Hiding is Roo Fanshaw's special skill. Living in a frighteningly
unstable family, she often needs to disappear at a moment's notice.
When her parents are murdered, it's her special hiding place under
the trailer that saves her life.
As it turns out, Roo, much to her surprise, has a wealthy if
eccentric uncle, who has agreed to take her into his home on Cough
Rock Island. Once a tuberculosis sanitarium for children of the
rich, the strange house is teeming with ghost stories and secrets.
Roo doesn't believe in ghosts or fairy stories, but what are those
eerie noises she keeps hearing? And who is that strange wild boy
who lives on the river? People are lying to her, and Roo becomes
determined to find the truth.
Despite the best efforts of her uncle's assistants, Roo
discovers the house's hidden room--a garden with a tragic
secret.
Inspired by "The Secret Garden," this tale full of unusual
characters and mysterious secrets is a story that only Ellen Potter
could write.
Read the Q&A with Ellen Potter from "Publisher's Weekly" on
writing a novel inspired by "The Secret Garden"
By Sally Lodge
Jan 12, 2011
In 2003, Ellen Potter made a lively splash onto the scene with
her middle-grade novel Olivia Kidney. She went on to write three
sequels about that enchantingly quirky heroine, as well as two
other novels, "Slob" and "The Kneebone Boy." Most recently, the
author tapped into memories of her own childhood reading to pen
"The Humming Room," a novel inspired by Frances Hodgson Burnett's
"The Secret Garden." Set in a mansion--a former children's
tuberculosis sanitarium--on an island in the St. Lawrence River,
the story centers on Roo, a prickly orphan who goes to live with
her aloof uncle, and befriends Phillip, his troubled son, and Jack,
a local boy. Potter talks about how this novel took shape.
Is it safe to assume that "The Secret Garden" was an important book
to you as a child?
Obviously, I loved the novel as a kid. What really struck me was
that when I went back to read it as an adult, the story not only
held up, but I discovered elements in it I had never noticed
before. It felt very fresh, and surprisingly layered in a way I
hadn't realized as a child.
Was that an unusual reaction for you to have to a book you revisit
from your childhood?
Yes, very unusual for me. A lot of times when I go back to books I
loved when I was young I don't quite understand what it was that I
loved about them. Rereading "The Secret Garden," I felt a lot like
Mary feels when she visits her garden. She's always finding
something new popping up--something delightful or surprising. I've
reread "The Secret Garden" every year as an adult. I have a
battered copy on my bookshelf--it's really quite a mess The
experience of reading the novel keeps deepening for me.
How did you tackle the actual writing of "The Humming Room"?
The idea of writing a contemporary version of "The Secret Garden"
was very exciting to me, yet at the same time it was very, very
intimidating. I knew I needed to follow the original story line--or
that I wanted to--but I knew I had to make it different enough that
it would be worthwhile for people to read my novel. My editor, Jean
Feiwel, was great and kept encouraging me to have at it, to go
anywhere that I felt I had to go with it.
Did you set parameters for yourself, in terms of working within
Burnett's original storyline?
I actually kept trying to swerve away from the original story, but
it wasn't easy. There's something about "The Secret Garden" that
kept me rooted in the original storyline, which was difficult for
me. I don't plot my novels--I move along with my characters. For
the first time I had a story already set out for me, which was very
challenging.
Would you say that you heard Burnett's voice in your head as you
wrote?
Yes. I feel I know "The Secret Garden" so well that I could kind of
riff on it like a jazz musician. I know it in my core, and could
take the essence and work with that. Still, I love the original
novel so much that it was psychologically a very tough book to
write. Though I think whenever I finish a book I always say it's
the hardest thing I've ever written
You obviously did branch out from the original, with the setting to
begin with. Why choose an island on the St. Lawrence?
I went back and forth on the setting, actually. At first I thought
of perhaps setting it in New York City, but that didn't work. At
the time I began writing the novel I was living in the Thousand
Islands, and was spending a lot of time on the St. Lawrence. The
river is so very beautiful, and it struck me as similar in some
ways to the moor in "The Secret Garden.""
"
Similar in what ways?
The St. Lawrence seems a vast expanse of gray, the way the moor is
a vast expanse of purple. But if you stop and look closely at the
river, it's incredibly changeable and moody--and sometimes violent.
But it's always surprising. And it occurred to me that this would
be a perfect setting for "The Humming Room." On top of that, there
are quite a few mansions in the Thousand Islands with ghost stories
attached to them. It's quite incredible.
So that inspired your mansion setting, with mysterious humming
noises and an abandoned garden hidden within it?
Yes, and I decided to make the mansion a defunct sanitarium,
because I wanted there to be a ghostly presence, an eerie echo, in
the house. One of the things I loved in "The Secret Garden," and
tried to put in my novel, was that there was a consciousness to
everything--the house, the moor, and the garden. They are really
characters themselves. In my novel, I wanted to give this same
consciousness and self-awareness to the mansion, the river, and the
garden, to give them personalities.
How did you set out to make Roo, Jack, and Phillip distinct
from--and have a more modern sensibility than--Burnett's
characters?
One thing I remember about Mary and Dickon is that there was a
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