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Norton Juster - The Phantom Tollbooth

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Norton Juster The Phantom Tollbooth
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    The Phantom Tollbooth
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The Phantom Tollbooth: summary, description and annotation

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Illustrated in black-and-white. This ingenious fantasy centers around Milo, a bored ten-year-old who comes home to find a large toy tollbooth sitting in his room. Joining forces with a watchdog named Tock, Milo drives through the tollbooths gates and begins a memorable journey. He meets such characters as the foolish, yet lovable Humbug, the Mathemagician, and the not-so-wicked Which, Faintly Macabre, who gives Milo the impossible mission of returning two princesses to the Kingdom of Wisdom.

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You know youre in excellent hands when in the midst of some nutty didactic - photo 1

You know youre in excellent hands when, in the midst of some nutty, didactic dialogue, the author disarms you.

I guess I just wasnt thinking, said Milo.

PRECISELY, shouted the dog as his alarm went off again. Now you know what you must do.

Im afraid I dont, admitted Milo, feeling quite stupid.

Well, continued the watchdog impatiently, since you got here by not thinking, it seems reasonable to expect that, in order to get out, you must start thinking. And with that he hopped into the car.

Its what Tock, the literal watchdog (see the Feiffer illustration), says next that makes my heart melt, as it did on my very first reading way back when: Do you mind if I get in? I love automobile rides. There is the teeming-brained Norton Juster touching just the right note at just the right moment.

The Phantom Tollbooth leaps, soars, and abounds in right notes all over the place, as any proper masterpiece must. Early critics responded enthusiastically, garnishing their reviews with exuberant Justeresque puns and wordplay. Comparison with Alice in Wonderland was inevitable, for the author displays a similar ingenuity, bite, and playfulness in his attack on the common usage of words. All well and goodwonderful, in factthis miracle of instant recognition by contemporary critics. And nicelovely, evento be compared to Alice, though I suspect Norton Juster would have preferred, if his book had to be compared, The Wind in the Willows. It was even compared to Bunyan! As Pilgrims Progress is concerned with the awakening of the sluggardly spirit, The Phantom Tollbooth is concerned with the awakening of the lazy mind.

All of the above would gladden the heart of any young writer, but comparisons to Carroll and Bunyan only begin to suggest the qualities that make Tollbooth so splendid. For me, it is primarily the heart and soul of Norton Justerhis menschkeitthat produced this marvel of a book. Another part of the marvel: even though Tollbooth is extraordinary fantasy, it is tightly hinged in the here and now, and conveys an urgent and vivid sense of reality. Jules Feifferthat rare artist who can draw an ideacombines the same insistent reality and uninhibited fantasy in his superb scratchy-itchy pen drawings.

Tollbooth is a product of a time and place that fills me with fierce nostalgia. It was published in New York City in 1961, that golden moment in American childrens book publishing when we lucky kidsNorton, Jules, myself, and many morewere all swept up in a publishing adventure full of risks and high jinks that has nearly faded from memory. There were no temptations except to astonish. There were no seductions because there was not much money, and kiddie books were firmly nailed to the bottom of the literary-career totem pole. Simply, it was easy to stay clean and fresh, and wildly ourselvesa pod of happy baby whales, flipping our lusty flukes and diving deep for gold. Tollbooth is pure gold.

Rereading it now (even Milo would be amazed at the quick whirling away of thirty-five years), I am touched all over again by the confidence, certainty, and radiance of a book that knew it had to exist. It provides the same shock of recognition as it did thenthe same excitement and sheer delight in glorious lunatic linguistic acrobatics. It is also prophetic and scarily pertinent to late-nineties urban living. The book treats, in fantastical terms, the dread problems of excessive specialization, lack of communication, conformity, cupidity, and all the alarming ills of our time. Things have gone from bad to worse to ugly. The dumbing down of America is proceeding apace. Justers allegorical monsters have become all too real. The Demons of Ignorance, the Gross Exaggeration (whose wicked teeth were made only to mangle the truth), and the shabby Threadbare Excuse are inside the walls of the Kingdom of Wisdom, while the Gorgons of Hate and Malice, the Overbearing Know-it-all, and most especially the Triple Demons of Compromise are already established in high office all over the world. The fair princesses, Rhyme and Reason, have obviously been banished yet again. We need Milo! We need him and his endearing buddies, Tock the watchdog and the Humbug, to rescue them once more. We need them to clamber aboard the dear little electric car and wind their way around the Doldrums, the Foothills of Confusion, and the Mountains of Ignorance, up into the Castle in the Air, where Rhyme and Reason are imprisoned, so they can restore them to us. While we wait, let us celebrate the great good fortune that brought The Phantom Tollbooth into our lives thirty-five happy years ago. Mazel tov, Milo, Norton, and Jules!

MAURICE SENDAK

1996

1. Milo

There was once a boy named Milo who didnt know what to do with himselfnot just sometimes, but always.

When he was in school he longed to be out, and when he was out he longed to be in. On the way he thought about coming home, and coming home he thought about going. Wherever he was he wished he were somewhere else, and when he got there he wondered why hed bothered. Nothing really interested himleast of all the things that should have.

It seems to me that almost everything is a waste of time, he remarked one day as he walked dejectedly home from school. I cant see the point in learning to solve useless problems, or subtracting turnips from turnips, or knowing where Ethiopia is or how to spell February. And, since no one bothered to explain otherwise, he regarded the process of seeking knowledge as the greatest waste of time of all.

As he and his unhappy thoughts hurried along for while he was never anxious to - photo 2

As he and his unhappy thoughts hurried along (for while he was never anxious to be where he was going, he liked to get there as quickly as possible) it seemed a great wonder that the world, which was so large, could sometimes feel so small and empty.

And worst of all, he continued sadly, theres nothing for me to do, nowhere Id care to go, and hardly anything worth seeing. He punctuated this last thought with such a deep sigh that a house sparrow singing nearby stopped and rushed home to be with his family.

Without stopping or looking up, Milo dashed past the buildings and busy shops that lined the street and in a few minutes reached homedashed through the lobbyhopped onto the elevatortwo, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, and off againopened the apartment doorrushed into his roomflopped dejectedly into a chair, and grumbled softly, Another long afternoon.

He looked glumly at all the things he owned. The books that were too much trouble to read, the tools hed never learned to use, the small electric automobile he hadnt driven in monthsor was it years?and the hundreds of other games and toys, and bats and balls, and bits and pieces scattered around him. And then, to one side of the room, just next to the phonograph, he noticed something he had certainly never seen before.

Who could possibly have left such an enormous package and such a strange one? For, while it was not quite square, it was definitely not round, and for its size it was larger than almost any other big package of smaller dimension that hed ever seen.

Attached to one side was a bright-blue envelope which said simply: FOR MILO, WHO HAS PLENTY OF TIME.

Of course, if youve ever gotten a surprise package, you can imagine how puzzled and excited Milo was; and if youve never gotten one, pay close attention, because someday you might.

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