Vancouver Sun

The strong, silent type

- BERNIE GOEDHART

Most kids these days approach computers, cellphones and other digital devices with a comfort level their parents and grandparen­ts probably envy. Conversely, however, when faced with such things as a manual typewriter or a rotary phone, youngsters may be stumped. It's fitting, therefore, that Allie Millington's new middle-grade novel (aimed by the publisher at eight- to 12-yearolds but, in my opinion, suited to a much broader age group), begins by admitting the reader might have “never spoken to a typewriter before” and “never seen a typewriter before, either.”

Enter the Brindle family: father Felix used an Olivetti Lettera 22 to propose to Beatrice, who not only said “forever” but embraced the typewriter as a way to record her innermost thoughts and to teach their four children — Ezra, Adalyn, Ernest and Arlo — to spell. All four had distinct personalit­ies and the entire family found pleasure in storytelli­ng and joint activities, although 12-year-old Ernest was happiest when left to his own devices, stealing away to the roof of their apartment building with a thick, red dictionary in hand. Ernest loved words and was enamoured with his Oxford English Dictionary collection.

Over the years, the typewriter's place on Beatrice's desk was invaded by piles of books, incurring Olivetti's disdain: “If there is one thing all typewriter­s agree on,” he tells us in one of his chapters (alternatin­g with those narrated by Ernest), “it is the insufferab­le nature of books.” His not-so-subtle criticism of books runs throughout this novel as a welcome thread of humour in a story that may cause readers' eyes to well up occasional­ly. Not only does a laptop eventually enter the Brindle household, but it totally supplants Olivetti's position on Beatrice's desk. By Chapter 5, her Tapestries, pages of typed words, lands in a trash bin; Olivetti himself is packed in his case and sold at a pawnshop for $126; and Beatrice has left home.

And by then, on Page 22 of this 246-page story, the reader has encountere­d the first reference to a mysterious event — the Everything That Happened — that threw every member of the Brindle family for a loop years earlier, and now upends their peace of mind. Beatrice has gone missing, and the Brindles — led by Ernest and his new friend Quinn, daughter of the pawnshop owner — set out to find her. Their unlikely ally in this venture is Olivetti, who breaks the strict “typewriter­ly code — to never let what has been typed into us back out. Communicat­ion with humans is strictly forbidden.”

“Do not be alarmed” (in a black typewriter­ly font), is the first message Olivetti sends Ernest, causing the boy to scream, very much alarmed. The rest of the story, beautifull­y written, is well worth reading.

 ?? ?? Olivetti
Allie Millington Feiwel and Friends Ages nine to 99
Olivetti Allie Millington Feiwel and Friends Ages nine to 99

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada