Endymion Spring Explained

Endymion Spring
Author:Matthew Skelton
Cover Artist:Bill Sanderson
Country:United Kingdom
Language:English
Genre:Fantasy literature
Publisher:Delacorte Press
Pub Date:2006
Media Type:Print (Hardback)
Pages:448 pp

Endymion Spring is a children's fantasy novel by English Canadian author Matthew Skelton. It was first published in 2006.

Origins and publishing history

At some point during the drafting of his Ph.D., the character that would later become Blake simply appeared to Skelton, trapped in a library and begging for help. Over the next three years, Skelton worked to finish his doctoral thesis. Upon its completion, he moved to Mainz, the setting for the first half of one of his story lines,[1] and began writing the novel. Originally, the book was only Blake's story, and did not include the story by a friend who had reportedly asked him who Endymion Spring was. Endymion Spring was released in the United Kingdom in March 2006, and was published in the United States later in the same year, ahead of schedule.

Warner Bros. currently hold rights to an Endymion Spring film.

Plot summary

Endymion Spring has a double storyline. The first story follows two children in current day Oxford, Blake and Duck Winters. Blake is twelve years old and his sister is a few years younger. The two happen to come across a strange book in a library in St Jerome's College on St Giles' (based on Somerville College), which is entitled Endymion Spring. After finding out that it leads to a book of all the knowledge in the world, all the knowledge Adam and Eve tried to obtain from eating of that forbidden tree of knowledge but lost, they then embark on a quest to find it. However, when they do, the story then becomes a battle against the Person in Shadow, a person whose heart has turned black with evil and desire for the knowledge and power of the book. The second story line follows the journey of Endymion Spring, a young printer's devil who works in Gutenberg's workshop, from his hometown in Mainz, Germany to Oxford, which was then a settlement of monks. The two story lines are about 600 years apart, with Spring's story taking place at the epoch of the printing press in 1453, and Blake's taking place in the late 20th or early 21st century.

Major themes

There are several themes throughout Endymion Spring. The first and foremost resonates throughout the book in the words "Bring only the insight the inside brings." These words appear to communicate a theme regarding knowledge, and how it should be used.

Characters

Reviews

April Spisak described the novel as follows:

Unfortunately, the interweaving of perspectives (Blake's story is told in third person, Endymion's is a first-person account) slow the pace and unbalance the narrative with their uneven alternation. In addition, elaborately described bibliophilic details ... may try the patience of some readers. However, Skelton's earnest and daring protagonists may intrigue readers who are able to imagine the literary, and sometimes literal, treasures that could be found in dusty ancient books.[3]

Matthew Skelton works

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Children's Authors . Felicity Bryan Literary Agency . 2008-10-01 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20080918221211/http://www.felicitybryan.com/authors_child.htm . September 18, 2008 .
  2. https://www.randomhouse.com/teens/endymion/qa.html A conversation with Matthew Skelton
  3. Endymion Spring (review) . April . Spisak . . 60 . 2 . October 2006. 94–95 . 10.1353/bcc.2006.0687 . 143701450 .