Monday 4 February 2019

The Perils of Being a Toy, by Mini Grey


Toy underwater - from Mini's sketchbook
It’s not easy being a toy. You get mired in adventures out of your depths, dressed in outfits you never chose, and left in unlikely places by your forgetful owners. Toys are our avatars. They are mostly (happily) silent unless their owners voice for them. Children can’t help being animators – it happens to the first things that are picked up – they get brought to life. 

Anything can be a Toy

Mini's baby book from C1967

In my baby book, my mum records that when I was three I talked a lot about two persons called ‘Gully’ and ‘Linda’. My mum never knew who they were, though they were often up to stuff. But I know. They were my hands. 
Those yellow pages fingers

 You know that thing where you can get your index and middle fingers to stride around like a pair of legs? Well that was Gully & Linda – I can’t remember who was right and who was left. They were possibly married. They used to do a lot of striding around on long car journeys.

Anything can be a toy. In the Edinburgh Museum of Childhood a few years ago I found this:
Shoe Doll

It was someone’s doll once. What it also was, was the sole of a shoe.

Sometimes the most eloquent toys are the most basic – where imagination has had to do most of the animating. And the most disappointing of toys can be the ones who try to say and do too much. Here is Scrubbing Brush, who is basic...

Scrubbing Brish carrying Lunch
 and Turbodog, who says way too much.

Turbodog - the most useless robotic dog there is...


both from Traction Man Meets Turbodog
Children’s books are the theatre for toys to come to life, where toys really can have adventures. And I love books about toys having adventures.

So here are my Top Five Perils of Being a Picture Book Toy. 


PERIL ONE: FALLING APART


It’s the big worry about being a toy. Not being able to regenerate unless someone repairs you can leave you in quite a mess. But the conundrum is: that falling apart makes you REAL. Let’s go first to That Rabbit Belongs To Emily Brown.

 
by Cressida Cowell and Neal Layton







Here is Emily Brown’s rabbit Stanley in a terrible state after his kidnapping by the naughty queen:
Something wrong with Stanley...from That Rabbit Belongs to Emily Brown by Cressida Cowell and Neal Layton
After she has rescued Stanley, the wise Emily Brown gives that Queen a recipe for making a Real Toy:
You take that horrid brand new teddy bear and you play with him all day. Sleep with him at night. Hold him very tight and be sure to have lots of adventures. And then maybe one day you will wake up with a real toy of your own.”
From That Rabbit belongs to Emily Brown by Cressida Cowell and Neal Layton

So falling apart can be part of the process of Becoming Real.


For more on becoming real, we’ll have to go to The Velveteen Rabbit, written by Margery Williams with magical pictures by William Nicholson.


The Velveteen Rabbit by Margery Williams and pictures by William Nicholson

 Pondering over a toy’s life in the Nursery, the Skin Horse offers the Velveteen Rabbit this definition of real:
“Real isn’t how you’re made,” said the Skin Horse. “It’s a thing that happens to you…Generally, by the time you are Real, most of your hair has been loved off, and your eyes drop out and you get loose in the joints and very shabby. But these things don’t matter at all, because once you are Real you can’t be ugly, except to people who don’t understand.”
There are many ways toys can fall apart: one is unravelling.

I Was Made For You by David Lucas
In I Was Made For You by David Lucas a home-made knitted cat is destined to be a Christmas present but wakes up with the need to discover the answer to the biggest questions - not just what he is but why he is. The little toy goes in search of an answer to the big Why, but snags his wool on a rusty nail and unravels before our eyes until he is ‘just a long loose thread shivering in the wind’. 

From I Was Made For You by David Lucas

He is precariously close to not being at all, but is found and wound by Daisy & her Mum, who reknits him into his shape again.

Loved To Bits by Teresa Heapy and Katie Cleminson

Toys can be tested to destruction. In Loved to Bits by Teresa Heapy and Katie Cleminson, the toy here is Stripy Ted who bravely loses body parts while engaged in adventures with his owner. 
Stripy Ted gallantly loses an ear (“Still got the best one – never fear!” he says cheerfully), an eye, and eventually both legs and both arms becoming only a ball and head.

But his owner prefers him in his brave unmended state. 
From Loved To Bits by Teresa Heapy and Katie Cleminson
So how much of yourself can you lose and still be you?

You can come unstuffed, but you can also be remade.
Tatty Ratty by Helen Cooper


I think Tatty Ratty, by Helen Cooper, is perhaps a story about being remade, so that old loved tired lost Tatty Ratty can become new again, dusted with sugar & floating down from the moon.

Lost probably on the bus just before the story begins, Tatty Ratty is only seen in the journey of adventures back home that Molly and her Mum and Dad dream up for him. Tatty Ratty is always getting closer, and always getting a bit remade – feeding himself up on porridge to get restuffed, falling in the sea to become washed, being dusted with sugar on the moon for a touch of sparkle. 
Finally the family are ready to track Tatty Ratty down at the Kingdom of Bunny. There could be a difficult moment here, when Molly spots the shelf of similar white bunnies with buttons who are all pretty much Tatty Ratty clones. 

From Tatty Ratty by Helen Cooper
But Tatty Ratty’s imagined journey home has somehow prepared Molly to find the right one.



 PERIL TWO: BEING LOST

A perennial peril of being a toy due to their hapless, absent-minded and easily distracted owners, being Lost can happen anywhere. 

Red Ted and the Lost Things by Michael Rosen and Joel Stewart

In Red Ted and the Lost Things, Red Ted finds himself in a Lost Property Office having been left on a train, and along with a toy crocodile decides to pluckily find his own way home. I love seeing the little toys bravely navigate the confusing streets of the full-size world.


From Red Ted and the Lost Things by Michael Rosen and Joel Stewart
 A nonchalant cheese-loving cat comes along for the ride. Red Ted is small but resourceful and the crocodile shows his teeth, seeing off a colossal dachshund. For the small toys the journey home is an epic struggle. Finally Red Ted is reunited with Stevie who makes everything right and has superpowers of understanding when it comes to toys and cats.

From Red Ted and the Lost Things by Michael Rosen and Joel Stewart

PERIL THREE: BEING SUPPLANTED, IGNORED, NOT PLAYED WITH, OR GIVEN AWAY

These fates are too awful to think about  - and they all do happen in the films Toy Story 1, 2 or 3 (EVERYTHING that can happen to toys happens in Toy Story somewhere.) Actually they are so awful I couldn't find picture book toys that get treated this way (any suggestions?), so here I'm resorting to a story of pure imagination...

The Story of the Bad Mump Mump

The real Mump Mump
Underwater Fantasy Mump Mump
When my son Herbie was 6 months old he was given this monkey. It was a good one – long legs, squashy round body, perfect bedtime companion. It wasn’t till a year later that we found out from Herbie that the monkey’s name was Mump Mump. 

So all was well. 

One day I was idly wandering round the toy department of Fenwick’s on Bond Street and I discovered an entire bin of Mump Mumps, probably on special offer. Ooh! - I thought - I could buy a spare Mump Mump! Just in case. We’d never ever have a lost or destroyed Mump Mump crisis! 

Reader, I nearly did it. But I didn’t. 

On the bus home I realised the full horror of what I could have done. Imagine the life of the Other Mump Mump. 

Consigned to a cupboard – (as your existence must always be a secret to the child you are meant to be for) - you watch - (probably through a chink in the cupboard door) -  as your child talks and plays and sleeps with the other hated Mump Mump. 
In your cupboard over the long years you plot out ways to despatch your rival Mump Mump. Maybe the day comes when the blow finally falls and the other Mump Mump is left on a beach or dropped off a ferry or mysteriously set on fire and at last you can take your rightful place at the heart of your child’s world. 
But no – the long years in the cupboard will have taken their toll and you will be somehow poisoned and bitter inside.

Maybe not the best picture book material. 

But with 'given away' I'm going to mention Dogger here.
From Dogger by Shirley Hughes
Dogger by Shirley Hughes
Dogger is lost and found and nearly lost again.Dogger's owner is Dave. Dogger isn't actually given away, he is lost then ends up on a toy stall at the school fete - but we see the loved toy ending up on a table with a '5p' label hanging on them. Dogger is perilously close to going home with another child. Some ingenious bargaining by Dave's sister Bella saves the day.



PERIL FOUR: The hard-working life of a toy which may include having to take the blame...
It Was You, Blue Kangaroo! by Emma Chichester Clark

Picture book toys often have to work hard for their owners. Blue Kangaroo, being a quiet sort, doesn't point out the unfairness of being repeatedly incriminated for his owner Lily's mishaps.
Eventually Lily's mum puts Blue Kangaroo on a high shelf and Lily has to go to bed without him.
The page I love (I think it’s the shadow that makes it so exciting) is this page of blues as Blue Kangaroo jumps down from the bookcase where he’s been banished with an idea about how to put things right.
From It Was You, Blue Kangaroo! by Emma Chichester Clark
Here is a collection of toys (and an actual cat) grouped round our son Herbie when he was fairly new. When he was very little it always seemed important that he be surrounded by a sort of glow from his stuffed guardians. 
The guardians of Baby Herbie's Kingdom

In While You are Sleeping by Alexis Deacon, the bedside toys are hard at work every night, protecting, checking, scaring bad dreams away, tending their child. There's a gathering of guardians around the bedside. Alexis Deacon's warm pastel pictures conjure up a mysterious dark tender night-time world.
While You Are Sleeping by Alexis Deacon

From While You Are Sleeping by Alexis Deacon

From While You Are Sleeping by Alexis Deacon

Being a toy is a serious business, a life or death struggle, a battle.
There are rules to being a picture book toy. Your owner will know you are alive but this is something they believe without seeing. You generally don’t come to life in front of them. It might freak them out. You don’t come to life around any humans (except maybe strange slightly magical ones.) You can only wander about when no people are watching you. Animals can probably see you and sometimes even understand/talk to you.
From Red Ted and the Lost Things by Michael Rosen and Joel Stewart
When I was making Toys in Space I had a picture in my mind of a group of toys being left on the grass in the garden overnight for the first time. They’d see the stars and wonder what they were. 

From Toys in Space by Mini
What else would happen? I badly wanted them to be abducted by an alien. However I wanted also to be brutally realistic, so the story of Toys in Space was my way for having Toys simultaneously abducted by aliens and not abducted by aliens. 



To get through a night out in the garden, they tell a story (which is where the beaming up comes in) until at last dawn happens and the sun comes out and they know they will be found.


PERIL FIVE: Your Owner GROWS UP

The Unspoken Tragedy in every toy’s life – is that its owner will grow up, the end of childhood. 

On the final page of The House at Pooh Corner, Christopher Robin says:

“Pooh, promise you won’t forget about me, ever. Not even when I’m a hundred.”

Pooh thought for a while.

“How old shall I be then?”

“Ninety-nine.”

Pooh nodded.

“I promise,” he said.

Still with his eyes on the world Christopher Robin put out a hand and felt for Pooh’s paw.

“Pooh,” said Christopher Robin earnestly, “if I – if I’m not quite -” he stopped and tried again – “Pooh, whatever happens, you will understand, won’t you?"

 The fate of a toy is to not grow, not change except to get worn and torn and be the victim of entropy, while your owner grows and changes and inevitably always grows up. But a toy is also potentially immortal if it doesn’t get too distressed, which its owner never is. So our toys have the potential to outlive us. 
 
In Bethnal Green Museum of Childhood live a huge collection of toys
Lost in the Toy Museum by David Lucas
who have outlasted their owners. In David Lucas’s Lost in the Toy Museum Bunting the Cat and the collection of historic toys romp their way through a game of hide and seek in the Museum.
From Lost in the Toy Museum by David Lucas

AND LASTLY...

Toy Names very often seem to have to state the bleeding obvious…so we have Red Ted, Stripy Ted, Blue Bear….

Blue Bear
Here is my Blue Bear who sits on my shelf in an encouraging way... But I always feel that Blue Bear is only a breath away from getting up and stumping off and having adventures of his own.



And perhaps one day he will.



Mini Grey makes picture books, and some of them have been about toys having adventures.
For more about lost toys, here's the tale of a lost whale on Sketching Weakly, Mini's sketch-blog.  
PS - Have you a favourite Picture Book toy that I've missed? Do let me know!



18 comments:

Dixyblue said...

Loved this. Thank you for brightening my Monday !

Juliet Clare Bell said...

Thank you, Mini! What a fun -if sometimes poignant- post (The Velveteen Rabbit!) And the post has given me half an idea for a story, too -hooray! What about Clown by Quentin Blake for your devastating Toy-Story-like being abandoned and chucked away? And fortunately, it has a happy ending...

Lucy Rowland said...

Hi Mini, I really enjoyed reading your post this morning. I kept scrolling down, thinking 'But what about 'Dogger'?' but it was there in the end- Dogger seems to be a book that people reference again and again- such a classic! This is not a picture book, but I really remember the cartoon 'The Raggy Dolls' from my childhood- all about the toys that end up in the reject bin at the toy factory! I've just re-watched the theme tune! Poor Raggy Dolls!

Jane Clarke said...

Very much enjoyed reading your post. Like Lucy, I was looking out for Dogger - when they were small, my sons shed real tears over that story.

Rebecca Gomez said...

I love this post so much! One of our favorite picture book toys is Used Up Bear. My son absolutely adored that book when he was little, and even now as a seventeen-year-old teenager, he still has that book on his shelf. Hopefully he'll share it with his own little one some day.

Mini Grey said...

Thank you Dixyblue!

Mini Grey said...

Thank you Juliet - yes, there is poor old Clown - I love the way he gets himself out of the dustbin...

Mini Grey said...

Thanks Lucy - yes Dogger had to be in there - probably should have been in 'Lost' but I was having trouble with my categories. Going into the toy zone unleashes a powerful tide of nostalgia!

Mini Grey said...

Thanks Jane! I loved finding this footage of Shirley Hughes reading Dogger: https://youtu.be/HD3DURks15E

Mini Grey said...

Thank you Rebecca! I will have to search out Used Up Bear - looks like it's by Clay Carmichael - poignant pic of a bear on a bin on the cover!

Paeony Lewis said...

Really enjoyed this, and seeing your gorgeous 'sketches' too.
I share your concerns about the fate of 'Other Mump Mump' - relieved this is fiction! My young daughter left an 'over-cuddled' toy kitten at a hotel and the tour rep was appalled that we were going to pay for a taxi to deliver the toy to the next hotel, but he didn't appreciate the potential devastation to my daughter, and thus everyone on the holiday! By the way, the same daughter wrote 'I love Demon Teddy' (or rather, her approximation of the words) inside Nicholas Allan's 'Demon Teddy' book, and twenty years later she reads Stephen King...

ptnozell said...

I loved reading this exploration of picture books with toys. To your list, I'd add Abigail Rayner's The Backup Bunny, NorhtSouth Books 2018.

David McMullin said...

This blog post is perfectly timed for me. I just read Edward Tulane this weekend, and loved how much heart can go into a book about a toy. I look forward to exploring this a bit further with these books. Thanks.

Jane Baskwill said...

This was a great post and gave lots to think about when it comes to toys in picture books. I think Knuffle Bunny might fit.

Emma Roberts said...

Thanks for sharing this informative information about mini plastic dolls for children with us. It's very helpful. Keep it up!

Ashlee Rolfson said...

Thank you to the author of this blog for highlighting the perils of being a toy. I'm inspired to embark on my own journey of scanning receipts on Fetch in February and challenge myself to maximize the number of receipts I can scan. Let's see how far we can go!
Check it

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HopeO said...

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