By Jane Langton
1962
Somehow, I missed reading this book as a child, but it is
one that I know I would have loved. The
Diamond in the Window is the first book in the Hall Family Chronicles. It tells the story of two children, Edward
and Eleanor, who live in an old, rambling house in Concord, Massachusetts. As the story opens, we find out that taxes
are owed on the property and if Aunt Lily can’t come up with the money in time,
she, the children, and Uncle Freddy will have to leave their run-down, yet much
loved home.
The children set out to solve a mystery involving two other children
who once upon a time had vanished from the attic of the house. They believe that solving this mystery will
not only find the missing children, but will also lead them to treasure,
enabling them to save their home.
This story is filled with historical lessons and plenty of fantasy. Three authors from Concord, Henry David
Thoreau, Ralph Waldo Emerson, and Louisa May Alcott, are all part of the story. Edward and Eleanor, whenever they sleep in
the attic room, fall into dreams that help them solve the mystery. Are they dreams, though? When Eleanor wakes from her dream of falling
out of a tree, she awakens bruised and scratched.
Louisa May Alcott's grave in Concord, MA |
Henry David Thoreau's grave in Concord, MA |
In one dream, Eleanor has become a doll belonging to Louisa May Alcott and witnesses a conversation among Louisa and her sisters. This follows a trip the children make to the actual Alcott home, now a museum. Another day, the children visit Walden Pond and later dream that they are mice who live in Thoreau’s house in the woods.
Along the way, Eleanor and Edward learn moral lessons, too.
In one of my favorite dream scenes, the children are stuck
in a set of never-ending mirrors. Each
step offers them a choice of mirrors to step through, making it difficult to go
back. After yanking and tugging each
other this way and that through this maze of mirrors, they come face-to-face
with images of their future selves, with stubborn, grim expressions. They are filled with horror as they realize
that each choice they have made has brought them to this place.
Eleanor remembers
what her Uncle Freddy told her once. “Beware how you paint yourself. Carve yourself well!” She realizes that in order to get back to
their kind, caring selves they need to start making very careful choices.
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