Moominpappa's Memoirs (Moomin Series #4)

Moominpappa's Memoirs (Moomin Series #4)

Moominpappa's Memoirs (Moomin Series #4)

Moominpappa's Memoirs (Moomin Series #4)

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Overview

Enhanced with Tove Jansson's simple, sprightly drawings, this series of delightful stories about life in Moomin Valley has enchanted audiences around the world for more than 70 years.

Before he had a family, Moominpappa led a life of adventure and intrigue. But he's never told his story until now. He has a bad cold, and it's the perfect time to remember his youthful endeavors and to ponder the experiences which have made him the remarkable Moomin he is.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780312625436
Publisher: Square Fish
Publication date: 04/27/2010
Series: Moomin Series
Pages: 192
Sales rank: 56,728
Product dimensions: 5.40(w) x 8.10(h) x 0.60(d)
Age Range: 9 - 12 Years

About the Author

Tove Jansson (1914–2001) was born in Helsinki and spent much of her life in Finland. She is the author of the Moomin books, including Comet in Moominland and Finn Family Moomintroll. Born into an artistic family—her father was a sculptor and her mother was a graphic designer and illustrator—Jansson studied at the University College of Arts, Crafts and Design in Stockholm, the Finnish Academy of Fine Arts, and L'École des Beaux-Arts in Paris. In addition to her Moomin books, she also wrote several novels, drew comic strips and worked as a painter and illustrator. In 1966, she was awarded the Hans Christian Andersen Medal for her body of work. Jansson had a studio in Helsinki but spent most of her time at her home on a small island called Klovharu.

Read an Excerpt

Moominpappa's Memoirs


By Tove Jansson, Thomas Warburton

Farrar, Straus and Giroux

Copyright © 1968 Tove Jansson
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-312-62543-6



CHAPTER 1

In which I tell of my misunderstood childhood, of the first Experience in my life and the tremendous night of my escape, and of my historic meeting with Hodgkins.


Early one cold and windy evening many years ago, a simple shopping bag was found on the doorstep of the Moomin Foundling Home. In the bag lay none other than I, rather carelessly wrapped in newspaper.

How much more romantic it would have been had I been placed instead on green moss in a small, pretty basket!

However, the Hemulen who had built the Foundling Home was interested in astrology (somewhat), and wisely enough she observed the dominant stars at the time of my coming into the world. They indicated the birth of a very unusual and talented Moomin, and the Hemulen accordingly worried about the trouble awaiting her (geniuses are often regarded as being disagreeable, but I must confess that this has never disturbed me).

The position of the stars is a remarkable matter! Had I been born a couple of hours earlier, I would have become a keen poker player, and everyone born twenty minutes after me felt compelled to join the Hemulic Voluntary Brass Band (fathers and mothers cannot be careful enough when starting a family, and I recommend making minute calculations).

Anyhow, when I was lifted out of the shopping bag I sneezed three times in a very peculiar way. It might have signified something or other.

The Hemulen tied a tag to my tail and stamped it with the magical number 13, because she already had twelve foundlings. All of them were grave, tidy, and obedient, because unfortunately the Hemulen washed them more often than she kissed them (she owned the sort of solid character that lacks all the finer nuances). Dear reader, imagine a Moominhouse where all the rooms are placed strictly in a row, foursquare and painted in the same beer-brown color! You don't believe me? Moominhouses, you say, should have plenty of the most surprising nooks and secret chambers, stairs, balconies, and turrets? Not this one! And worse: in the night none of us was allowed to get out of bed, to eat, chat, or walk about. (We were barely permitted to pee!)

I was never allowed to take any funny little bugs home with me to keep under my bed. I had to eat and wash at fixed times. I had to carry my tail at an angle of forty-five degrees when saying good morning. Oh, who can talk about such matters without shedding a tear!

I used to stand before the tiny mirror in the hall and look deep into my unhappy blue eyes, trying to penetrate the secret of my life. With my nose in my paws, I heaved sighs such as "Alone!" "Cruel World!" "Fate is my Lot!" and other sad words, until I felt a little better.

I was a very lonely Moominchild, as is often the case with original talents. No one understood me or could make me out, least of all I myself. Of course, I was aware of the difference between me and the other Moomin children. It lay mainly in their deplorable incapacity for wondering and marvelling.

For example, I would ask the Hemulen why everything was just as it was and not the other way round.

"Wouldn't that be pretty indeed," said the Hemulen to this. "What's wrong with things as they are?" She never explained anything, and I felt more and more strongly that she was trying to shrug the whole matter off. "What, when?" and "Who, how?" have no meaning to Hemulens.

Or I asked her why I was I and not someone else.

"Bad luck for both of us! Have you washed your face?" was the Hemulen's reply to this important question.

I continued: "But why are you a Hemulen and not a Moomin?"

"My father and mother were Hemulens, praise be," she replied.

"And their fathers and mothers?" I asked.

"Hemulens!" the Hemulen cried. "And also their fathers and mothers, and all theirs, and so forth and so forth, and now go and wash or I'll be getting nervous!"

"How dreary. Do they never end?" I asked. "Sometime there must have been a first father and mother, mustn't there?"

"That's so long ago that nobody cares," said the Hemulen. "And anyhow, why should we end?" (A dim but unavoidable notion told me that the line of fathers and mothers that had to do with myself was something rather exceptional. I wouldn't be surprised if my swaddling-clothes had been embroidered with a royal crown. But alas! old newspapers tell nothing!)

One night I dreamed that I was holding my tail at a wrong angle, namely, seventy degrees, when I said good morning to the Hemulen. I described this nice dream to her and asked if it made her angry.

"Dreams are trash," said the Hemulen.

"How does one know?" I objected. "Perhaps the Moomin in my dream is the real one, and the Moomin who stands here is only something you are dreaming?"

"I'm afraid not! You are very real!" said the Hemulen dejectedly. "I haven't time for you now! You give me headaches! What'll become of you in this un-Hemulic world?"

"I'm going to be famous," I declared earnestly. "And among other things, I'll build a house for little Hemulen foundlings. And I'll let them eat treacle sandwiches in bed and keep grass snakes and skunks under it!"

"They'll never care for that," said the Hemulen.

I'm afraid she was right.


So passed my early childhood in quiet and constant wonderment. I was permanently astonished, always repeating my questions of "What, when?" and "Who, how?" The Hemulen and her obedient foundlings avoided me as best they could; the word "why" seemed to make them uneasy. So I wandered alone in the bleak, treeless landscape by the sea near the Hemulen's house, musing over spiders' webs and stars, over the Little Creeps with curled tails that scuttled around in the water pools, and over the wind that blew from different quarters and always smelled different. (I have later learned that a talented Moomin always wonders about things that seem self-evident but finds nothing strange in things that an ordinary Moomin thinks are curious.) It was a melancholy time.

But by and by a change came: I started to muse about the shape of my nose. I put my trivial surroundings aside and mused more and more about myself, and I found this to be a bewitching occupation. I stopped asking and longed instead to speak of my thoughts and feelings. Alas, there was no one besides myself who found me interesting.

Then came the spring that was so important for my development. At first I didn't understand that it was directed toward myself. I heard the usual chirping, whirring, and humming from all who awoke from the winter and now were in a hurry for something. I saw the Hemulen's symmetrical vegetable garden get its start, and everything that came up was crumpled from impatience. New winds were singing at night. The smells were different. They were the smells of change. I sniffed at everything and got growing pains in my legs, but I still had no idea that it was all intended for me.

Finally, one windy morning, I had a feeling that ... well, I simply had a feeling. And I walked straight down to the sea that the Hemulen didn't like and consequently had forbidden us.

An important experience awaited me. For the first time I saw myself full-length. The bright and shiny ice was much wider than the Hemulen's hall mirror. I could see the clouds of the spring sky sailing past my small, pretty, upright ears. At last I could view the whole of my nose and the firm, well-rounded rest of myself all the way down to my paws. The paws were really my only disappointment: they had a look of helplessness and childishness that bewildered me. "However," I thought, "perhaps it will pass with time. Doubtless my strength is in my head. Whatever I do, I will never bore people. I'll never give them time to look as far down as my paws." Enchanted, I gazed at my reflection. In order to see it still better, I lay down on the ice on my stomach.

But now I disappeared. Now there was only a green dimness that dwindled deeper and deeper. Vague shadows were moving about in the unknown world that led its secret life under the ice. They looked threatening and very attractive. A giddiness came over me and I thought, "To fall down there. Down among the strange shadows ..."

The thought was so terrifying that I thought it once again: "Deeper, deeper down ... Nevermore! Only down and down and down."

It made me extremely upset. I rose up and stamped my feet to see if the ice would hold. It did. I walked a bit farther out to see if it would hold there, too. It didn't.

Suddenly I hung up to my ears in the cold green sea with my paws helplessly dangling over a bottomless and dangerous darkness. In the meantime the clouds were sailing along in the sky quite calmly, as if nothing had happened.

Perhaps one of the threatening shadows would devour me! It was not impossible that he would take one of my ears along to his children and tell them, "Now, eat up before it goes cold! This is genuine Moomin and not to be had every day!" Or I would float ashore with a tragical clump of seaweed behind one ear, and the Hemulen would weep regretfully and tell everyone she knew, "Oh, he was such a singular Moomin! What a pity I didn't understand it in time ..."

I was just starting on my funeral when I felt something very cautiously nipping my tail. Everyone who owns a tail knows how careful one is of this special ornament and how instantly one reacts if it is threatened by danger or affront. I laid my enticing dreams aside and was filled with energy. Determinedly I crawled up onto the ice, and then ashore. There I told myself, "Now I have had an Experience. This is the first Experience of my life. I can't possibly stay with the Hemulen any longer. I shall take my fate in my own paws!"

I felt cold all day, but no one asked me why. This fortified me in my resolution. At dusk I tore my bedsheet in long strips and tied them into a rope. I made it fast to the windowsill. The twelve obedient foundlings looked on but didn't say a word, and this hurt me. After evening tea I wrote a farewell letter, taking great care over it. Simply, but with dignity, it said:

Dear Hemulen,

I feel that great events await me, and that a Moomin's life is short. So I leave this place. Good-bye. Do not grieve: I shall return one day crowned with laurel wreaths!

Cheerio, and with best wishes,

A Moomin who is unlike others

P.S. I am taking a pot of pumpkin mash along.


The die was cast! Led by the stars of my fate, I went on my way, with never an inkling of the strange events that lay in wait for me. I was simply a very young Moomin, gloomily wandering over the heath, sighing in desolate gorges, my loneliness increased by the terrifying sounds of the night.


At exactly this point in his Memoirs, Moominpappa became very deeply moved by the tale of his unhappy childhood, and he felt that he needed a break. He screwed the top on his memoir-pen and went over to the window. All was silent in Moominvalley.

A light breeze was whispering in the garden and gently swinging Moomintroll's rope ladder to and fro. "I'm sure I could still manage an escape," Moominpappa thought. "I'm really not so very old!"

He chuckled to himself. Then he lowered his legs over the windowsill and reached for the rope ladder.

"Hello, Pappa," said Moomintroll at the next window. "What are you up to?"

"Exercises, my boy," answered Moominpappa. "Keeping fit! One step down, two up, one down, two up. Good for the muscles!"

"Better be careful," said Moomintroll. "How are the Memoirs going?"

"Quite well," answered Moominpappa and hauled his trembling legs to safety over the windowsill. "I've just run away. The Hemulen cries with grief. I think it will all be very moving."

"When are you going to read it to us?"

"Soon. As soon as I've come to the riverboat," said Moominpappa. "It's great fun to read your own book aloud!"

"I'm sure it is," said Moomintroll and stifled a yawn. "Well, good night, Pappa."

"Good night, Moomintroll," said Moominpappa, already unscrewing the top of his memoir-pen.

"Well. Where was I ...? Oh, yes, I had run away, and then in the morning — no, that'll come later. I must enlarge upon the night of escape ..."


All night I wandered through unknown, bleak landscapes. How I pity myself now, afterward! I didn't dare stop, I didn't dare look around me. Who knows what you may suddenly see in the darkness! I tried to sing "How Un-Hemulic Is This World," the morning march of the foundlings, but my voice trembled so much that it only frightened me all the more. There was a mist that night. Thick as the Hemulen's oatmeal porridge, it crawled over the heath, changing bushes and stones into formless monsters — they glided toward me, reached out for me ... Oh, how sorry I felt for myself!

Even the redoubtable company of the Hemulen would have comforted me just then. But as for turning back — never! Not after such an imposing letter of farewell.

Dawn came at last.

And at sunrise something beautiful happened. The mist became as rosy red as the veil on the Hemulen's Sunday bonnet. In a moment the whole world turned rosy red and friendly! I stood motionless and saw the night disappear. I put it clear out of the way. I experienced my first morning, my own and private morning! Dear reader, judge of my happiness and triumph when I tore the hateful tag from my tail and threw it far into the heather! After that I danced the Moomin Dance of Dawning Freedom in the cold, glistening spring morn, with my small, beautiful ears pricked and my nose lifted against the sky.

No more washing by others' orders! No more eating just because it was dinnertime! No more saluting anybody other than a King, and no more sleeping in foursquare, beer-brown rooms! Down with the Hemulens!

Up rose the sun, its light sparkling on cobwebs and wet leaves, and among the receding mists I saw the Way. The Way that wound over the heath, out toward the world, forward into my coming life, which would be a life of singular fame and not a bit like anybody else's.

First of all I ate the pumpkin mash and tossed the pot away. Now I was rid of all possessions. There was nothing I had to do, and nothing I could do out of old habit, because everything was completely new and unknown to me. I have never felt better.

This singular feeling lasted until night. I was so filled with myself and my freedom that the coming dark didn't bother me in the least. Singing a song of my own composition with the greatest words (I'm afraid I've forgotten them now), I wandered on straight into the night.

I was met by a wind with a strange, nice smell that filled my nostrils with expectation. I did not know then that this was the smell of the forest, of moss and bracken and a thousand large trees. When I became tired, I curled up on the ground and warmed my cold paws against my stomach. Perhaps I wouldn't build a home for Hemulen foundlings after all. As a matter of fact, they are very seldom found. I lay for a while musing about which it was better to become, a famous person or an adventurer. I decided to be a famous adventurer. And just before I went to sleep I thought, "Tomorrow!"

When I awoke I was looking straight up into a new world that was all green. Understandably enough, I was very surprised, as I had never seen a tree before. They were dizzyingly tall and straight, and they supported a green roof. The leaves swayed gently and glistened in the morning light, and a great many birds were dashing back and forth, screeching with delight. I stood on my head for a moment to calm myself. Then I shouted, "Good morning! Who does this beautiful place belong to? Are there any Hemulens here?"

"Don't bother us! We're busy playing!" the birds cried and threw themselves headlong among the leaves.

I walked farther into the wood. The moss felt warm and very soft, but there were deep shadows under the bracken. Swarms of small creatures such as I had never seen before were jumping and flying about, but of course they were too small to understand serious conversation. At last I met an older hedgehog sitting by herself and polishing a large nutshell.

"Good morning, ma'am!" I said. "I am a lonely refugee who was born under rather special stars."

"You don't say," said the hedgehog, none too enthusiastically. "I'm working. This is going to be a milk-bowl."

"Indeed," I said, and became aware that I was hungry. "Who owns this beautiful place?"

"No one! Everyone!" said the hedgehog with a shrug.

"I, too?" I asked.

"By all means," mumbled the hedgehog and continued polishing her milk-bowl.

"So you're quite sure, ma'am, that this place doesn't belong to some Hemulen or other?" I asked, worriedly.

"A what?" said the hedgehog.

Imagine, this happy creature had never come across a Hemulen!

"A Hemulen has terribly large feet and no sense of humor," I explained. "She has a protruding, slightly depressed snout, and her hair grows in indefinite tufts. A Hemulen does nothing because it would be fun to do it, but only because it must be done, and she tells one all the time what one ought to have done and —"

"Good gracious!" cried the hedgehog and backed away among the bracken.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Moominpappa's Memoirs by Tove Jansson, Thomas Warburton. Copyright © 1968 Tove Jansson. Excerpted by permission of Farrar, Straus and Giroux.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Contents

MOOMIN GALLERY,
PROLOGUE,
PREFACE,
CHAPTER 1 In which I tell of my misunderstood child–hood, of the first Experience in my life and the tremendous night of my escape, and of my historic meeting with Hodgkins.,
CHAPTER 2 Introducing the Muddler and the Joxter in my Memoirs, presenting Edward the Booble, and giving a spirited account of the Oshun Oxtra and its matchless launching.,
CHAPTER 3 Recapitulating my first heroic rescue feat, its staggering outcome, a few thoughts, and a description of the behaviour of Niblings.,
CHAPTER 4 In which the description of my ocean voyage culminates in a magnificent tempest and ends in a terrible surprise.,
CHAPTER 5 In which (after giving a small specimen of my intellectual powers) I describe the Mymble family and the great Surprise Party that brought me some fascinatingtokens of honor from the paw of the Autocrat.,
CHAPTER 6 In which I found a colony, suffer a crisis, and call forth the Ghost of Horror Island.,
CHAPTER 7 In which I describe the triumphant unveiling of the converted Oshun Oxtra and an eventful trial dive to the bottom of the sea.,
CHAPTER 8 In which I give an account of the circumstances of the Muddler's wedding, further touch slightly on my dramatic meeting with Moominmamma, and finally write the profound closing words of my Memoirs.,
EPILOGUE,
Tove Jansson and the Moomins,
A Timeline Full of Fun Facts About the World of Moomin,

Reading Group Guide

Discussion Questions
1. Compare and contrast Moominpappa and Moominmamma as parents.
2. The Moomin books feature several different female characters. Pick one and discuss what makes her particularly strong and memorable.
3. The Moomins have been compared to A.A. Milne's Winnie the Pooh and Lewis
Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. Can you see the similarities?
4. Whenever there is trouble, the Moomins and their friends always seem to flock to
Moominmamma for help. What is it about Moominmamma's personality and character that makes her so comforting?
5. Gather some information about Finland. After reading the information, can you see any resemblance between the Finnish landscape, and Moominvalley and its surrounding areas?
6. At one point in the series, Moomintroll leaves his house and goes out to discover the world on his own. How is his adventure similar to growing up?
7. The Moomins are described as very tolerant characters. Reading through the books, point out the scenes where this characterization is shown.
8. Do any of the characters change throughout the books? Do any stay the same?
Discuss.
9. If you could be any character from the Moomin books, which would you be and why?

10. Can you identify with any of the characters in the books? How?

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