Rose St., Corner Bombil, Cahilsot Village
Brgy. Calumpang, General Santos City
February 26, 2012
Natalie Babbit
Providence, Rhode Isalnd, USA
Dear Mrs. Babbit,
It’s a great privilege and honor for me to have an opportunity to write to a gifted artist and writer like you. It is my first time write a letter to an author and my first time as well to read one of your books and I found it simply amazing. I read that you are an award- winning author of the modern classic of Tuck Everlasting, The Eyes of the Amaryllis, Kneeknock Rise and many other brilliantly original books for young people. By just reading one of your works, The Eyes of the Amaryllis, I will not anymore wonder why because your works really show how a bright writer you are.
The plot is very well written and is fast-paced without ever feeling bored. The mysterious and powerful sea drives a grandmother and her granddaughter through some unusual experiences, while waiting for a sign from that lost-at-sea on The Amaryllis because of a hurricane.
Reading this book, I found it was rather similar to "Daughter of the Sea" by Berlie Doherty. Both books praise the ocean to a great deal, but if I were to choose the stronger of the two, "The Eyes of the Amaryllis" wins hands down. I've always liked this story, and considering why I like it, there are a number of reasons that I can't always explain. The characters and their relationships are complex, with shades of grey that Jenny can't help noticing. Her Gran's fierce love and deep faith in her husband are very fine, and her strength and determination are like rock itself, choosing to let her son go when he couldn't handle living with the sea as an ever-present reminder of witnessing his father's death. However, I have little doubt that Babbitt herself has spent a lot of time with the ocean. But with this, I could say that real love cannot really be satiate by water neither is drown by floods.
Along in its linear plot, I also look the story of Nicholas as a terrible and a foolish waste just like what Geneva sees to it. This book really shows the vulnerability of those who lose a loved one and how hope can direct one's behavior in ways that can't be explained with logic.
"Amaryllis" is a wonderful tale of longing. Now, I am quickly becoming such a fan of yours that I believe everyone should read your work. I am looking forward to read more of your works that has wonderful tidbits of morality and the human condition peppered throughout your narratives and morality tales that would always be a huge favorite of mine.
More power and God Bless!
Your supporter,
Divina B. Moradas
Sunday, February 26, 2012
The Eyes of the Amaryllis (PART I)
I found “The Eyes of the Amaryllis” inspiring and uplifting. The Amaryllis is a ship that was lost during a hurricane which took Geneva Reade's husband including all the crew members of the ship. This incident left no traces. For thirty years, Geneva has been waiting and walking the shores looking for a sign from the ship and her husband, a sign she knew beyond a shadow of a doubt, would eventually come.
I knew it was very throbbing and excruciating chapter in Geneva’s life then when her husband is nowhere to found. It’s not easy then to wait for signs in about thirty years with no assertion if it would really come. But for Geneva, she patiently waited for that moment to come. This is spun with touches of the supernatural. It is ultimately about accepting things as they are and letting go of that which you so dearly want to cling on to.
Many children nowadays find their grandparents mysterious and weird. When I was still six years old, I also thought that one. But, unlike Jenny in the story, as her granny shares the mysterious things in her life, I hadn’t thought even at once that my Grandmother seems to be mad. Instead, I really love to listen to my grandmother as she shares creepy stories in her life as well as her love life way back ages and ages then.
In the Song of Solomon 8:7, it states that many waters cannot quench love; neither can the floods drown it. I simply find this inspiring in relation to the story of the Eyes of the Amaryllis. Indeed, real love doesn’t drown, and isn’t overcome by an ocean. Geneva’s love for the captain is really deep and true that she has waited patiently for a sign she knows is coming. Although her only son refuses to visit the place where he lost his father, she refuses to leave it and move in with his family. I found this book was rather similar to "Daughter of the Sea" by Berlie Doherty. Both books praise the ocean to a great deal.
I really found this book amazing--so many themes, including the line between fantasy and reality, between the living and the dead, the sea and the land, understanding between the generations, --memory and moving on after a great loss. But I just wonder then how if The Eyes of the Amaryllis was set on Cape Cod today. Would the novel have worked more effectively than setting The Eyes of the Amaryllis in the past? Moreover, there's the open question of what to believe about Gran's long vigil by the sea, and what mysteries the sea might hold. Does the signs after the thirty years of Geneva’s waiting really signifies that her husband is still alive but just trapped by the sea which Geneva really believes it so? Or it’s just a mere imagination and all are just coincidence of things? How long will this so- called deadly game with the sea last? A game that only the sea knows how to win. What winning really means in this story? And as I read this book, I’ve got to question myself if will I do believe in things that can’t be explained?
I think, though for while Geneva's husband does indeed send his wife a sign, the sea is not happy with the gift and demands it back and by force, as it happens, but this will not stop for the love and longing both of them feels. Death would also not be a hindrance in expressing their love for each other even if Granny would face her death then. So even when Geneva would be saying farewell in this world, there would be still signs that her husband will send. This shows that the line between reality and imagination is indefinable. This is maybe a ghost story, but for sure, this is a story of an endless love.
I knew it was very throbbing and excruciating chapter in Geneva’s life then when her husband is nowhere to found. It’s not easy then to wait for signs in about thirty years with no assertion if it would really come. But for Geneva, she patiently waited for that moment to come. This is spun with touches of the supernatural. It is ultimately about accepting things as they are and letting go of that which you so dearly want to cling on to.
Many children nowadays find their grandparents mysterious and weird. When I was still six years old, I also thought that one. But, unlike Jenny in the story, as her granny shares the mysterious things in her life, I hadn’t thought even at once that my Grandmother seems to be mad. Instead, I really love to listen to my grandmother as she shares creepy stories in her life as well as her love life way back ages and ages then.
In the Song of Solomon 8:7, it states that many waters cannot quench love; neither can the floods drown it. I simply find this inspiring in relation to the story of the Eyes of the Amaryllis. Indeed, real love doesn’t drown, and isn’t overcome by an ocean. Geneva’s love for the captain is really deep and true that she has waited patiently for a sign she knows is coming. Although her only son refuses to visit the place where he lost his father, she refuses to leave it and move in with his family. I found this book was rather similar to "Daughter of the Sea" by Berlie Doherty. Both books praise the ocean to a great deal.
I really found this book amazing--so many themes, including the line between fantasy and reality, between the living and the dead, the sea and the land, understanding between the generations, --memory and moving on after a great loss. But I just wonder then how if The Eyes of the Amaryllis was set on Cape Cod today. Would the novel have worked more effectively than setting The Eyes of the Amaryllis in the past? Moreover, there's the open question of what to believe about Gran's long vigil by the sea, and what mysteries the sea might hold. Does the signs after the thirty years of Geneva’s waiting really signifies that her husband is still alive but just trapped by the sea which Geneva really believes it so? Or it’s just a mere imagination and all are just coincidence of things? How long will this so- called deadly game with the sea last? A game that only the sea knows how to win. What winning really means in this story? And as I read this book, I’ve got to question myself if will I do believe in things that can’t be explained?
I think, though for while Geneva's husband does indeed send his wife a sign, the sea is not happy with the gift and demands it back and by force, as it happens, but this will not stop for the love and longing both of them feels. Death would also not be a hindrance in expressing their love for each other even if Granny would face her death then. So even when Geneva would be saying farewell in this world, there would be still signs that her husband will send. This shows that the line between reality and imagination is indefinable. This is maybe a ghost story, but for sure, this is a story of an endless love.
About the Author
A gifted artist and writer, Natalie Babbitt is the award-winning author of the modern classic Tuck Everlasting, Kneeknock Rise and many other brilliantly original books for young people. She began her career in 1966 as the illustrator of The Forty-ninth Magician, a collaboration with her husband. When her husband became a college president and no longer had time to collaborate, Babbitt tried her hand at writing. Her first novel, The Search for Delicious, established her gift for writing magical tales with profound meaning. Kneeknock Rise earned her a Newbery Honor Medal, and in 2002, Tuck Everlasting was adapted into a major motion picture. Natalie Babbitt lives in Providence, Rhode Island, and is a grandmother of three.
The Eyes of the Amaryllis
When the brig Amaryllis was swallowed in a hurricane, the captain and all the crew were swallowed, too. For thirty years the captain’s widow, Geneva Reade, has waited, certain that her husband will send her a message from the bottom of the sea. But someone else is waiting, too, and watching her, a man called Seward. Into this haunted situation comes Jenny, the widow’s granddaughter. The three of them, Gran, Jenny, and Seward, are drawn into a kind of deadly game with one another and with the sea, a game that only the sea knows how to win.
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