Time Quintet

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search
Time Quintet
200px
Spines of the first four books in the Time Quintet in their original hardback dust jackets
Author Madeleine L'Engle
Country United States
Language English
Genre Young adult, science fantasy
Publisher Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Published 1962 – 1989
Media type Print (Hardback & Paperback)

The Time Quintet is a fantasy/science fiction is a fabulous series of five young adult novels written by Madeleine L'Engle.

Those novels are:

Publishing history

The series originated with A Wrinkle in Time, written in 1959 to 1960 and turned down by many publishers before Farrar, Straus & Giroux finally decided to publish it in 1962. A Wrinkle in Time won the Newbery Medal and has sold over 6 million copies. The sequel, A Wind in the Door, takes place the following year but was published over a decade later, in 1973. A Swiftly Tilting Planet, set ten years after A Wrinkle in Time, followed in 1978. The fourth title of the quintet, Many Waters, was published in 1986, but takes place several years before A Swiftly Tilting Planet. This is readily apparent from the fact that Sandy and Dennys Murry are in high school as of Many Waters, but refer to their college studies at the time of A Swiftly Tilting Planet; and from Meg's unmarried status as of Many Waters.

All five titles have been published in numerous editions over the years, with occasional changes in cover art and, in 1997, a new introduction by L'Engle for the Dell Laurel-Leaf paperbacks. The books have also been packaged as a boxed set, first (before the publication of Many Waters) as the Time Trilogy, next as the Time Quartet, and finally in its entirety as the Time Quintet.

Since 1989, the Time Quartet series plus An Acceptable Time (which takes place a full generation after A Wrinkle in Time) have been collectively called the "Time Quintet".

In May, 2007, the books were reissued under the Square Fish imprint in both mass market and trade paperback form. Both editions include new cover art, "An Appreciation by Anna Quindlen", a "Questions for the Author" interview, and the text of Madeleine L'Engle's Newbery Medal acceptance speech, published under the title "The Expanding Universe".

Overview

This series follows the lives of Meg Murry, her youngest brother Charles Wallace Murry, and their friend Calvin O'Keefe as they try to save the world from evil forces. The remaining Murry siblings, twins Sandy and Dennys Murry, take up the struggle in one volume from which the other protagonists are largely absent. A further book about Polly O'Keefe, the eldest child of Meg and Calvin, features several characters from the other novels and completes the Time Quintet.

A Wrinkle in Time

The mysterious Mrs. Whatsit, Mrs. Who and Mrs. Which. The three Mrs. W's are unearthly creatures that act their part as humans and are very willing to help the Murrys. They send Meg and Charles Wallace through time and space to rescue their father on the planet Camazotz, accompanied by their new friend Calvin. Along the way, the three children learn about the "Dark Thing", a cloud of evil that shadows many planets, including Earth. They encounter a brain named IT, which controls the minds of people.

A Wind in the Door

Meg, Calvin and the disagreeable school principal Mr. Jenkins have to travel inside one of Charles Wallace's mitochondria to save him from a deadly disease, part of a cosmic battle against the evil Echthroi and the forces of "Unnaming".

A Swiftly Tilting Planet

Charles Wallace must save the world from nuclear war by going back in time and changing might-have-beens, accompanied in spirit (through kything) by Meg at home.

Many Waters

Twins Dennys and Sandy accidentally walk into Mr. Murry's experiment and are sent back in time to the pre-flood days of Noah. They befriend his family, a group of seraphim, and some miniature mammoths.

An Acceptable Time

Meg and Calvin's eldest daughter, Polly O'Keefe, visits her maternal grandparents only to find herself trapped 3000 years in the past, caught up in a struggle between the People of the Wind and the warlike, drought-stricken People Across the Lake.

Setting

<templatestyles src="Module:Hatnote/styles.css"></templatestyles>

This series takes place in a roughly contemporary setting, usually understood to be in the near future with respect to the publication dates of the first two novels. Since the series was written over the course of decades, it is not possible to establish an exact year in which each story takes place; historical events mentioned in the books (such as the dates of the Apollo space program and the name of the President of the United States) do not always correspond to the "real world". In recognition of this, and of the cosmic nature of the series, the inside front cover of Many Waters states that the series is set in Kairos, a way of looking at time as "real time, pure numbers with no measurement",[1] reflecting her belief that "God's time and our time are not the same".[2]

Each of the books contains one or more instances of tessering, carrying the protagonists to metaphysical battlegrounds in the cosmic struggle between good and evil. The eponymous "wrinkle in time" is a short hop to the immediate past, engineered by the Mrs. W's to allow Meg, Calvin and Charles Wallace to accomplish their mission and return before they are missed at home. In A Wind in the Door, Proginoskes takes Meg to "yesterday" to show her the Echthroi destroying a patch of stars. Charles Wallace spends most of A Swiftly Tilting Planet "Within" the bodies and minds of people from the distant (and not-so-distant) past, traveling there by unicorn. Many Waters finds Sandy and Dennys stranded in the time of Noah after unwisely typing on their parents' computer while an experiment is in progress.

The milieu is identified by the author as science fantasy. As L'Engle explains in her book The Rock That Is Higher: Story as Truth: "If we limit ourselves to the possible and provable... we render ourselves incapable of change and growth, and that is something that should never end. If we limit ourselves to the age that we are, and forget all the ages that we have been, we diminish our truth."[3] Later in the same book, she further explains her use of the science fantasy genre: "Writing A Wrinkle in Time... was my first effort in a genre now called 'science fantasy', and science fantasy is not far from fairy tale, that world which delves deep into the human psyche, struggling to find out at least a little more of what we are all about."[4]

The world of L'Engle's characters is filled with fictional place names, often taken from mythological figures that relate symbolically to the locale. For example, the planet Ixchel in A Wrinkle in Time, where Meg is cared for by a motherly, sightless creature with tentacles, is named for Ixchel, a Mayan moon goddess. Other, more mundane locations are often fictionalized versions of places L'Engle has lived or visited in the real world, such as L'Engle's Connecticut home, which strongly resembles that of the Murry family.[5]

Characters

<templatestyles src="Module:Hatnote/styles.css"></templatestyles>

The main characters (protagonists) in the Time Quintet are as follows:

  • Margaret "Meg" Murry is the eldest child of scientists Jack and Kate Murry. Mathematically brilliant but less than adept at other subjects in school, Meg is awkward, unpopular, and defensive around authority figures as well as her peers, but generally gets on well with her family and Calvin. Meg is initially unhappy with her physical appearance, particularly her mouse-brown, unruly hair, braces and glasses. She outgrows most of these limitations in the course of the books, although she never completely overcomes her inferiority complex. By the time of A Swiftly Tilting Planet she is married to Calvin O'Keefe and imminently expecting her first child.
  • Charles Wallace Murry is the youngest Murry child, the most extraordinary and the most vulnerable of the novel's human characters. Charles Wallace did not talk at all until he was nearly four years old, at which time he began to speak in complete sentences. Charles can empathically or telepathically "read" certain people's thoughts and feelings, and has an extraordinary vocabulary. As he ages, he faces illness and other difficulties, but survives and adapts. At age fifteen he remains small for his age, and has a serious, quiet demeanor. He is entirely absent from the O'Keefe series of books, being "off somewhere on a secret mission."
  • Calvin O'Keefe is the third eldest of Paddy and Branwen O'Keefe's eleven children, a tall, thin, red-haired 14-year-old high school junior (as of the first book) who plays on the school basketball team. Neglected by his own family, Calvin joyfully enters the lives of the Murrys. By the time of A Swiftly Tilting Planet he is married to Meg, holds two doctorates, and is presenting an academic paper on chordates.
  • Alexander "Sandy" Murry and Dennys Murry — Younger than Meg but older than Charles Wallace, the twin sons of Drs. Jack and Kate Murry describe themselves as the "squares" of the Murry clan. This changes somewhat when, as teenagers, they are transported to the time immediately preceding the Deluge in Many Waters. In the remaining volumes of the Time Quintet, they are the realists of the family, and tend to be skeptical about Meg and Charles Wallace's accounts and theories about what is happening. In later life, as seen in the O'Keefe series of books, particularly A House Like a Lotus, Sandy is an "anti-corporate" lawyer, and Dennys is a neurosurgeon.
  • Polly O'Keefe is the protagonist of An Acceptable Time, the fifth book in the Time Quintet. The eldest child of Meg and Calvin, she is born shortly after the events of A Swiftly Tilting Planet. Intelligent and widely traveled, Polly speaks numerous languages. In her first three appearances (The Arm of the Starfish, Dragons in the Waters and A House Like a Lotus), she has not yet settled on a specific career path, but may have found her calling as of the end of An Acceptable Time.

Themes

The Time Quintet shows themes of love, loss, friendship, loneliness and the triumph of good over evil. L'Engle often borrows elements from the Bible in a way similar to C. S. Lewis, one of her favorite authors. In A Wrinkle in Time, for example, the beautiful creatures of Uriel sing a psalm, and Mrs. Who quotes St. Paul; and angelic characters — the three "Mrs. Ws", the "singular cherubim" Proginoskes, and the seraph Aradnaral, among others — aid the Murrys and Calvin, but still leave the humans to make their own difficult choices. Another theme which echoes Lewis's work is that phenomena which human perception classifies as "science", "religion" and "magic" are in actuality part of a single seamless reality.

Related series

L'Engle has written four books featuring the children of Calvin and Meg O'Keefe, especially their eldest daughter, Polly O'Keefe, and their eldest son, Charles. These are, in order of both publication and character chronology:

These also take place in a Kairos framework, although only The Arm of the Starfish and An Acceptable Time have the characteristic science fantasy elements to any great extent. Taken together, the eight books are called the "Murry–O'Keefe" series. The O'Keefe books further connect, through such characters as Adam Eddington, Canon Tallis and Zachary Gray, to the Austin family series of books, which take place primarily in "chronos" (or "ordinary, wrist-watch" time).[1] Further overlaps between characters connect virtually every L'Engle novel into one massive series of books.

Movie

<templatestyles src="Module:Hatnote/styles.css"></templatestyles>

In 2003, A Wrinkle in Time was adapted into a television movie by Disney.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  2. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  3. L'Engle, The Rock That Is Higher, p. 100.
  4. L'Engle, The Rock That Is Higher, p. 222.
  5. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

External links