GOD CAN NEVER DIE 

(The Old God is Still Alive)


A fairytale by Hans Christian Andersen

It was a Sunday morning. The bright, warm sun was shining into the room; the mild, refreshing air was streaming in through the open window and outside beneath God’s blue sky, where field and meadow stood green and in flower, all the small birds were rejoicing. While everything outside was joy and happiness, inside the house sorrow and misery resided. Even the wife, who was otherwise always of good heart, sat there at her breakfast and gazed down despondently, finally she got up and, without having tasted a bite, dried her eyes and went over towards the door.

And it really seemed as there was a curse upon this house. It was a time of scarcity in the land; trade was doing badly; taxes were becoming more and more oppressive; year by year housekeeping money grew less, and finally the only prospect left was poverty and misery. All of this had for some time depressed the man, who was otherwise an industrious and law-abiding citizen; now thinking of the future made him despair utterly, indeed, he even stated frequently that he would do himself a mischief and put an end to this miserable, hopeless life. Nothing helped, neither what his good-humoured wife said, nor the worldly and spiritual consolations of his friends – these only made him all the more taciturn and dismal. It is easy to grasp that his poor wife also ended up by losing heart. Although her despondency was of a completely different nature, as we shall soon hear.

When the man saw that his wife too was sorrowful and wanted to leave the room, he held her back and said: ‘I will not let you go out before you tell me what’s wrong with you!’

She remained silent a while longer, after which she gave a deep sigh and said: ‘Ah, dear husband, last night I dreamt that the old God was dead, and that all the angels followed him to the grave!’

‘How can you possibility believe or think such utter rubbish!’ the man replied. ‘Don’t you know that God can never die!’

Then the good woman’s face lit up with joy, and as she affectionately pressed both her husband’s hands, she exclaimed: ‘So the old God is still alive, then!’

‘Of course!’ the man answered, ‘Who could possibly doubt it!’

Then she embraced him, looked at him with gracious eyes that gleamed with trust, peace and happiness, while saying: ‘But oh, dead husband! if the old God is still alive, why do we not trust in him and rely on him! he has counted every single hair on our heads, not one strand falls out without his willing it, he clothes the lilies in the field, gives the sparrows their food and the ravens their prey!’

At these words the man felt as if scales had fallen from his eyes, and as if all the heavy bands around his heart had been loosened; for the first time in a long while he smiled and thanked his devout, dear wife for the ruse she had used to revive his dead belief in God and called back his trust. Then the sun shone in an even friendlier fashion into the room onto contented human faces, the air wafted even more refreshingly around the smiles on their cheeks, and the birds rejoiced even more loudly in their heartfelt gratitude to God.


1836





Andersen's Fairy Tales