Young Christopher Chant, in training to become the next Chrestomanci or head controller of magic in the world, becomes a key figure in a battle with renegade sorcerers because he has nine lives
Diana Wynne Jones was a celebrated British writer best known for her inventive and influential works of fantasy for children and young adults. Her stories often combined magical worlds with science fiction elements, parallel universes, and a sharp sense of humor. Among her most beloved books are Howl鈥檚 Moving Castle, the Chrestomanci series, The Dalemark Quartet, Dark Lord of Derkholm, and the satirical The Tough Guide to Fantasyland. Her work gained renewed attention and readership with the popularity of the Harry Potter series, to which her books have frequently been compared. Admired by authors such as Neil Gaiman, Philip Pullman, and J.K. Rowling, Jones was a major influence on the landscape of modern fantasy. She received numerous accolades throughout her career, including the Guardian Children鈥檚 Fiction Prize, two Mythopoeic Awards, the Karl Edward Wagner Award, and the World Fantasy Award for Life Achievement. In 2004, Howl鈥檚 Moving Castle was adapted into an acclaimed animated film by Hayao Miyazaki, further expanding her global audience. Jones studied at Oxford, where she attended lectures by both C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien. She began writing professionally in the 1960s and remained active until her death in 2011. Her final novel, The Islands of Chaldea, was completed posthumously by her sister Ursula Jones.
this prequel to gives the mysterious and urbane Chrestomanci (multi-dimensional policeman of all things magical) his own backstory. this was a wonderful kid's novel, swiftly-paced and enjoyable from beginning to end.
i loved the connectivity between this book and its predecessor, seeing the basic similarities and differences between Cat and Christopher, their similar reactions to their current Chrestomanci and Chrestomanci Castle, their different ways of not being magical, their similar abandonments and the different ways their families let them down, their different sorts of victimhood and their similar ways of finally taking command. the girls that they sorta fall for. the relatives who betray them. their mutual destiny.
Cat and Christopher are both very special people who are trapped by that destiny. i liked how Jones did not sugarcoat the trap. being Chrestomanci is neither boy's dream, and the job is never turned into anything approaching wish fulfillment - despite its power, and despite its potential for wonder and adventure. she made this grand position - master of all magic, traveler throughout all dimensions - somehow prosaic. even rather dreary. a smart and surprising choice by the author.
i think that Jones also captures Christopher's age perfectly. his young voice and thought process are what guide the reader, and so we get to see things with both objective distance and a subjectiveness that allows us to be fooled along with Christopher himself - fooled by the people around him and fooled by himself into acting in certain ways, refusing to believe obvious truths and eager to believe obvious deception. he is not always a nice boy - at times sulky, arrogant, or unkind. but he is also often quite kind, and brave, and good. a well-rounded boy! Jones' writing style conveys all of this in an appealingly straightforward and rather tidy style. even better, she shows how a boy can change, sometimes slowly over time, sometimes in a great big rush, eyes suddenly opened and aware of his own biases and his own strengths.
plus it has Throgmorten, best magical cat from another dimension ever!
I liked this better than Charmed Life, even though it鈥檚 a prequel. Fun stuff.
There were some cliche trappings that shouldn鈥檛 have worked (rich neglected kid who is somehow nice and who finds out he鈥檚 super duper magical but finds a way to be even nicer). And the whole nine lives and multiverse idea doesn鈥檛 make sense at all, but all that was somehow okay because this was such fun to read! I鈥檓 curious to see where the series goes from here.
There鈥檚 also a pretty deep idea here about the disconnect between kids and adults. The adults here are trying to use the kids for their own purposes, setting them on tracks and trying to exploit their talents. The kids have to learn how to communicate effectively, lie well, and learn to find their own way through all the pressure and influences.
(Okay but seriously, there鈥檚 a multiverse of worlds in series but somehow they mostly have some kind of generic British thing going on? Honestly now. I don鈥檛 believe for a second that a world like ours but with magic would be so similar.)
I鈥檒l have to track down book 3. I鈥檓 excited to see what鈥檚 next.
I don't know how to accurately describe my love for this book. Every time I read it I feel more strongly (and I think on average, I read it about twice a year, so I feel very strongly about it indeed!) Never-mind that it's a "children's book" (whatever that means). It's beautiful, it's timeless, it's rich and it's subtle. I adore it.
I first read it when I was about ten. This and "Witch Week" were in the two little bookshelves at the back of my fifth-grade classroom, and as you do when you're a ten-year-old bookworm, I had carefully gone through almost every book there over the course of the school year, leaving only those that looked uninteresting. Somehow I'd missed Diana Wynne Jones (I think the covers of those editions were a little strange, and I was conscious of covers at ten.) But I'd read almost all of the other books, and it was there, and so I took it to my desk to read instead of listening to my Social Studies lesson.
It ended up being the kind of book that was impossible to put down. I think I got in trouble about it a few times. I liked it and I finished it and it went on my mental "good book" list (which at the time meant that I would someday read it again, when I got around to it.) That was that for a few years. I didn't recommend it to anyone but my sister. I loved Christopher's dream journeys, his parents' strange aloofness, his carelessness with his lives, Tacroy's secrets, the Goddess turning into Millie, the cricket matches, and that bold, beautiful moment of release when Dr. Pawson coaxes Christopher's magic out of him -- but I thought my friends would find it strange, and so I didn't tell them about it. It was a kind of private book. I wanted it to be all mine, so that nobody could corrupt it.
Somehow, this translated to me reading it year by year, eagerly and thirstily, sucking in all the multi-layeredness and life lessons that I'd missed on previous rereads. It's THAT kind of book -- it's full of things that you don't fully understand the first time, that you have to get older to appreciate, or that you have to think about in a certain way to comprehend. I've read it at least ten times, and I don't even think I've found everything yet.
I love the other Chrestomancis too, but they pale in comparison to this one. I don't know WHAT it is -- I've tried to put my finger on it for years, and I can't. The other books are multi-layered too, with characters just as dynamic, plots just as complex, as this one. Maybe it's what whoever-it-was said, that quote about reading a book at the right age, and it leaving an impression on you forever. It really did.
I don't want it to be my secret anymore. It frustrates me ridiculously that nobody seems to have read this book. I want people to read it. I want to run around on rooftops and FORCE people to read it. (But at the same time, I do appreciate that there isn't a wild and rabid fandom rushing to make memes or write frightening fanfiction. That's nice. That kind of reaction destroys books' dignity, and the dignity of Christopher Chant would be a terrible thing to mess with.)
At any rate, that's all I'm able to say about it. I love this book with an enormous, wild passion, and I think I always will.
Wonderful like I remembered. I love putting all the pieces together. The ending with the people of Eleven wasn't the best, sadly. I think the 'noble savage people' idea is showing its age.
The Lives of Christopher Chant wasn't my first DWJ, or even my first Chrestomanci book, that was Charmed Life, which I acquired at about 8 and read until it was falling apart.
This one I had to get from the library for years before picking up my own copy, so I didn't read it as many times as a kid, but over time it's become my absolute favourite of the series. I love that, not to put too fine a point on it, Christopher is a complete asshole for quite a lot of this book, but in a very believable way. He's a sheltered kid whose been lied to and had stuff hidden from him his whole life. He makes the choice to trust the first adult who treats him like a competent, autonomous human being, and furiously resents the ones who keep dragging him from place to place with no seeming interest in his own cares and desires.
This all makes quite reasonable sense!
Also, he has the emotional intelligence of a ROCK. He's a kid who's never been taught empathy or how to think about other people's needs as well as his own. He's fumbling around learning these skills on his own, because the few adults he interacted with as a small child spectacularly failed to model them to him.
But at heart he is caring and kind and considerate, just in a kind of autocratic-leaning kind of way.
The scene where he helps Throgmorten escape is one of my favourites in the entire series, because it's one of the first times we really see that kindness come out in an overt way.
His gradual burgeoning friendship with Millie is wonderful. The way he doesn't realize they've become friends until well after it's already happened. The way Millie figures out his magical silver allergy before he does. And the way he handles a bedraggled Goddess showing up on his doorstep while the entire world is already falling down around his ears.
As for Millie, well, I've idolized Millie since I was eight years old, and that hasn't changed. She's just so practical. Not necessarily sensible, she's still a kid after all, but practical and decisive and confident in a way small child me always wanted to be.
I've also always loved Mordecai Roberts and Flavian Temple, the way their friendship and betrayal and renewed friendship plays out in the text, but also the very different ways Christopher treats them. The dashing and rake-like Tacroy he takes to instantly because he's part of the grand adventures of the Anywheres, but the more upright yet kind Flavian he immediately resents because he represents the restrictions of the Castle that he does want to be in and does not understand.
Mordecai and Flavian are set up as opposites, but are really actually remarkably similar when it comes down to it, and the scene where Flavian finally loses his temper with Christopher is perfect. As a child I always recognized myself in that scene, because I could be so like Flavian. I would hold it all in and be quiet and polite and friendly until suddenly some little thing was just too much and all my anger would burst out of me in a torrent.
I kept coming back to DWJ's books as a kid and keep coming back to them as an adult because she really got kids, in a way that was neither sappy or moralizing. Children's wonder and excitement and obsessive passions, sure, but also their self-centredness and shortsightedness and difficulty understanding the consequences of their actions. And she shows them learning and changing and discovering in the most delightful and believable of ways.
Maravillosa precuela de 'Charmed life' (traducido al castellano como 'Una vida m谩gica') en la que conocemos los or铆genes del fant谩stico hechicero Chrestomanci, cuando era tan solo un ni帽o que viajaba de un mundo a otro conociendo diosas, robando gatos y so帽ando con ser jugador de cr铆quet profesional. Tan solo desmerece un poco el desenlace, pero a煤n as铆 he disfrutado much铆simo de toda la novela que es divertida, original y llena de personajes geniales. No es necesario haber le铆do 'Charmed life' para catarla, por cierto
Ho l'impressione, quando leggo Diana Wynne Jones, di trovare nei suoi libri il meglio di Gaiman e della Rowling. Avete presente tutte quelle cose deliziose e geniali come la metropolvere, la giratempo, la stanza delle necessit脿? Tutte quelle trovate che rendono memorabile il mondo di Harry? Ecco in Diana Wynne Jones quelle trovate non sono diluite in sette libri, ma ce ne sono sette in ogni pagina, la sua narrativa sembra esplodere di idee, essere un concentrato di intuizioni magiche. Alla fine del romanzo, nell'edizione Salani, c'猫 una sua breve intervista in cui parla del fatto che da bambina il padre non gli comprava i libri e quindi era costretta a inventare, per s茅 e per le sorelle, storie sempre nuove. Penso che questo sfortunato evento, abbia portato la mente dell Jones a rimanere un po' quella di una bambina e proprio per quello a essere iperattiva e in grado di partorire stupende follie. Questo senza dimenticare le sue trame intricate, ma sempre ditate di finali ad orologeria, con colpi di scena che Shyamalan scansate. Se non leggete Diana Wynne Jones perch茅 siete troppo grandi, sappiate che vi state sommamente sopravvalutando e invece dovreste proprio mettere alla prova i vostri pregiudizi.
This is my favorite of the Chrestomanci Quartet by leaps and bounds. Jones' pacing is impeccable, and there is never a dull moment. While her ability to spin everything together in endings is a bit lackluster in some of the other books -- Magicians of Caprona and Charmed Life being the worst offenders -- here we have a wonderful buildup to a very fulfilling climax. Her characters are vivacious and likable (even when they are doing unlikeable things), her wit is as sharp as ever, the magic is brilliantly simple in a complex sort of way, which is my very favorite type of magic . . . and there is even a dragon.
This story brought something of the Young Me back to life. I'd remembered very little of it apart from the general overview (and it turns out I'd been conflating this story with the one in Charmed Life), so it really was like reading it for the first time. I loved the magic system. It helped illuminate the path I'd taken to becoming a magic-writer. I loved the adventure aspect. It reminded me that I'd once been someone who loved going on adventures -- big or small, it didn't matter. And I loved simply reading it. It made me realize that perhaps I'm not quite as different from Young Me as I'd imagined. I started reading to settle my brain before sleep, and as you can see, I stayed up half the night. Not due to anxiety or depression, Thank Shivnath . . . simply because I *had* to know what happened on the next page.
I remember now the days before PCs and Smartphones, when books were all I had. How much I loved them. What good company they were. What adventures I had alone, in my room. This book brought out the best in me -- it was just like old times. I felt like myself again after closing it. It is a rare and truly magical book that can make you feel things so deeply, and something here resonated with me on a profound level. For that, I am supremely grateful.
This is my favorite of the Chrestomanci books, and to my surprise I had completely forgotten the final confrontation. I guess it's been a while.
The Lives of Christopher Chant lacks the strong through-line of , which is maybe why the latter is more generally popular, but I enjoy the development of Christopher as a character and the exploration of the Related Worlds. There's also some of DWJ's trademark subtle horror, such as and her wonderful feline characters. I really love Throgmorton the Temple Cat. The narrator for the audiobook rendered his yowl perfectly.
This is also best experienced as a prequel, because there is something really fun about seeing the Chrestomanci of Charmed Life as an ordinary, lonely, occasionally bratty boy. So read at least Charmed Life and possibly also , and then give this one a shot.
Where and were more on a kiddie side of the series, somewhere around the series started to grow up. This one is the 4th in the series and it has definitely a more complex plot. I really loved this book till almost the end. The landing was rocky, DWJ sometimes rushes in the end, story became a bit too convoluted. But I loved young boy Chrestomanci and The Living Asheth very much.
Of the three Chrestomanci books I've read so far, this was easily my favorite. I've enjoyed DWJ's style from day one, but this is where everything came together for me and I developed really strong feelings about plot and relationships. I love how DWJ just goes for it in terms of frankly messed up subject matter but still keeps things brisk and funny. She does a great job of putting us in the tight POV of Christopher as a very young child as well as when he gets older, so that we share much of his interpersonal obliviousness even as we pick up on plot cues that he doesn't.
I felt (and enjoyed) that Tacroy seemed to be a guest from a Wharton novel or the like, off in some seedy garret full of opium or laudanum. But the actual twist was even better! What a well-drawn character and set of relationships (including his with Miss Rosalie).
I also loved the Goddess, although I was pretty annoyed that she and the rest of the people in her world seem to be white. This annoyance doubled when it became clear that Tacroy -- and the entire rest of his (evil, extra alien) world -- are not white. Because of course they are. SMH
Still, overall really loved this book and am excited to read more about Christopher and Millie.
Every re-read of a DWJ book seems to bring something new or at least emphasises in capital letters something I've long felt about her as a writer. After my recent re-read of Charmed Life, this book again strongly reminded me how DWJ's villains are villains not because they are cartoonishly Evil but because they knowingly and callously use people and fail to value people simply as people. It also hit me how different and more vivid DWJ's children's and YA books (also of course for adults!) are from most YA today. Despite the fact that today's YA books try to deal face-on with lots of issues, DWJ seems to be in some ways so much more unflinching. I realise that must sound strange and perhaps it isn't even true, but it's how I felt when reading this. She's so very honest about people, with all our good and bad stuff mixed together.
A reread of an old childhood favorite. DWJ is a wizard (if not a nine-lifed enchanter) when it comes to inventive fantasy stories.
It's been a long time since I've read this one, so although there were some parts I remembered vividly (like how Christopher walked around the corner of his bedroom to get to other worlds), I was amazed to see how much I didn't remember at all. The animosity between Christopher's parents must have gone right over my head when I was younger.
A great old-fasioned feeling fantasy. Definitely recommended.
Fun and easy to read. Pretty sure I didn't read this, the first time, so, hm. Maybe I only read the first book, when I was younger. In any case, it's best to read this after Charmed Life, otherwise it would give the game away with some of what happens in Charmed Life.
Christopher Chant isn't the pleasantest kid to read about, if you're reading in an aware sort of way and you know some things about the world -- e.g. dragon blood -- but at the same time, you get sucked into what he's doing. And it's lovely when he starts to develop -- because he does develop -- and becomes more self-aware. Millie/the Goddess is a fun character, too, and I kind of identify with her obsession with school novels... as a kid, I ate 'em up. I'd still like to get hold of the Chalet School books, someday... But my favourite character, somehow, is Tacroy, who still manages to be a decent kind of guy, despite everything.
The only quibble is how neatly and quickly it all ties up at the end. It felt rather abrupt, and just... too neat.
I read this series as a 5th grader. In fact, my copy got confiscated by the terrifying 4'9" Mrs. Wasserman because I was reading it under the desk and trying to look innocent.
I was delighted to reread this and realize that these books really ARE captivating, and maybe I did have some literary taste as a kid.
I loved the way the adolescent hero has a terrible shock discovering that he is not adorable, and that he may in fact be an arrogant jerk. What a perfect insight into being 13! And Jones is a master of the dangerous mistrusting gulf between children and the adults around them. How can adults and children understand or trust each other? Who is reliable and who is dangerous? Very -- dare I say it? psychologically realistic-- in a magical alternate universe.
2021: Possibly loved this even more on my reread. Especially charmed by the Goddess, who reads lots of boarding-school novel, and wants to exist in a school story from the 1950s, despite her ferocious powers. Very funny and charming. Also delighted to meet the cats again: Throgmorten the daring and Proudfoot the adorable.
Review from 2018: This is an excellent children's fantasy novel: it does absolutely everything it needs to do. It begins with Christopher Chant (who we have met as an adult in Charmed Life, but this book stands alone), a lonely child with wealthy, self-obsessed parents, who can travel to other worlds. This is a singular skill, but Christopher doesn't know it: he gets solace from travelling, but doesn't know it's an exceptional skill until he meets his charismatic uncle, Ralph. Unfortunately, Ralph is not really on Christopher's side at all.
It's a fast paced novel, with Christopher shuttled from place to place, meeting many unsatisfactory adults. In another world, he befriends a Goddess in human form, and they become allies, along with a number of delightful and fiercesome cats. The story is very satisfying, keeping to its internal logic, and full of daring, and, not always present in children's books, genuine human emotion. It's fun to read and makes wonderful escapism.
This second installment of the Chrestomanci series is direct prequel to Charmed Life, in which Jones more fully develops her "many worlds" fantasy setting by telling how Christopher Chant grew up to occupy the position of Chrestomanci, despite losing so many of his nine lives along the way.
It is a quite magical biography and a different sort of story than Charmed Life, although both are tinged with real darkness, and both deal with the consequences of emotional neglect, which leaves others, children especially, vulnerable to manipulative persons. The thematic content is, again, a bit deeper and more disturbing than you might expect for middle-grade fiction, yet handled with a wonderfully light touch.
As with every installment of this series, it's Jones' keen attention to the details and concerns of real life that makes her fantasy so good. Her characters are vividly human: being magical doesn't particularly ennoble their virtues, intensify their faults, or alleviate their stresses. Deftly-told otherworldly adventures make the stories fun, while ordinary concerns and choices makes the stories credible. Highly recommended.
Reread in 2022 - I really really loved this book. It's SO imaginative. I love Christopher so much as a character. His life starts out so simple and fun - he travels between worlds from time to time and people like him so much there they give him little trinkets to keep as presents - until people realise what he can do and try to use him for their own purposes. The cast of characters is rich and I'll remember them forever and this has so many cosy scenes which I completely adored - Christopher playing cricket, The Goddess talking about vintage school books to name just two. This was a joy.
----- Wow. Diana Wynne Jones is quite incredible, she's unlike anyone I've ever read (apart from maybe Pratchett). Her books are SO unique and memorable .
This was no exception, and I liked it more than Charmed Life because I loved all the main characters. The magic is super fun. Christopher can travel between worlds during his sleep and has got nine lives so his Uncle tasks him with recovering a series of objects from different, sometimes dangerous realms - until Christopher finds out he's destined to become the greatest sorcerer of all time.
Super clever. The writing is GORGEOUS - she's the best author I know when it comes to sneaking in some small cosy details in the middle of action-packed scenes that make you feel instantly warm and at home. The dialog is sharp and witty, really funny. I enjoyed everything about this book. Absolutely going in my library to reread forever.
Interestingly enough, if feels like it follows the same kind of formula. A child throwed into a world they don't really understand or particularly care about, turned left and right by those who take advantage of a child's eagerness to belong, to be cherished and loved. (not gonna lie, i love it - you can't help but ache and feel deep fondness)
Once again in awe of Diana Wynne Jones' imagination. You feel enchanted with the possibilities the magic provides, you can never predict what might come next from one of the Related Worlds. Everything is new and refreshing and an utter delight to discover as you read.
I'm really curious to discover the rest of the stories in the Chrestomanci series.
This is a fun one, though probably my least favourite of the Chrestomanci books. I enjoy The Goddess, Throgmorton, and Tacroy, but I don't feel all that connected to the actual plot. A bit too long, perhaps. Still, I enjoy revisiting when I reread the whole series!
Really fun. Favorite DWJ so far. Sometimes I struggle to get sucked into her novels, but this one did not suffer from any early chapter plot malaise.
And鈥�. I鈥檓 pretty sure JK Rowling lifted her Harry Potter franchise straight outta this book. Too many coincidences, I think she owes DWJ some royalties.
- neglected boy learns he has magic abilities, goes to a boarding school - boring practical magic teacher - an eccentric and secretive wizardy mentor - splitting a person into several lives - putting a life into an object to keep it safe - a Minister and bureaucratic magic regulations - lots of ordinary people banding together with simple spells to defend the Castle from powerful baddies
This is a story in the Chrestomanci series, it is designated as #2 and it should be read in this order because if you read it ahead or behind you might not understand certain aspects of the series. One thing to keep in mind while reading this author's books is that the story builds very slowly and may seem very mundane and aimless. When you progress to midway or a little further, the story begins to catch you and draw you in. At first, I didn't like this, but once I got used to her rhythm, I didn't mind it so much.
Una sorta di spin off su Christopher Chant, aka il Chrestomanci, imperdibile per entrare davvero nella storia generale della saga. La Jones continua a esplorare le dimensioni gi脿 abbozzate in Vita stregata, stavolta in maniera pi霉 approfondita. Carini i personaggi, specie la Dea, ma anche il gatto Throgmorten e l'amico Tacroy. Il giovane Christopher mantiene la leggera distanza che si percepisce, in misura maggiore, nel Chrestomanci adulto, del resto 猫 un grande incantatore.
This is the one I really want to re-read. But I will do so sometime after I finish this series. Christopher has grown on me and I just want to see the way he has changed. My favorite aspect of him does not look like it will change. Which I love. I just admire his cynicism and this is very much a part of him that seems to remain with him through the years.