Pullman’s Forgotten Literary Treasure
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This Sunday’s Observer asks a number of contemporary writers to nominate a “forgotten literary treasure” – a work that has fallen by the wayside and not received the acclaim the writer feels it deserves. Philip Pullman was among those asked and he plumped for The Balloonist, by the late American author MacDonald Harris. Pullman writes:

“My candidate for revival is a book by the American writer MacDonald Harris, who died in 1993, and none of whose 16 novels remain in print. Why he isn’t better known I simply don’t understand, because he’s outstandingly good.

If I have to restrict myself to one novel (and it is difficult) I’ll nominate The Balloonist – an adventure story, told in the first person, about an expedition by balloon to the North Pole in 1897. It’s leisurely, it’s subtle and reflective, it’s funny, it’s accurate and fascinating about the technical business of flying balloons and meteorology and the mysteries of early radio; there’s a love story that is tender, sexy and ridiculous all at once, there are characters who are firmly conceived and rounded and surprising, there’s an immaculate and jazz-like sense of rhythm and timing; but best of all there’s that sensation that comes so rarely, but is as welcome as a cool breeze on a hot day when it does – the sensation that here is a subtle, witty and intelligent mind that really knows how to tell a story.

Actually, it’s almost impossible to read any of Harris’s first pages without helplessly turning to the next, and the next. I’m astonished that he’s not far better known.

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One Response to Pullman’s Forgotten Literary Treasure

  1. Christy says:

    wow still no comments, wait i reall dont know what to say about it…. erm im glad that pullman thinks that this book is good!??