Hello and welcome to Fairy Tale Friday. Are you sitting comfortably? Good. Then I’ll begin.
This week we look at an interesting novel entitled Boy, Snow, Bird by
British author Helen Oyeyemi. The novel was named as one of the best books of
2014.
This is an unusual retelling of Snow White. We have a girl whose name is Boy, a white-as-snow blonde stepdaughter named Snow and a child named Bird whose skin colour reveals a secret history. It is a story about passing. Passing for white. Passing for another gender. Passing as someone else because the truth of who you are is unacceptable. I found it a thought provoking read.
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Boy, Snow, Bird
Boy Novak, a young white girl, is born to
an abusive father who works as an exterminator and whom she refers to as the
rat catcher. In the winter of 1953, when she is twenty years old, Boy runs away
from her father, and moves from New York to Flax Hill. In Flax Hill, Boy
stumbles across a tenement house and begins to go on double dates with one of
the other tenants who introduces her to her boyfriend's business partner, a
jewellery designer and widower called Arturo Whitman. Arturo eventually tells
Boy that he has a young daughter named Snow.
While Boy and Arturo initially have a
tempestuous relationship, they grow closer as Boy is enchanted by Snow. On a
weekend trip, Arturo proposes to Boy by giving her a bracelet shaped like a
snake. She thinks of the bracelet as evil step-mother jewellery, but she
accepts it. Boy and Arturo have a quick wedding, after which she learns that
Arturo has an older sister, Clara, who is shunned by the rest of the family.
Boy becomes pregnant and gives birth to a
girl she names Bird. As soon as Bird is born, Boy realizes that Bird is black.
Boy interrogates Arturo, who reveals that his father and mother were
white-passing African-Americans from Louisiana. He also reveals that his first
wife Julia was descended from white-passing African-Americans, and they were
both relieved when Snow was born white and blonde.
Boy grows increasingly frustrated over the
different ways in which the family and the town react to Bird and becomes
jealous of Snow. She finally reaches out to Clara, who tells her to give Bird
to her to raise, as she -- Clara -- was once given up by her mother, when she
was not passing as white. Instead, Boy asks Clara to take Snow for what she
claims is a short visit, in reality planning to have her stay indefinitely.
Thirteen years later, in 1968, Bird grows
up as the only daughter in the Whitman family, while her father visits Snow
twice a month. Bird discovers a series of letters Snow wrote to her mother in
which she begs to be able to come home and fails to understand what she might
have done to upset Boy. The last letter in Boy's collection is one addressed to
Bird, which Bird decides to answer.
Bird and Snow begin a secret
correspondence and Bird learns more of the secret Whitman history. Eventually,
because of their correspondence, Boy allows Snow to come home to visit.
Before Snow can come, Bird is temporarily
attacked and kidnapped from her backyard by a man who reveals himself to be her
grandfather, the rat catcher, who reveals his name to be Frank Novak. After a tense
and unhappy conversation Frank leaves Bird, never to return again.
At Thanksgiving the
entire Whitman family is reunited, including Clara and her husband John. Boy
asks Snow to forgive her for sending her away and encourages Snow to punch her
in order to settle the score between them. Snow decides to stay with the
Whitmans and begins to live in Flaxhill again.
Boy's journalist friend Mia arrives at her
door one day to confess that she was the one who gave Boy's address to Frank.
Mia, a single woman, admits that she wanted to write an article about women who
could not be mothers, and she decided to track down Boy's mother, finding out
her name was Frances Amelia Novak. Frances was an extremely intelligent
feminist and doctoral candidate who was also a lesbian. Because of her
lesbianism she was raped by an acquaintance. Frances became
pregnant by the rape and during the pregnancy transitioned into a man and began
calling himself Frank. After Mia confronted Frank about his former identity she
told him to tell Boy the truth of his origins before the article was published.
He had gone to Flaxhill to do this, before leaving because he was unable to
talk about it.
Boy decides to go to New York to try and
see her father and determine if she can find Frances within him. She takes Mia,
Bird and Snow with her.
That’s all for this week. Stay tuned next week for a
look at some Snow White poetry.
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