Jasper Jones, is a 2009 novel by Australian writer Craig Silvey. It has won and been shortlisted for several major awards including being shortlisted for the International Dublin Literary Award. The novel was selected by the American Library Association as 'Best Fiction for Young Adults' in their 2012 list.
Overview
editIn summary, a small rural Australian town grows fearful when a young girl goes missing. Thirteen year-old Charlie grows especially fearful, because he alone knows what has happened.
The academic literature has described Jasper Jones as conforming "to the conventions of Australian Gothic, which projects contemporary experience onto … dysfunctional families in small, remote towns.... where young protagonists encounter violence or death, and where outsiders are punished for their difference".[1]
Plot
editThe protagonist Charlie Bucktin is a quiet, book-loving, 13-year-old boy who lives in the fictitious rural town of Corrigan, Western Australia. On a summer evening in 1965, Charlie receives an unexpected visit from 14-year-old Jasper Jones, who is excluded by the Corrigan locals because of his Aboriginal heritage and rebellious lifestyle, and who is a source of distant intrigue for Charlie. Jasper asks for Charlie's help and leads him to a private clearing in the bush. Charlie is horrified to find the corpse of a young girl, Laura Wishart, Jasper's only friend, beaten and suspended from a tree. Jasper inspects Laura's body and discovers indications Laura was raped but Charlie does not recognise what Jasper discovered. Jasper, aware that he is likely to be blamed for Laura's murder, convinces Charlie that they should hide the body to buy them time to solve the murder themselves. They put her body into the nearby dam, weighing her down with a rock.
A search for the missing girl is soon organized. The authorities assume she is a run-away. Jasper is interrogated brutally by the local police but released quickly. During this time, tensions rise in the town, while parents fear more disappearances and the townspeople seek someone to blame.
Charlie spends his days with his best friend Jeffrey Lu, a Vietnamese boy who shares Charlie's love for intellectual jokes and deals stoically with the constant racial hatred inflicted on him and his family. Jeffrey is a cricket enthusiast, but his attempts to join Corrigan's team are thwarted by the racism of the coach and other players. Eventually, fortune goes his way, and Jeffrey finds himself batting in a game against a rival town, watched by Charlie and Eliza, Laura Wishart's younger sister. As Jeffrey wins the game on the last ball, Charlie and Eliza's relationship moves from friendship to romance.
Meanwhile, Jasper thinks that Laura's murderer is Mad Jack Lionel, a reclusive old man who is rumored to have done terrible things in the past. Jasper decides to confront Lionel and, with Charlie, goes to his house. Lionel manages to defuse Jasper's aggression, and the truth is revealed: Lionel is, in fact, Jasper's grandfather. When Jasper was a baby, Lionel crashed his car while driving Jasper's mother to the hospital, causing her death. The incident left Lionel broken and ostracized by the townspeople.
After the confrontation with Lionel, late at night, Eliza comes to Charlie's window. Eliza wants Charlie to follow her. On their midnight ramble, they come across a lone car parked near the river. Charlie recognizes his mother in the backseat and she is in a compromising situation with the town's police man, and Jasper's determined bully. Eliza pulls Charlie away and takes him, unexpectedly, to the spot where Laura died. Here, Eliza tells Charlie what she knows about Laura's death. After a violent sexual assault at the hands of her abusive father, Laura came looking for Jasper. Eliza followed her to the clearing. Finding Jasper elsewhere, and believing he left town without her, Laura committed suicide, hanging herself from a tree. Although watching her sister from a nearby hidden spot, Eliza could not reach Laura in time. After hearing Eliza's shocking story, Charlie then confessed that he and Jasper put Laura's body into the dam, and have been trying to prove Jasper's innocence. Jasper discovers Charlie and Eliza, and Charlie repeats Eliza's tale, and the three spend the night under the stars, overcoming their grief.
The next day, Eliza, Jasper and Charlie split up. Charlie knows he's never going to see Jasper again. Jasper is leaving Corrigan for good. When he arrives home, Charlie finds his mother packing and leaving home. His parents are separating.
Charlie and his father are now on their own. Charlie's father finishes the novel he's been working on. Charlie is the first to read it, and he finds it beautiful and brilliant.
As the novel nears its end, Charlie performs a feat of "bravery" feat that impresses his school peers. He sneaks onto the property of Mad Jack Lionel and steals peaches. To impress his peers even more, Charlie stages a "brawl" with Lionel (having promised Lionel to cook his Sunday dinner if he would pretend to attack Charlie). The pretend brawl is successful and excites the students who believe it is very much real. Even Warwick Trent, the bully of Charlie and Jeffrey, believes that Charlie has shown a lot of courage. While the children cheer on Charlie, suddenly, someone sees a plume of smoke in the distance.
Charlie runs toward the smoke and finds that Eliza's house is on fire. He sees her standing by herself and realizes that she caused the blaze, and is saddened by the reality that the people of Corrigan will blame Jasper for it. Charlie goes to Eliza, who continues to watch the fire calmly, and whispers "perfect words" in her ear.
Character Sketch
editCharlie Bucktin: The thirteen year-old protagonist and narrator of the novel. He is intellectual rather than athletic. This makes him somewhat of an outsider in Corrigan, where sporting ability is highly valued and intelligence not so much. He aspires to become a writer, and reads notable books during the course of the novel, including Pudd'nhead Wilson and To Kill a Mockingbird. These books are the source of much of Charlie's inspiration and guidance.
Jasper Jones: Mixed Aboriginal and white, Jasper is an outcast. He is fourteen but Charlie states that Jasper looks much older. He is the town's scapegoat, the first person to be blamed for any kind of trouble. Jasper's alcoholic father is physically abusive, prompting Jasper to steal for food, as there is no money left in the house. Jasper's mother died when he was young, and Jasper tells Charlie he doesn't remember anything about her.
Eliza Wishart: Charlie's romantic interest. Eliza is described as intelligent and slightly resembling Audrey Hepburn. She is Laura's younger sister.
Laura Wishart: Eliza's older sister and Jasper's love interest. It is her death being investigated.
Jeffrey Lu: Charlie's best friend. He is a year younger than Charlie but has skipped a year in school because of his intellect. Because of his Vietnamese heritage, Jeffrey often experiences racial discrimination from the other cricketers despite his exceptional cricket abilities. Often makes sassy comments about Charlie's crush on Eliza.
Mad Jack Lionel: An elderly recluse scapegoated by the township. Kids regularly steal from his property to prove their bravery. Taking a peach from his tree is the highest achievement. Jasper blames him for Laura's murder.
Warwick Trent: The generic bully character. He bullies Jeffrey on the cricket team and he bullies Charlie at school. He has been put back two years into Charlie's grade.
Publication history
editThe novel was published in 2009 in Australia by Allen & Unwin,[2] and in the UK by Windmill Books,[3]
It was published in the US by Alfred A. Knopf Books for Young Readers, an imprint of Penguin Random House, in 2011.[4]
In translation, it has been published by Seix Barral/Grupo Planeta in Spain, Neri Pozza/Giano Editore in Italy, Calmann-Lévy/Hachette in France and Rowohlt in Germany (2012).
Awards and nominations
editWon
edit- The University of Canberra selected the novel as its inaugural UC Book of the Year for 2013.[5]
- Indie Book of the Year Award, 2009: Overall Winner and Fiction Winner[6]
- Western Australian Premier's Book Awards, 2009: Winner (joint) for Fiction[7]
- Australian Book Industry Awards (ABIA), 2010: Book of the Year, and Literary Fiction of the Year[8][9]
Shortlisted
edit- Miles Franklin Award, 2010: shortlisted[7]
- The Sydney Morning Herald Best Young Australian Novelists, 2010: shortlisted[7]
- New South Wales Premier's Literary Award (Christina Stead Prize for fiction), 2010: shortlisted[10]
- Victorian Premier's Literary Awards (Vance Palmer Prize for Fiction), 2010: shortlisted[7]
- International Dublin Literary Award, 2011: shortlisted[7]
- Michael L. Printz Award, 2012: shortlisted[11]
Notable Book Lists
editJasper Jones was selected by the American Library Association as 'Best Fiction for Young Adults' in their 2012 list.[12]
Film adaptation
editThe film rights for the novel were sold to producers Vincent Sheehan and David Jowsey.[13][14] Screenwriter Shaun Grant and Silvey co-wrote the script.[15][16] Director Rachel Perkins started filming in October 2015.[17] The film stars Toni Collette (as Ruth Bucktin), Levi Miller (Charlie Bucktin), Aaron L. McGrath (Jasper Jones), Hugo Weaving (Mad Jack Lionel), Angourie Rice (Eliza Wishart), and Dan Wyllie (Wes Bucktin).[18][19][20]
Stage adaptation
editThe novel has been adapted as a play by Kate Mulvany. In 2014, Barking Gecko Theatre Company premiered the stage adaptation of Jasper Jones in Perth.[21] In early 2016, Belvoir St Theatre performed the play in Sydney.[22] In mid 2016, Melbourne Theatre Company performed the play in Melbourne.[23] The production was also performed in Brisbane from July - August 2018 by Queensland Theatre - http://www.queenslandtheatre.com.au/Shows/18-Jasper-Jones# Archived 11 August 2020 at the Wayback Machine, and in Adelaide from August–September 2019 by the State Theatre Company - see https://statetheatrecompany.com.au/shows/jasper-jones/.
References
edit- ^ Bradford, C. (2016). "Prizing National and Transnational: Australian Texts in the Printz Award". In Prizing Children’s Literature (pp. 33-45). Routledge.
- ^ Jasper Jones by Craig Silvey, Allen & Unwin (Australia), archived
- ^ Jasper Jones by Craig Silvey, Windmill Books, Archived 18 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Jasper Jones by Craig Silvey, Penguin Random House (US), archived
- ^ University of Canberra, UC Book of the Year, archive
- ^ Indie Book Awards, Australian Independent Bookseller, archive..
- ^ a b c d e "Jasper Jones". Allen & Unwin. Retrieved 5 April 2017.
- ^ "Australia's Mark Twain wins book of the year", Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC), archived..
- ^ Australian Book Industry Awards, archived
- ^ Winton, Silvey on Premier's book short list”, by William Yeoman, The West Australian, August 12, 2010, archived.
- ^ Michael L. Printz Winners and Honor Books, Young Adult Library Services Association (YALSA), a division of American Library Association (ALA)
- ^ American Library Association 'Best Fiction for Young Adults' (2012)
- ^ ScreenDaily, archived 07 October 2015
- ^ Screen NSW (the NSW government's key funding body for the NSW screen production industry), "Funding Approval Details", archived 07 October 2015
- ^ "Jasper Jones (2016) Full Cast & Crew", IMDb, archived 21 January 2016
- ^ Shaun Grant, "From Snowtown to Jasper Jones, an insider's view of the art of adaptation", Sydney Morning Herald, published 4 December 2015, archived 7 December 2015
- ^ "Rachel Perkins' Jasper Jones is cast and ready to film in WA", SBS, archived 07 October 2015
- ^ “Toni Collette Joins the Cast of Jasper Jones”, Porchlight Films, archived 07 October 2015
- ^ “Incredible cast brought together for the film adaption of the iconic Australian novel, Jasper Jones”, Film Ink (Australia), archived 15 October 2015
- ^ Hugo Weaving, Toni Collette join all-star cast of Jasper Jones, Sydney Morning Herald, Linda Morris, 18 October 2015, archived 24 October 2015
- ^ "Jasper Jones: the stage adaptation of Craig Silvey's novel". Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC). 15 July 2014. Retrieved 30 August 2016.
- ^ Blake, Jason (6 January 2016). "Jasper Jones review: Kate Mulvany's adaptation stands tall despite slight falter at end". Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 30 August 2016.
- ^ Galloway, Paul (18 July 2016). "Kate Mulvany on Jasper Jones". Melbourne Theatre Company. Retrieved 30 August 2016.