Emily’s Penny Dreadful
Bill Nagelkerke
Emily’s Penny Dreadful (2016)
Bill Nagelkerke
Paperback, 146 pages
Penny Dreadfuls were cheap and disreputable fiction
magazines, offering lively stories of highwaymen, murderers and other
desperadoes, popular among boys and young men in the Victorian times. When the
home of Emily’s Uncle Raymond burns to the ground, the only thing the grumpy
writer manages to save is a single, 150-year-old Penny Dreadful.
Emily (9) is precocious; she knows this because Uncle Raymond has not only told
her so but taught her how to spell it. Emily is also resentful, because she has
only had her own bedroom for two weeks. Now she has to move in with her sister
Sibbie, to make room for her homeless aunt and uncle. Tensions rise. Emily and
Uncle Raymond are soon sparring over grammar, spelling and metaphors.
“People who write books are always grumpy,” concludes Emily, “They can’t help it. They suffer from brain-strain, Dad says.”
Gradually Emily realises how serious a matter it is for a writer to lose his
computer, back-up discs, notes and drafts. Uncle Raymond, of course, is full of
self-pity, “I shall very likely never write another word,” he moans.
After Emily borrows the Penny Dreadful, she is inspired to try writing her own.
Her first attempts – reproduced in full as a story within a story – are the
highlight of this book. Emily calls it The Devil’s Element – a reference to the
phosphorus once used for matches – and her first sentence reads, “It was a dark
and story night.” Naturally Emily has her own Thurberish justification,
“Reading a book in bed means it’s a story night. So there.”
Young readers will enjoy seeing how some of the characters in the tear-jerking
saga resemble Emily’s family. The plucky heroine Miley is particularly
thinly-disguised. Sibbie is furious when she recognises her own words. The
astute reader will also spot that Emily has learned from Raymond’s
grudgingly-given advice. In her story, the villainous kidnapper, known only as
Pork Pie, pauses to write down new words in his vocabulary notebook.
It’s all
great fun, and Emily is about to rescue Miley from slave labour in a match
factory, when writer’s block strikes. Both Emily and Raymond have run out of
ideas. Now they are forced to swallow their differences and co-operate to get
Miley to freedom and Emily’s book to a happy ending.
The result confirms Raymond’s admission that “All writers are liars and
thieves,” (a line possibly purloined from Jack Lasenby) and brings events to a
satisfactory conclusion.
Emily’s Penny Dreadful may indeed be dreadful but it is dreadful in a very
enjoyable way. Bill Nagelkerke has created a light-hearted book which not only
contains a guilty secret and an adventure but also provides a practical guide
to young writers who want to tell a story of their own. This book is, in the
very best sense, dreadful fun.
Trevor Agnew, 23 December 2015
Emily, the Dreadfuls, and the Dead Skin Gang
Bill Nagelkerke
Emily, the Dreadfuls,
and the Dead Skin Gang
Bill Nagelkerke (2017)
Novel, Paperback, 168 pages
“I can read my stories to you,” said Emily…“They’re Penny Dreadful type stories, full of heroes and villains and exciting getaways and things like that.”
Emily is back!
This novel, Emily, the Dreadfuls, and the Dead Skin Gang, sees the
return of would-be writers Emily (9) and her grumpy Uncle Raymond, a comical
couple, who first appeared in Emily’s Penny Dreadful (2015). Having lost
his computer in a fire, Uncle Raymond is still trying to re-start his writing
career, while Emily has been inspired by one of his old Penny Dreadfuls (popular Victorian magazines, full
of lurid crimes and dramatic escapades) to write her own story, Dead Skin.
Although Dead Skin is supposed to be a co-operative effort by Raymond and
Emily, it is Emily who does most of the work. This adds to the fun because both
writers are strong-minded and thin-skinned. Chapters of Dead Skin form a story
within the story.
“Another audacious burglary!”
The Emily series is constantly amusing as the reader moves from one narrative
to another, especially when Emily adapts events around her (and ‘borrows’ ideas
from Uncle Raymond and her friends).
Events in the main story quickly turn up in a similar but funnier form in
Emily’s hand-written manuscript. After Emily and her three best friends try to
form a gang called the Dreadfuls, we see the Dead Skin gang vowing to capture
the burglars who “use dust as a weapon as well as dangerous and
threatening words.”
The various authors all play fair with their readers. The clues are all
present, although craftily concealed, red herrings are seen, and shivers run
down spines. Somebody even gets to say, “Beware, this is a trap.”
This story is a cheerful adventure, which gently spoofs both the Penny Dreadful
style of adventure and the later efforts of Enid Blyton. It also provides
positive encouragement and a good example for young people with writing
potential.
Trevor Agnew
31 August 2017






