Troll Fell is the first of a trilogy by Katherine Langrish who blogs at the fabulous
Seven Miles of Steel Thistles.
So it's no surprise to find it full of familiar tropes and characters,
but I love the new directions in which these are taken. On one level
this is conventional fairy story, on another it's immediate and relevant
to a modern-day audience.
When his father dies, Peer Ulfsson is sad and lonely, but preparing to
make the best of things by moving in with family friends and continuing
his training as a woodcarver. So he's appalled when a hideously brutish
uncle turns up at the funeral and claims him as kin. Peer is taken back
to his uncle's mill on the edge of Troll Fell, where he's neglected and
mistreated. But at least he has his dog Loki with him, and he does
manage to make new friends - with young Hilde, a neighbour, and with the
Nis, the household bogart, who is equally neglected (and we all know
from fairytales that that's not a good idea!). The Nis is sly and
mistrusting, and often sulky, but at least he's a source of information
about what's going on outside the mill. It's important information, as
it turns out, because the trolls who live under the Fell are expecting
to celebrate a wedding between their prince and the daughter of the king
of Dovre Fell, an event of great significance and one which will have
enormous repercussions for Peer and Hilde.
Troll Mill
picks up the story some time later, and I don't want to say too much
about the plot, except that new characters are introduced while old ones
return in a deliciously scary and atmospheric story. Along with Hilde I
agonised for Kersten and Bjørn, and I thought the troll baby was
tremendous! Peer and Hilde are both struggling with the pangs of growing
up and undergoing all sorts of feelings which will be familiar to a
young audience. The action is fast-moving though, and these are books
which would be wonderful to read to a younger child -- scary, but not
oppressively so, exciting and funny, and with the true fairytale
emphasis on the resourcefulness of its young heroes. An adult reader,
meanwhile, can appreciate the deft interweaving of the elements of the
folk tales on which Langrish draws, and the light touch she brings to
the exploration of the feelings of her main characters. There are some
superb writers working with this traditional material these days - what
makes Langrish stand out, I think, is that her love for it shines out of
her writing and lends a wonderful freshness and authority.
The trilogy continues with
Troll Blood, which I haven't had a
chance to read yet. I read both on my Kindle. And, I should
add, I enjoyed
Troll Fell so much that I downloaded
Troll Mill straight
away!