Elm Street in North London, bounded by the stump of a tree at the Park end and by Woodside School (and gimlet-eyed George Crackenthorpe) at the other, to the outward eye a row of terrace houses like any other, is a territory to the children who live there, their cohesion proved by the fact that at school they are known to their peers from other streets as "the Elm Street lot". The six stories that chronicle their adventures [in The Elm Street Lot] were written ten years ago … but at least the passage of time has showed the dateless character of Philippa Pearce's writing. Progress has not yet put an end to the self-contained, village atmosphere of many London streets which is reflected in this book….
Elm Street's individuality is supported by the device of "populousness", the method by which an author, defining only a handful of characters, creates the illusion of a far larger cast…. The illusion of populousness is simply and elegantly sustained…. (p. 3538)
This is a free excerpt of 167 words. There are 349 words (approx.
1 page at 300 words per page) in the full critical essay.
Read the rest of this Criticism with our Pearce, (Ann) Philippa 1920–: Critical Essay by Margery Fisher Access Pass.