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The Children's Book

A. S. Byatt
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Plot Summary

The Children's Book

Fiction | Novel | Adult | Published in 2009

Plot Summary

The Children’s Book is a novel published in 2009 by British writer A.S. Byatt. It tracks the lives of several interconnected families between 1895 and World War I. Based loosely on the life of children’s book author E. Nesbit, the novel builds toward revelations about the continuity of the causes and effects of human choice, and about the unique formal rhythms of family that persist through time. It primarily follows the members of the Wellwood family, who try to create lives in the world of the arts and material crafts. Olive, the central character, writes children’s books to support the family financially; the novel’s name comes from her characters, who grow through adolescence and the atrocities of war.

The book begins with the discovery of a boy named Philip Warren by an employee in the storage rooms of the South Kensington Museum. Philip has escaped from laboring in the Potteries and is nearly starved, striving to find a job that will satisfy his dream to “make something.” Philip is taken to Major Prosper Cain, who watches over the precious metals, as well as Olive Wellwood, a successful fantasy author who is on a trip to visit Cain to do research for her writing. Olive tries to empathize with Philip’s plight, and states that it is only natural to want to fashion an independent creative life.

Next, Olive’s background is revealed: also a fugitive, she has fled with her sister Violet from a childhood of constant poverty and loss of family. She married a man named Humphry Wellwood, who has fallen unintentionally into the life of a banker and acts as patron for her artistic life. Olive lives productively and in great luxury, utilizing her memories of childhood in a mining community and combining them with her interest in folklore and fairy tales to become a prolific and well-known author.



Humphry and Olive take in Philip to their farmhouse estate called Todefright, where they board and educate many children. They fashion their environment idealistically and in contrast to strict contemporary Victorian values, allowing the children to speak whenever they want, make their own creative projects, cultivate radical political beliefs and freely practice cultural heritages. The estate occasionally verges on hedonism, throwing lavish summer parties and allowing for intense emotional relationships between its inhabitants.

Todefright soon reveals itself to harbor plenty of secrets behind its ostensible role as a bastion of liberal arts and humanism. Various infidelities between residents have made its many family trees extremely confusing, unreliable, and political. Residents do not seem to value telling the full truth or divulging how money is being spent, and live without much care for the effects of their actions. The children at Todefright get especially scary glimpses into the adults’ dark affairs. The estate oscillates from being a utopian system to a prison-like institution while Humphry and Olive shift back and forth from being benevolent parents to incompetent and uncaring disciplinarians.

Meanwhile, Olive’s writing reveals much about her inner life and explains some of the complexes behind her often-reductive treatment of children as conduits for fiction. Her stories involve themes of imprisonment, betrayal, and the loss of innocence. When Olive becomes pregnant with another child, she uses her stories as her own shelter, working tediously not only to support the new member of the household but also to prove her own creative independence from her unborn child.



Olive creates a book for each of the house’s children, using the texts to embody her different attitudes toward the individuals. The detail and care for each book corresponds to her liking for the child it is based on. Tom, her eldest son, has the longest book, and eventually goes insane. He hates Peter Pan, and ends up mimicking the behavior of an animal, adopting its non-attachment to the “make-believe” pretenses he perceives in literature.

The facade of Todefright is duplicated and made explicit in a nearby estate called Purchase House. Dilapidated, it belongs to a potter named Benedict Fludd, for whom Philip works as an apprentice. Fludd’s wife abuses drugs, and they abuse their children chronically. The characters of Purchase House, in their overt abuse, bring out the repressed abuse occurring simultaneously in Todefright.

The novel closes with the beginning of World War I. The size of the house is far reduced and reflects the long-term outcomes of the abuse and neglect of community under the facade of creative and subjective freedom. Yet, Olive’s children manage to renew connection to each other and their surrogate parents, suggesting the possibility of the restoration of love and family. Thus, Byatt seems to argue that despite the endorsement of behaviors that bring entropy into domestic life, and the specter of imminent war, people always retain the ability to connect with their community, reconciling their self-consciousness and will to independence with the parallel need for a healthy public life.
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