What Katy Did
What
Katy Did is an 1872 children's book written
by Sarah Chauncey Woolsey under her pen name Susan
Coolidge. It follows the adventures of a
twelve-year-old American girl, Katy Carr, and her family who live in the
fictional lakeside
Ohio town of Burnet in the 1860s. Katy is a tall untidy tomboy, forever getting into scrapes but wishing to be beautiful
and beloved. When a terrible accident makes her an invalid, her illness and
four-year recovery gradually teach her to be as good and kind as she has always
wanted.
Two
sequels follow Katy as she grows up: What Katy Did at School and What Katy Did Next. Two further sequels relating the adventures of Katy's younger
siblings were also published—Clover and In the High Valley. The books were frequently reprinted and all are available
online.
Coolidge
modeled Katy on her own childhood self, and the other 'Little Carrs' on her
brothers and sisters.[1] The title is a play on the katydid, a family of insects – which explains the insects on the
first edition book cover.
Plot summary
12-year-old
Katy Carr lives with her widowed father and her two brothers and three sisters
in Burnet, a small midwestern American town. Her father is a very busy doctor
who works long hours; the children are mostly in the care of his sister Aunt
Izzie, who is very particular and something of a scold. Bright, headstrong Katy
can hardly avoid getting into mischief almost daily under these circumstances,
but she is unfailingly remorseful afterward. She behaves somehow kindly to the
children and also she dreams of some day doing something "grand" with
her life: painting famous pictures, saving the lives of drowning people, or
leading a crusade on a white horse. She also wants to be "beautiful, of
course, and good if I can." When her mother died four years earlier, Katy
promised to be a little mother to her siblings: in practice, she is the kind of
big sister who is sometimes impatient or cross with them but leads them into
all sorts of exciting adventures.
When
Cousin Helen, an invalid, comes to visit, Katy is so enchanted by her beauty
and kindness that on the day of Helen's departure she resolves to model herself
on Helen ever afterward. The very next day, however, Katy wakes in an ill
humor, quarrels with her aunt and pushes her little sister so hard that she falls
down half a dozen steps. Afterward, sulky and miserable, Katy decides to try
out the new swing in the woodshed although Aunt Izzie has forbidden it. Had
Aunt Izzie actually explained that the swing was unsafe because one of the
staples supporting it had cracked, "all would have been right," but
she believes that children should unquestioningly obey their elders. Katy
swings as high as she can and then, as she tries to graze the roof with her
toes, the staple gives way. She falls hard, bruising her spine.
The
lively Katy is now bedridden and suffering terrible pain and bitterness. Her
room is dark, dreary, and cluttered with medicine bottles; when her siblings
try to comfort her, she usually drives them away. However, a visit from Cousin
Helen shows her that she must either learn to make the best of her situation or
risk losing her family's love. Helen tells Katy that she is now a student in
the "School of Pain" where she will learn lessons in patience,
cheerfulness, hopefulness, neatness, and making the best of things.
With
Cousin Helen's help, Katy makes her room tidy and nice to visit and gradually
all the children gravitate to it, coming in to see her whenever they can. She
becomes the heart of the home, beloved by her family for her unfailing kindness
and good cheer. After two years Aunt Izzie dies and Katy takes over the running
of the household. At the end of four years, in a chapter called "At
Last", she learns to walk again.
The
book includes several poems that the characters wrote.
Characters
Katy
Carr: the eldest of the Carr children
and the novel's protagonist.
At the beginning of the book she is a twelve-year-old tomboy who much prefers
running around outdoors to quiet 'ladylike' pursuits and so tears her clothes
and is always untidy; however, she longs to be good.
Clover
Carr: the second-eldest sister adores
Katy and follows her in everything she does. Clover is pretty and clever with a
sunny disposition; she is described as loving everyone and is loved by everyone
in return.
Elsie
Carr: the third sister, an awkward child
at the beginning of the book, too old to play with the 'babies' and too young
to be included in Katy and Clover's games. She tries her hardest to join in,
but is usually ignored; instead, she whines. After Katy is injured Elsie proves
very helpful and considerate, and she and Katy finally grow close.
Dorry
Carr: a stolid boy and great eater, the
fourth Carr is the eldest son. He develops a certain mechanical skill over
time.
Johnnie
Carr (short for Joanna): the fifth
child, a tomboy. She and Dorry are great friends.
Phil
Carr: the baby of the family, who is
only 4 years old at the book's beginning.
Cecy
Hall: a pretty and tidy girl, the
daughter of a nearby neighbour.
Imogen
Clark: a classmate of Katy and Clover; a
silly, affected girl. Initially she enthralls Katy with her romantic
imagination, but she proves dishonest and self-centered and, as her father
predicted, Katy grows disillusioned with her.
Papa
(Dr Philip Carr): the children's father, a very busy
doctor who has been a single parent, firm but understanding, since his wife's
death when Katy was 8.
Aunt
Izzie: Papa's sister, an old-fashioned
woman who raises the children after their mother dies. She is very particular
and scolds a lot because she does not understand the children's ways, although
she has a heart of gold. Her death results in Katy taking over the domestic
management of the household.
Cousin
Helen: Papa's niece; she cannot walk
because of an accident years ago. Despite her suffering she is amusing,
cheerful, and kind; just what Katy wants to be. After Katy's accident, Cousin
Helen helps her adjust to her illness.
Themes
Susan
Coolidge shared her publisher, Roberts Brothers, with Louisa
May Alcott, and What Katy Did helped
satisfy the demand for naturalistic novels about girlhood that followed the
1868 success of Little Women. Like Alcott, Coolidge heightened the
realism of her novel by drawing on her own childhood memories.[1]
What
Katy Did also illustrates social shifts.
First the novel depicts the treatment of fun in the 19th century. After her
accident, young Katy is given lots of love and care; however, she is sad,
confined to an upstairs room, and, although she has a wheelchair, she never
goes further than her bedroom window. The possibility that she could leave her
room is barely considered and no-one thinks of moving her to the ground floor.
She copes by making herself and her room so pleasant that everyone comes to
her. Early on, she goes out in a carriage, but finds the experience so painful
that she never tries it again. Thereafter, she lives in her bedroom, makes the
best of things and waits, hoping to outgrow her injury. There is no physical
therapy – instead Katy is warned to avoid too much movement lest she "set
herself back". Cousin Helen manages to travel a little, and even goes for
a hydrotherapy
water cure at one point, but it is made clear that she has no hope of ever
walking again.
Adaptations
Two
TV movies and a brief TV series have been based on What Katy Did. The
most recent film (1999) starred Alison
Pill as Katy, with Megan
Follows as Cousin Helen, Michael
Cera as Dorry, Bryn
McAuley as Joanna, and Dean
Stockwell as "Tramp". A 1972 UK
movie adaptation, Katy, starred Clare Walker, and the 1962 eight-part TV series
made in the UK, also called Katy, featured rising star Susan
Hampshire in the title role. In 2015, author Jacqueline
Wilson wrote her novel Katy, which is a modern retelling of What Katy Did; in
2018, the Wilson novel was adapted into the CBBC TV series Katy.
The August 2016 edition of Storytime featured a new illustrated adaptation with illustrations by
Italian artist Marco Guadalupi.
Sequels
What
Katy Did was followed by four sequels: What Katy Did at School in which Katy and Clover attend the fictional Hillsover
School (set in Hanover, New Hampshire); What Katy Did Next, in which a new friend of Katy's takes her on a
once-in-a-lifetime trip to Europe; Clover, in which Katy is married and
Clover accompanies her brother Phil to Colorado after he falls ill; and In
the High Valley, which shows the lives of a handful of young people living
in the High Valley in Colorado, including Clover, Elsie and their husbands.
References in popular culture
- "What Katie Did" is the name of a song by the Libertines that may have been inspired by the book. The lyrics refer to the characters, e.g. "Hurry up Mrs. Brown". The group Babyshambles later released a song entitled "What Katy Did Next". Both were written by Libertines and Babyshambles frontman Pete Doherty.
- "What Kate Did" is the name of the ninth episode of season 2 of Lost.
- "What Kate Does" is the name of the second episode of season 6 of Lost.
- A character named Katy Carr appears in the first volume of Alan Moore's graphic novel The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen. As Katy beats a student at Ms Coote's school, the headmistress says she believes in the "School of Pain".
- Idahoan songwriter Josh Ritter includes a reference to What Katy Did in his song "Monster Ballads" on his album The Animal Years.
- In the movie Coffee and Cigarettes by Jim Jarmusch, a Steve Coogan fan says her name is Katy and he answers "What Katy did next".
- The protagonist of Avi's The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle introduces her own story by saying "This is no 'Story of a Bad Boy,' no 'What Katy Did,'" to indicate that she is not remorseful for her unladylike behavior.
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