Nightbirds on Nantucket

by Joan Aiken

Other authorsRobin Jacques (Illustrator)
Hardcover, 1966

Status

Available

Call number

AIKEN

Publication

Doubleday (1966)

Description

Having had enough of life on board the ship that saved her from a watery grave, Dido Twite wants nothing more than to sail home to England. Instead, Captain Casket's ship lands in Nantucket, where Dido and the captain's daughter, Dutiful Penitence, are left in the care of Dutiful's sinister Aunt Tribulation. In Tribulation's farmhouse, life is unbearable. When mysterious men lurk about in the evening fog, the resourceful Dido rallies against their shenanigans with help from Dutiful, a cabinboy named Nate, and a pink whale.

User reviews

LibraryThing member AbigailAdams26
Dido Twite returns for her first full-length adventure in this third installment of Aiken's Wolves Chronicles. Rescued from the North Sea by the whaler Sarah Casket, Dido eventually finds herself on Nantucket, where she must cope with her whiny young companion, Dutiful Penitence, and a harsh task
Show More
master named Aunt Tribulation. Uncowed and unimpressed, Dido is more than a match for her adversary. But as yet another nefarious plot to assassinate Good King Jamie begins to unfold around her, it will take all of her considerable resources to foil this latest Hanoverian outrage.

The fun continues as one of the most level-headed and common-sensical heroines in children's literature confronts some of the zaniest and most hilariously convoluted plot twists known to melodrama. With her penchant for whimsically appropriate names, the surprise appearance of a character from the beloved The Wolves of Willoughby Chase, a suitably improbable plot, and a humorous send-up of Melville's Moby-Dick in the form of Captain Casket's obsessive quest to find the "great pink whale," Nightbirds on Nantucket is sure to please.

Like the earlier Black Hearts in Battersea, this title was originally illustrated by Robin Jacques, and it is a shame that his drawings were not retained in later editions.
Show Less
LibraryThing member Crowyhead
The sequel to The Wolves of Wilhoughby Chase and Black Hearts In Battersea.
Dido Twite awakens on a Nantucket whaler, having slept for ten months after being rescued from a shipwreck in the arctic. Now, before she can make her way back to her beloved England, she must help Captain Casket's daughter
Show More
Dutiful Penitence face her fear of everything other than Bible study and needlepoint. No easy task in the face of Pen's new guardian, the sinister Aunt Tribulation! But is Aunt Trib all she appears to be? This is a mystery, an adventure story, and a very, very funny book.
Show Less
LibraryThing member souloftherose
Very slight spoilers for Black Hearts in Battersea

Following directly on from the events that took place at the end of Black Hearts in Battersea we finally get to find out what happened to the wonderful Dido Twite.

Dido wakes up to find herself on a whaling ship having slept for ten months (fed on
Show More
whale oil and molasses) after having been rescued from a shipwreck. Dido is desperate to get back home to England but before she can do so she has to help Captain Casket's daughter, Dutiful Penitence, who has become scared of absolutely everything following the death at sea of her mother and has locked herself in a cupboard in one of the cabins where she has spent most of the voyage. Dido's journey eventually leads her to the isle of Nantucket where she becomes embroiled in more adventure as she meets one or two of the characters from the earlier books in the Wolves series and has to stop a dastardly Hanoverian plot to assassinate King James III, assisted by a great pink whale.

With several nods to Moby Dick, this instalment of the Wolves Chronicles easily lives up to the previous two and my only regret is that I didn't order the next book in the series along with this one.
Show Less
LibraryThing member fuzzi
Nightbirds on Nantucket continues the adventures of Dido Twite, last seen clinging to a rock at the conclusion of Black Hearts in Battersea. Dido has since been rescued from a watery grave by the crew of an American whaling ship, but does not sit back and just enjoy her impromptu cruise. With the
Show More
assistance of new friends Nate and "Pen" (short for her full name, "Dutiful Penitence") she helps to uncover a murderous scheme to assassinate the king of England.

Until recently, I did not know that Joan Aiken had written a series of sequels to The Wolves of Willoughby Chase, and now that I have, I am taking the time to read them. Her stories are full of humor and whimsey (for years Pen's father has been obsessed with chasing a pink whale all over the oceans of the world) and I find them highly entertaining.
Show Less
LibraryThing member ed.pendragon
Writing a successful novel is sometimes a little like inventing a recipe for a special dish. Take a dash of Jules Verne, add essence of Charles Dickens, several pinches of Herman Melville and season with adventure. Would that it was as simple as that. What you need is the main ingredient, the
Show More
protein in the dish, and in Night Birds in Nantucket that is provided by the indomitable figure of Dido Twite.

When we last saw Dido she'd been lost at sea somewhere off the northeast coast of England, presumed dead. That was December, 1833. It is now ten months later, and the poor lass has lain in a coma after having been picked up by the whaler Sarah Casket. Like an amalgamation of Snow White and Moby Dick's Ishmael she is found in a wooden straw-filled coffin-like box on the other side of the world, north of East Cape on the Russian side of the Bering Straits (the East Cape -- Cape Dezhnev since 1898 -- was then popular with whalers). She has been looked after by young Nate Pardon all the while, and when she finally awakens it is to find it could be months before she is in a position to head back to England. And while she waits she finds that those on board the Sarah Casket are a very strange bunch indeed.

First there is Jabez Casket, the Quaker captain from Nantucket, who addresses everyone as "thee" and has a singular mission on his mind. Then there is his daughter, Dutiful Penance, who has chosen to remain below unseen from grief at the loss of her mother. What about the rascally Ebenezer Slighcarp, the first mate -- what's his game? And who is the mysterious woman Dido finds below decks who threatens Dido if her presence is revealed? As the whaler makes its way back to the North Atlantic Dido discovers the Captain's obsession is with a pink whale, but it is not until they reach Nantucket seven months later (in April or May 1835) that Dido goes ashore to find that the story is not over yet.

It's hard to review the third of the Wolves Chronicles without revealing too much of the story, but by referring to the previously mentioned three authors I hope to indicate how intricately Joan Aiken plots what many might regard as 'only' a children's book. Jules Verne's From the Earth to the Moon (1865), set at the end of the American Civil War, features a manned projectile being sent to the earth's satellite. One of the proposals involves building a giant cannon to the plans of J T Marston, and the contemporary book illustration I'm sure furnished the inspiration for one of the main narrative devices. Meanwhile, Dickens (or indeed any of his contemporaries) wrote several plots about orphans and suchlike being badly bullied and manipulated by adults who should have known better; this is certainly the case with Dutiful Penance and Dido, both of whom who have lost at least one parent.

Lastly, Melville's most famous novel Moby Dick is clearly a part model for Night Birds in Nantucket: a pink whale called Rosie Lee and the madly driven Captain Casket parallel the white whale Moby Dick and Captain Ahab, and a ship is indeed sunk by the action of the whale -- though not in the way one would guess, let alone expect.

Amazingly there is even an assassination attempt on the British monarch in this novel, much like the young Queen Victoria who nearly lost her life by a bullet at the end of May 1842. The more one reads, the more one's impressed by Aiken's rich and inventive imagination. But without the central figure of the resourceful, irreverent, brave and intensely likeable Dido, who affects virtually everyone she comes in contact with, it would matter not a jot how cleverly the story is plotted. By the end of Night Birds the reader will be agog to know what happens to the young heroine next.
Show Less
LibraryThing member comradesara
this is a 'cozy' book. made to be enjoyed with tea. big kids can read kids' books, too.
LibraryThing member curioussquared
Some of the best children's novels available are by Joan Aiken. This is the first book of hers I read and I enjoyed it possibly even more than all of the others. These books need more advertising - all kids need to read them!
LibraryThing member troop1646
Great adventure story, I really liked this one!
LibraryThing member jjmcgaffey
Fun, and I do like Dido - but the coincidences in this one and between this one and Black Hearts in Battersea always makes it just a trifle less fun than the others. And Pen is such a wet - scared of everything. With good reason - her parents are/were no prize - but still. It's nice when she
Show More
flowers at the end, though. The pink whale is just plain silly. But I admit that after reading it, I find myself exclaiming "Croopus!" every once in a while...
Show Less
LibraryThing member Marse
The third in this Joan Aiken series follows Dido Twite to Nantucket after her shipwreck in the previous book "Blackhearts in Battersea". The first in the series, "The Wolves of Willowby Chase" had two cousins as the protagonists, the second had one of the secondary characters from the first book as
Show More
its hero, and this one follows suit: Dido was a secondary character in the second book and is the heroine of this tale. While competently written and not without its charms, I'm afraid that the book (and the series) does not really hold my interest enough for me to continue. The characters are not intriguing enough in themselves as characters to make me care what actually happens to them. Also, the endings are so pat and expected that there is little to no real suspense. I would recommend these books for 2nd or 3rd graders.
Show Less
LibraryThing member ashleytylerjohn
Another treat. I'm a huge fan of the tone and texture of her works. I'm quite sure they won't be for everybody, but for me, they strike a sweet spot. They're fun, without being relentlessly action-packed. The characters are interesting and distinctive. Even when stuck in the direst of circumstances
Show More
the protagonists are cheerful and optimistic. And it's all just weird and quirky enough to elevate it beyond exceedingly pleasant, to exceedingly interesting.

(Note: 5 stars = amazing, wonderful, 4 = very good book, 3 = decent read, 2 = disappointing, 1 = awful, just awful. I'm fairly good at picking for myself so end up with a lot of 4s).
Show Less

Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1966

Physical description

7.5 inches

Barcode

7505
Page: 0.7862 seconds