A French children's book in translation from 1961, in which five children are trapped in a cottage by a landslide.

14-year-old Laurent's family is concerned that he spends all his time reading and doing chemistry experiments, and isn't engaging with other people. So they dispatch him to stay with his younger brother and sister in a cottage only occupied by a 14-year-old girl and her younger brother, who are alone because her mother is having surgery. The idea is that Laurent will have to take care of the other kids, and this will make him come out of his shell more. His parents do leave him the out of being able to pack up his siblings and return to Paris if he really hates it.

I am honestly not sure if it was even vaguely normal in 60s France for five kids ages 14-5 to stay alone in a remote mountain cottage for ten days, or if this was just a literary convention. Anyway, Laurent unsurprisingly hates it and packs up his siblings to leave. But while they're on the train platform with the other kids, he has a change of heart and they all head back to the cottage. But they stop in the cottage of a family friend, who is out at the time.

It gets buried in a landslide! They're all trapped in pitch darkness! In an only vaguely familiar house! They can't use the stove because it already nearly suffocated them with carbon monoxide! Their only air is from a narrow shaft leading to a giant canyon! There's very little food! No one knows they're in trouble because one of the kids wrote ten postcards dated for every day of the vacation, then arranged with the post office to send one per day!

The kids having to do everything in total darkness for most of the book is a really cool twist on this sort of "trapped in a space" book. (One of my favorite moments is when enough dirt slides away that some light gets in, and they see that they've been half-starved in pitch darkness with two huge hams and a lantern hanging from the ceiling.) It has some cozy elements - they're trapped with goats, which they can milk but which also get into everything and poop everywhere, and one goat gives birth to twin kids - but gets desperate quickly when Laurent gets an infected cut and the main milking goat drowns in a flooded cellar. But it all ends up okay when they first signal with Morse code in a mirror (in a nice touch of realism, it takes a long time for anyone to figure out the message as the kids get some of the letters wrong, including signaling OSO instead of SOS) and then make and set off gunpowder!

Not an enduring classic, but an entertaining read.
ratcreature: RatCreature is thinking: hmm...? (hmm...?)

From: [personal profile] ratcreature


FWIW when I was a teenager in 1990s Germany it wasn't that unusual for 15 year olds to go on short vacations without parents just parental permission and arrangements. I remember that at that age I found it unfair and overprotective that my parents insisted that my older brother went with me to my first comic convention in another city for a long weekend, when several of my classmates got permission for unsupervised trips. (Also they went with friends the same age so not completely solo.)
mific: (Default)

From: [personal profile] mific


Maybe kids surviving by themselves was also a sixties thing - that was when "My Side of the Mountain" was published I think?
In NZ where I grew up there was far less parental hovering in the sixties - kids like myself routinely walked to school by themselves, sometimes longish distances, and no one worried about accidents or predators.
conuly: (Default)

From: [personal profile] conuly


And then they go home and he tells his parents "NEVER AGAIN! I am going back in my shell and I will STAY THERE", right?
landofnowhere: (Default)

From: [personal profile] landofnowhere


The idea is that Laurent will have to take care of the other kids, and this will make him come out of his shell more. Or he'll just leave all the caretaking to the girl, which would not be fair to her? I guess putting them in darkness keeps him from escaping to a book... Anyway that sounds like a fantastic survival setup.
cyphomandra: (balcony)

From: [personal profile] cyphomandra


I love the prewritten postcard detail - so incredibly helpful (not).

I haven’t read this but it reminds me of Ivan Southall’s Hills End, an Australian book where a group of kids (and their teacher) get cut off by floods/landslides. The bit from that I remember most clearly is when they can’t find any clean water but do have access to the village shop so end up bathing i n lemonade :D

armiphlage: Ukraine (Default)

From: [personal profile] armiphlage


Oooh, I remember reading this a half-century ago!

From: [personal profile] thomasyan


Sounds pretty fun, and also like it would be weird pairing with the novella "When Darkness Loves Us" by Elizabeth Engstrom that you reviewed (that I therefore read) about the newlywed woman who gets locked into an underground cavern and starts a "society" there.
Edited Date: 2026-03-13 01:08 am (UTC)
ethelmay: (Default)

From: [personal profile] ethelmay


I remember almost all of those details, but not the gunpowder. I liked the bit about one of the girls pacing around the room and saying things like "The table, the goats, the sink, the goats..." and when the others are puzzled, explaining she was pointing out how "the goats have left their traces everywhere."
skygiants: the aunts from Pushing Daisies reading and sipping wine on a couch (wine and books)

From: [personal profile] skygiants


This sounds quite satisfying tbh! (I am an outlier among my circle in that I never cared for lone survival stories like Hatchet or My Side of the Mountain, but I love it when a group of bickering children are all attempting Survival together.)
.

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