The Tulip Touch

The Tulip Touch is a children's novel by Anne Fine published in 1996. The book, written for elementary-school aged children, raises questions of morality and accountability as well as exploring the question of nature versus nurture. It was highly commended for the Carnegie Medal and won the 1996 children's book Whitbread Award.

Plot

Natalie lives with her father, a hotel manager, and her mother, who is loving but pays more attention to Natalie's younger brother Julius. When they go to live in a hotel called 'The Palace' where Natalie meets Tulip Pierce, an enigmatic girl of Natalie's age. Tulip initially charms Natalie with her strong personality and wild imagination. The two girls become close friends.

Over the years, their relationship slowly evolves from a childhood friendship into a more sinister mix of obsession and manipulation. They play various games, all invented by Tulip, who is often away from school, without explanation. The games range from the unkind "Stinking Mackerel" where they use facial expressions to make strangers suspect they have an unpleasant smell, to the far more dangerous "Babe in the Woods" which involves endangering Natalie's young brother. Another game which also involved Natalie's younger brother is a game where he had to put a plastic bag over his head and try and catch Natalie and Tulip.

Natalie first begins to notice the differences between her and Tulip when she goes in search of her one-day and visits her home with her father. Natalie's father is made uncomfortable when they see the run down farm that Tulip, her mother and her father live on. Tulip's father, Mr Pierce, is portrayed as violent and sadistic through events relayed to Natalie by Tulip. There are many clear signs that Mr Pierce is abusive to both his wife and daughter although this is not picked up on by Natalie at first. After learning she has visited the farm, Natalie's father makes her promise she will never go back.

Tulip plays on the sympathies of Natalie's entire family who are aware of the way she is being treated. Natalie's father often treats Tulip like his own daughter, encouraging Natalie to include her in everything. However, as Natalie's parents begin to see the malicious tone that Tulip is adopting, they encourage Natalie to end the friendship. Although Natalie suspects that Tulip will do harm to her if they end the friendship.

Natalie finally breaks away from Tulip, but never feels entirely free from her influence. She now realises the clues that she had never noticed before that were evidence of Tulip's home life; the shabby, old uniform that her school complains about and her absences. She still watches her, although they are no longer friends, and at times misses the wildness and imagination that she herself lacks. Other people seem mundane at first but Natalie manages to make other friends eventually, throwing herself into her school work while Tulip gets wilder, knifing bus seats and burning litter bins. Natalie hears that Tulip has visited a local family asking to see a baby that the whole community knows has recently died which greatly upsets the family. In the end, feeling rejected by Natalie when she is not invited to the famous Christmas party at The Palace, Tulip burns down the hotel where Natalie's family lives, endangering their lives.

Natalie, at the close of the novel, has moved to a new hotel with her family and things are going well but while her family, old teachers, and old community all criticise and dislike Tulip, Natalie knows she will remember Tulip for the rest of her life and always feel guilty about her. It is clear that at the time of her friendship with Tulip, Natalie was too young to recognise the signs of abuse but wonders why adults who seem to have known the same thing never helped Tulip.

Characters from The Tulip Touch

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 12/3/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.