Harriet the Spy
Which I reread last night, curled up in bed with my Petzel headlamp because Steve was asleep. It was instant childhood revisited. I always pictured Harriet’s bedroom and tiny bathroom as my bedroom and tiny bathroom in our house in Bucharest. It was at the top of a large three story house, and I was the only one up there in a rabbity warren maze of narrow halls and small rooms.
As a kid, it always outraged me that Harriet got blamed for other people reading her notebook. My feeling was always that yeah, they’re curious, but if they ignored the PRIVATE signs emblazoned on it, they deserved what they got. Pure and simple. On rereading it, I still felt that way–Ole Golly was the only adult who makes any sense on what she has to say about it–but more than that, I was struck by how absent Harriet’s parents are. Actually, all the parents are pretty absent, from Sport’s checked out father to Janie’s ineffectual mother. It’s kind of like Charlie Brown adults and their mwah mwah conversations; the parents are there, but they’re not present.
Which all leads to the question: Is Fitzhugh showing the separate world that children inhabit, or is she making a statement on all these parents? I can’t tell. Can you?