- The Sea Fairies
infobox Book
name =The Sea Fairies
image caption =
author =L. Frank Baum
illustrator =John R. Neill
cover_artist =John R. Neill
country =United States
language = English
genre = Children's novel
publisher =Reilly & Britton
release_date = 1911
media_type = Print (Hardcover )
preceded_by = N/A
followed_by = Sky Island"The Sea Fairies" is a children's
fantasy novel written byL. Frank Baum , illustrated byJohn R. Neill , and published in 1911 by theReilly & Britton Company, the publisher of Baum's series of Oz books. Baum dedicated the book to the otherwise-unknown "Judith of Randolph, Massachusetts" — most likely one of the child readers who corresponded with the author.As an underwater fantasy, Baum's "The Sea Fairies" can be classed with earlier books with similar themes, like
Charles Kingsley 's "The Water-Babies " (1863), and successors too, likeE. Nesbit 's "Wet Magic" (1913). Baum's novel has no relation to the 1830 poem of the same name by Alfred, Lord Tennyson. In 1905, however, a musical setting of Tennyson's poem for female chorus and orchestra, composed byAmy Beach , was in performance; the title may have stuck in the back of Baum's mind.Plot
Mayre Griffiths, nicknamed Trot, or sometimes Tiny Trot, is a little girl who lives on the coast of southern California. Her father is the captain of a sailing schooner, and her constant companion is
Cap'n Bill Weedles, a retired sailor with a wooden leg. (Cap'n Bill had been Trot's father's skipper, and Charlie Griffiths had been his mate, before the accident that took the older man's leg.) Trot and Cap'n Bill spend many of their days roaming the beaches near home, or rowing and sailing along the coast. One day, Trot wishes that she could see amermaid ; her wish is overheard, and granted the next day. The mermaids explain to Trot, and the distressed Cap'n Bill, that they are benevolent fairies; when they offer Trot a chance to pay a visit to their land in mermaid form, Trot is enthusiastic, and Bill is too loyal to let her go off without him.So begins their sojourn among the sea fairies. They see amazing sights in the land of Queen Aquarine and King Anko (including an
octopus who is mortified to learn that he's the symbol of theStandard Oil Company ). They also encounter a villain called Zog the Magician, a monstrous hybrid of man, animal, and fish. Zog and his sea devils capture them and hold them prisoner. The two protagonists discover that many sailors thought to have been drowned have actually been transformed into zombie-like gilled slaves by Zog. Trot and Cap'n Bill survive Zog's challenges, and the villain is eventually defeated by the forces of good. Trot and Cap'n Bill are returned to human form, safe and dry after their undersea adventure.As many readers and critics have observed, Baum's Oz in particular and his fantasy novels in general are dominated by puissant and virtuous female figures; the archetype of the father-figure plays little role in Baum's fantasy world. "The Sea Fairies" is a lonely exception to this overall trend: "The sea serpent King Anko...is the closest approximation to a powerful, benevolent father figure in Baum's fantasies." [Katherine Rogers, "L. Frank Baum," p. 289.]
Reception
Baum had decided to end the Oz series with "
The Emerald City of Oz " in 1910, after six installments over the first decade of the twentieth century. "The Sea Fairies" was intended to be the first in a new series of fantasy novels, which Baum and Reilly & Britton continued the next year with "Sky Island." Unfortunately for author and publisher, the two volumes of the new projected series did not meet with the same success as the Oz books previously had. The first edition of "The Sea Fairies" sold 12,400 copies in its initial year on the market, where "The Emerald City of Oz" had sold 20,000. Even when Baum's books experienced a major resurgence in interest and sales in 1918, "The Sea Fairies" sold only 611 copies that year while the Oz books and even Baum's non-Oz works were selling thousands of copies. [Rogers, p. 230.]Once Baum returned to writing Oz books with "
The Patchwork Girl of Oz " in 1913, the Trot series was retired — but the main characters lived on. Trot and Cap'n Bill are the main protagonists in "The Scarecrow of Oz " (1915) — the plot of which was reworked from the projected third book in their aborted series — and they play a significant role in "The Magic of Oz " (1918). Trot appears in "The Lost Princess of Oz " (1917) and "Glinda of Oz " (1918) as well. She also plays significant roles in some ofRuth Plumly Thompson 's Oz books, and, after that, in official and non-official sequels by various authors.Other Media
In 1985, an independent producer commissioned a script based on "The Sea Fairies" as a follow-up to "
Return to Oz ", but because of "Oz"'s poor reception, the project was apparently dropped.The Oz Kids video "Journey Beneath the Sea" was a loose adaptation of "The Sea Fairies."Notes
References
*Rogers, Katharine M. "L. Frank Baum: Creator of Oz." New York, St. Martin's Press, 2002.
*Eyles, Allen "The World of Oz: A Fantastic Expedition Over The Rainbow." England, Black Pig Editions Ltd., 1985.
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.