Five on a Hike Together part 2

Last time I left off just as the Julian decides that they are going to visit Two Trees and Gloomy Water to see if they can find Saucy Jane (but avoid Maggie who Knows). 


The adventure begins

We are a little over halfway through the book by now, and yet we are only just at the part where the real adventure begins. 

That’s not to say the previous chapters have been boring or eventless, but apart from the strange message in the night it hasn’t been adventurous. 

But now, we get to see the places from the message Dick was given. Two Trees is slightly sinister burnt out ruin and Gloomy Water is exactly as it sounds from the name. I’m stuck with some strange mental images having formed them when I was a child and reading this for the first time and they’re hard to get rid of.

Firstly the two trees are palm trees in my head (no idea why – I did know it was England and not the tropics!) and Gloomy Water is annoyingly small and bordered by a ridiculously even line of shrub/hedges. 

As they were not prepared for camping they end up in the cellars – and I’m absolutely with Anne that having lots of other doors and rooms down there is more than a tad creepy. 

Quickly the hunt for Saucy Jane starts – she’s not in the boat house, so where else could a boat be?

This is the first time I’ve really thought about the history of the house and the boats. Merry Meg, Cheeky Charlie, and Careful Carrie. Were they named after some of the people that lived at Two Trees? (Also why are three alliterative but not the fourth?) Blyton uses Saucy Jane as the name of the narrow boat in The Saucy Jane too, but I’m not sure if it’s a common boat name or not.

I definitely felt a pang or two reading about the little boat house and the boats with the cushions and everything just mouldering away.


Dick and Maggie

An adventure becomes more adventurous when the baddies show up. Dick never got his message but obviously Maggie sought him out and let him know. 

They naturally turn up to do some treasure hunting themselves and are not happy to find the Five right in their way. They attempt to be threatening and menacing but are unarmed and therefore easily held off by Timmy. We know Dirty Dick can be violent and dangerous from our earlier meeting with him, so there is an air from him, but otherwise he and Maggie are not the toughest enemies the Five have faced.

They do steal the Five’s food in an attempt to get rid of them, but Timmy just steals their food in return, and there is an incident where Dirty Dick rows their boat into the Fives’ raft but other than that it’s fairly conflict free. Dick and Maggie think that as the kids have to be back at school on Monday they can just wait it out – of course they have no idea that the Five know about the hidden loot and have all the clues to find it.

The Five find the loot first, but it’s actually a close call. Dick and Maggie are obviously smart people even if they don’t look it because they work out the clues and are extremely close to finding the right spot on the lake themselves. They are hampered by there only being two of them, though, and having the children so close they don’t want to give anything away.

So it’s a moonlight dip for the boys to recover the loot and outwit Dick and Maggie.


Nitpicks, observations and other comments

As always I noted various things that seemed like contradictions, curiosities, plot holes and so on. 

  • Julian creates a comprehensive list of things the girls are to pack but leaves off underwear. As nobody ever goes to the toilet I suppose they never change their pants either.
  • The woman at the inn says that the nearest vet is in Great Giddings but no bus goes there. Surely a village big enough to have a vet would have a bus going there or at least close? It made me think of Robbie Coltrane in the Comic Strip Presents episodes, he would have made it sound very sinister. 
  • The escaped prisoner says to Dick I saw you go in [to the barn] and I’ve got to go in half a tick. This guy is on the run from the police and has agreed to deliver two messages as he goes. So why does he see Dick go into the barn and then wait around for ages? Dick had time to fall asleep, dream and awaken and the narrative has the moon rise etc. There’s no suggestion that there is anyone else around to see him, so unless he saw Dick enter the barn then went off and saw Maggie then returned, I’ve no idea what he was doing all that time.
  • After their run in with the unhelpful policeman George says I hope his dinner’s gone cold. How does she know that he was eating his dinner? We know because Blyton told us but the Five don’t see him at his dinner and he doesn’t say anything about them interrupting his meal.
  • Not strictly a nitpick but George mentions that her mother lived in a town at some point. Kirrin has belonged to her mother’s family for generations so I always assumed that Fanny has been in Kirrin all her life.
  • When Dirty Dick arrives at Gloomy Water he doesn’t recognise Dick, yet they met at his house when he turfs him out. 
  • The bit of paper reads Chimney but later they say One Chimney as if that’s its name. Similarly the prisoner who sent the message is referred to as both Nailer and The Nailer.

Next post: Five Have a Wonderful Time

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Monday #369

Five on a Hike Together part 2

and

April round up

If one cannot enjoy reading a book over and over again, there is no use in reading it at all.

– Oscar Wilde

I’m an avid re-reader, and not just with my Blytons. Now is certainly a good time to revisit old favourites.

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Fan fic Friday: Cunningham and Petrov: The Mystery of the Missing Aeroplane chapter 7

Previously Bill went up to Gairdon to collect Philip, and then they set off in a plane to Austria.

Chapter 7

Almost trembling with excitement Anatoly packed his things, paid the landlady and went to see if he could catch a lift out of  town in the right direction with some of the farmers moving about after delivering their wares to the scattered villages.

He managed to find himself a lift in the right direction and paid the farmer handsomely when he was taken as far as possible. He slipped down off the cart, checked his compass and set off at a fast walk towards where he knew the airfield was.

He was the first one to arrive, and he settled down in a corner, to have a rest and wait for Bill’s planes to land and the other agents who could make it to the allotted meeting point, to join him.

From the message he had received he was expecting Bill to arrive by four, four-thirty at the latest. He wasn’t too concerned when it reached five pm, but when the clocked ticked on to six he was slightly worried. Two other agents had arrived by then, and they sat together pensively, wondering what had happened to the promised pick-up.

“Do you think they will come?” Anatoly asked.

Thompson shrugged laconically. “Might have been a change of plan. Maybe they decided to head straight to the valley instead of wasting time diverting to get us. We’ll just have to wait and see.”

“We’ve got a wireless set up,” Smith reminded him. “A message will come through sooner or later. Hopefully sooner, I’ve been bored out of my mind this past week. I could do with some action even if it’s just making our way back home.”

Anatoly nodded though he began chewing on his thumb nail. He didn’t want to tell the others what he had found out, in case Bill didn’t want it shared. He got up after a moment and wandered around the hanger for a moment, his nervous energy getting the better of him. As he went to the front of the hanger he thought he heard the sound of an approaching engine.

His heart rate picked up as he scanned the sky, spotting the white underbelly of a plane. He watched it circle lower, shading his eyes from the sun which was sliding down in the sky. As it approached for its landing he caught sight of the insignia on the tail, the markings on the sides, and realised that it was not Bill’s plane.

Smith wandered over, taking out a cigarette. “Is it the boss?” he asked, as he lit his cigarette, and offered Anatoly the box.

“No,” Anatoly replied despondently, taking a cigarette. He stuck it in his mouth and then took the box of matches, striking one and holding it to the end of the cigarette until it caught. Shaking the match out he discarded it and handed the box back. They turned away as the plane touched down, heading back to their little corner. “I wish I knew what was going on,” Anatoly said. They were under instruction to only radio in at their prescribed times unless there was an emergency or information of utmost importance had come up.

“Don’t we all, mate,” Smith replied. “The boss’ll have his reasons for leaving us high and dry. We’ll get orders eventually.”

Anatoly nodded and sucked on the cigarette. “I wonder if there is any food in this place,” he added as his stomach rumbled. “I was in such a rush to get here, I forgot to pick up supplies.”

They managed to scrounge a meal from the hut, but it wasn’t up to much, and they bedded down for the night amongst some bushes near the perimeter fence, taking it in turns to keep watch although they knew a plane coming in to land would wake them.

In the morning the rose, washed and shaved as best they could at the cold water tap outside and resumed waiting.

A small plane landed just past eight, and they kept well back out of the way. And finally, at half-past nine, two medium aeroplanes with a familiar look circled, and came into land.

The door to the nearest plane was flung open and the stairs lowered. They watched keenly as Bill appeared in the doorway and stepped out.

“Smith. Thompson,” he said, nodding at the two men. “Petrov.” He nodded at Anatoly too.

“Ready to go?”

“Yes, sir!” they all replied, knowing better than to ask why they were so late. The just crossed the tarmac quickly and boarded the plane. There were five other agents on board, Bill making up the sixth as he re-entered the plane and raised the stairs again.

Anatoly was surprised to see Philip Mannering aboard, his hair tousled and clothes untidy. “Philip,” he said, nodding by way of greeting.

“Anatoly,” Philip replied with a grin. “Ready for some action?”

“Always,” Anatoly replied. He thought about sitting next to Philip but decided against it. He was already seen as the baby of the SIS and didn’t need to cement that reputation by chatting away to a fourteen year old.

“Well, gentlemen,” Bill said above the engine as it started up. “Shall we get this done?”

To be continued…

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Locked down library book displays

There’s a reasonably long back-story to this, so feel free to scroll straight to the pictures!

I’ve sort of lost track of the days and weeks but some time ago in March we had to self-isolate, then my work closed. We were asked to work from home, if we could. I’ve done what I can – mostly responding to social media enquiries and comments and supplying people with their PIN to access the online services. There’s not much else I can do, though.

One evening about eleven o’clock I looked over and noticed that a Jaws movie poster was propped up on a book stand. (I have two book stands I borrowed to lend to my sister who needed to prop her iPad up for teaching a fitness class, and then couldn’t return). I thought that looks like the start of a book display. I had, not too long before, borrowed Jaws the book and hadn’t been able to return that either… and Brodie has some toy boats. And toy sharks.

So I did my first display and in a fit of foolish enthusiasm declared I would do a book display every day of the lockdown, using whatever I could find around the house. I’m now about a month in and still have quite a lot of ideas, but I don’t know if I have enough depending on how long this goes on.

Anyway; here are the first seven days of book displays. There are a couple of Blyton ones, of course!


Day #1

Jaws by Peter Benchley

I started with just the poster, boat and book, then my sister said ‘doesn’t Brodie have a bath shark?’ I found the hand puppet first, then kept adding sharks (we have a few as Brodie is named after Chief Brody from Jaws). The film has several sequels so there are two photos representing Jaws (book and film) then Jaws 2 and Jaws 3d.


Day #2

Thomas the Tank Engine

Brodie loves his Thomas books and toys so I had quite a lot to work with.


Day #3

The Famous Five

I couldn’t wait any longer to do this!

I couldn’t fit my whole collection on the table, so I went for the Fives I have in decent dustjackets, the 90s annual, one of the recent annuals, my Sindy dog who represents Timmy on my bookshelf, a few of the postcards, and my 70s Pepys cards and the 50s Pepys cards.

Close ups below;


Day #4

The Mystery of the Strange Messages

None of my Five Find-Outer books have dustjackets so I decided just to feature one with some props. Buster, obviously, enough macaroons to feed the gang for around thirty seconds and some of the strange messages received by Goon.


Day #5

Jurassic Park by Michael Crichton

I’ve always loved the films and I read the books for the first time recently, both on my Kindle. I happen to have two Kindles so I used them plus some of Brodie’s toys to try to recreate the scene in the book/film when the visitors take the jeeps past the tyrannosaur paddock and get stuck…


Day #6

The Organised Mum Method by Gemma Bray

If you read my monthly round ups you’ll have seen me mention the Organised Mum Method before. It’s free to follow online but I have the book as well, which I’ve put with some of my favourite cleaning products as recommended by the TOMM community.


Day #7

Nursing

Some of my favourite nursing memoirs on the left and nursing fiction on the right. Along with a vintage first aid kit.

From the back left;

  • Call the Midwife (book #1) – Jennifer Worth
  • The Nightingale Girls (book #1) – Donna Douglas
  • Yes Sister, No Sister – Jennifer Craig
  • A Nurse in Time (book #1) – Evelyn Prentis
  • Florence Nightingale – Cecil Woodham-Smith (I admit I haven’t read this but you can’t do a nursing display without the Lady with the Lamp!)
  • A Nurse at War – Maggie Holt
  • Call Nurse Millie (book #1) – Jean Fullerton

So that was my first 7 with plenty more to come!

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Monday #368

Locked down library book displays

and

Fan Fic Friday:

Cunningham and Petrov The Mystery of the Missing Aeroplane chapter 7

“Books are the plane, and the train, and the road. They are the destination, and the journey. They are home.”

― Anna Quindlen, How Reading Changed My Life

Despite not finding Five on a Hike Together allowed me as much escapism as usual, I still think that books are one of the best ways to escape from the current stresses and difficulties we are having.

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Five on a Hike Together

This is one of my favourite Fives, it’s my second favourite after Five Go to Smuggler’s Top, in fact. (I realise I haven’t done a Five review since November, I think I got swept away with other blog ideas!)

I admit I’ve not been practicing what I preach. I know I’ve posted a few quotes about escaping into a good book, but I actually found it quite hard with Hike. I’ve escaped into vampire fiction set in Minneapolis, and sci-fi in Rushford (and lots of other places/times) quite easily recently but I didn’t experience my usual escapism this time with Blyton. I couldn’t help but be jealous of the Five heading off for four whole days outdoors with no lockdown and no social distancing. I was also finding motivation and concentration were lacking the past few days which is why this review is so late.

I did get into it after a few false starts, however, and here is my review.

 


A story in how many parts?

As I was reading I thought this would be hard to divide down but now I’ve sat to write the review it seems patently obvious.

  1. The Five set off on their hike and Timmy is injured, ending with the Five splitting up.
  2. Dick has his strange night-time experience and after examining the bit of paper Julian decides that they will go on to Two Trees and Gloomy water for a bit of a poke around.
  3. They arrive at Two Trees, Dick and Maggie show up, and they do their treasure hunting.

Another series of unfortunate events

In my review of Five Fall Into Adventure I started with the heading a somewhat unfortunate series of events and I think the same could apply to the start of this book.

Well, the very start is fortunate indeed – Juliana and Dick’s school are granted a couple of days tacked onto their weekend at the same time that George and Anne are off, so Julian plans a hike for them.

It all starts off just fine – and they source plenty of food. They walk (or indeed, hike) and then the first little thing goes wrong.

Timmy gets stuck down a rabbit hole and in being rescued hurts his leg. George is, of course, very agitated about this, so when he ends up walking on three legs they insist on him seeing a vet.

They inquire at an inn, to the bad news that there is no vet nearer than six miles, and no bus goes there. Mr Gaston, who keeps horses and dogs might take a look, though, and he’s only half a mile away.

They then make the sensible but disastrous decision to split up. Julian and George will go to Mr Gaston’s and Dick is entrusted to take Anne to Blue Pond Farmhouse.

Strangely Julian hasn’t given Dick very good directions to the farmhouse, and soon it’s dark and raining. They meet an old man who only seems able to say ‘ar’ and interpreting that as ‘yes’ Dick and Anne head off in the direction he points only to end up at a broken-down cottage where a deaf old woman gives Anne a bed in the attic and Dick heads out to bed down in the barn.

Now, this all seems very unfortunate and do doubt Dick and Anne don’t have a pleasant time at all – but it drops them headlong into another adventure so it’s not all bad.


A message for Dick

This is another confluence of events. Having had all of the above go wrong in order for them to end up at what we later discover is the Taggertys’ place, further good or back (depends how you look at it) luck plays a part.

Dick thinks that Julian’s just made a poor accommodation choice (well, there’s no Trip Advisor, is there?) and so after waiting a while for them to arrive he gives up and beds down in the barn.

Later he is woken by a tapping at the window and someone calls “Dick, Dick!” He’s pretty sure they can’t mean him, but what else is there to do other than take the message?

The message is, of course, the iconic Two Trees. Gloomy Water. Saucy Jane. And Maggie knows. 

dick five on a hike together


Do we have an adventure on our hands?

Dick is rather busy escaping with Anne the next morning so it’s a while before he remembers his strange night time visitor. He tells the others and they agree it was probably a dream – only he is able to produce the bit of paper that had been pushed through the barn window to him, proving it wasn’t, in fact, a dream.

They put two and two together, and work out that the person was probably the escaped convict from the prison, having heard the bells ringing the previous evening, and that he wanted Dirty Dick Taggerty and not Dick Kirrin.

They try to give that information to the police but they encounter an unusually rude and unhelpful policeman (Goon aside, the police are always helpful and hard working in Blyton’s books). The policeman laughs at their information and tells them the escaped convict has been recaptured.

Julian decides that there might be something in the strange message, and they head to the obvious place to investigate: the post office. Like Tucky the porter in Five Go Off to Camp, the Hike has an old postie who furnishes them with some information about Two Trees, and a warning about the marshes around there, plus some camping equipment.

The others are surprised by this – as Julian has decided to abandon his carefully planned route to investigate Two Trees, knowing they could fall into a marsh or run into the friends of convicts. It’s a rather un-Julianish thing to do, isn’t it? But it’s just as well he does, because otherwise there would be no rest of the story.

We are more or less halfway through the book now, and the true adventure hasn’t even begun – but let’s leave it there until next time!

Next post: Five on a Hike Together part 2

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Blyton by others: Game books

There are still more books with Enid Blyton’s names on the covers that are not continuations or retellings, and most of them come under the ‘game book’ heading.

Game books, for want of a better term are books which at designated points give the reader two or more options on how to continue the story. The options can be based on answers to puzzles or simply choices as to whether the children will split up or stay together, investigate a noise in the night or stay put and so on. There will  be multiple ways to complete the story – but not all will have a happy ending!


The Adventure Squad

There are two of these books by Dave Morris, published in 1994. They are based on the first two Adventure Series books.

Famous Five Adventure Games

There are eight of these books by Stephen Thraves published between 1984 and 1988. Each one came in plastic wallet containing a dice with the heads of the Five on five sides and a mystery icon on the other, a map, a code book, a measuring strip, a code breaker a rucksack card, a picnic hamper card and some picnic cards.

They are based on eight of the Five books, if I give you the titles you can probably guess most of them.

  • The Wreckers’ Tower Game (
  • The Haunted Railway Game
  • The Whispering Island Game
  • The Sinister Lake Game
  • The Wailing Lighthouse Game
  • The Secret Airfield Game
  • The Shuddering Mountain Game
  • The Missing Scientist Game

For those who get stuck I have added the original titles below, in white. Just click and drag to highlight so you can read them.

  • Five Go Down to the Sea
  • Five Go Off to Camp
  • Five Have a Mystery to Solve
  • Five on a Hike Together
  • Five Go to Demon’s Rocks
  • Five Go to Billycock Hill
  • Five Get into a Fix
  • Five Have a Wonderful Time

I have 4 of these, (Whispering Island, Wailing Lighthouse, Secret Airfield and Shuddering Mountain). I’ve barely opened them before but have done so today to see if they are complete. Three are but Shuddering Mountain is missing everything (obvious seeing as it’s not got the plastic wallet!) Luckily some of the items can be borrowed from the other games, the map and codebook are in the Cave of Books, it’s just the code-reader that might pose a problem.

The Famous Five and You

Mary Danby wrote six of these between 1987 and 1989. They are based on the first six Famous Five books.

  • The Famous Five and You Search for Treasure!
  • The Famous Five and You Find Adventure!
  • The Famous Five and You Run Away!
  • The Famous Five and You Search for Smugglers
  • The Famous Five and You Take Off!
  • The Famous Five and You Underground!

The fifth sounds more like you take a plane rather than a caravan, and the sixth is rather vague given the number of underground adventures the Five have.

These were reissued in  2010-2011 with new covers and with just The Famous Five Adventure Game Book #1-6 as their titles.

I have played Book 2, based on Five Go Adventuring Again.

Famous Five Survival Guide

Published in 2008 this is a large hardback book. It contains a new story about the Five along with puzzles to solve to assist them in their adventure.

Five Find-Outers Solve it Yourself Mysteries

There are four of these by Stephen Thraves from 1986.

  • The Five Find-Outers and the Shadowy Figure
  • The Five Find-Outers and the Faked Painting
  • The Five Find-Outers and the Note from Nowhere
  • The Five Find-Outers and the Raided Safe

These are ‘loosely based’ on some of the Find-Outers books, though I’m not sure which. The second is likely Banshee Towers, and the third could be either Spiteful Letters or Strange Messages, probably the latter. I’ve no idea about the shadowy figure or raided safe, however.

Five Find-Outers Find the Villains Games

These are 1990s reprints of the above solve-it-yourself mysteries but with substantial changes to the format. They have added a wallet containing picture files and a suspect list. The cave of books lists only the middle two, though the image of the back cover shows that all four were either made or were planned to be made.


How many of these have you played?

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Monday #367

Blyton by others: Game books

and

Five on a Hike Together

Following on from last week’s non-Blyton quote – here’s another one about the joys of reading.

“A great book should leave you with many experiences, and slightly exhausted at the end. You live several lives while reading.”

William Styron, Conversations with William Styron.

I’d much rather be living the lives of the Famous Five right now, than my own!

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Fan fic Friday: Cunningham and Petrov: The Mystery of the Missing Aeroplane chapter 6

Last time Bill arrived in Gairdon to hear Philip’s startling tale of their time in the Valley of Adventure.

Chapter 6

After talking to Bill on Tuesday evening, Anatoly had decided it was time to move his digs before he drew attention to himself. He walked to the next village a few miles away, but close enough to keep an ear out for any news of the missing man.

He put his bags down in the room he had just acquired from the stern looking Austrian woman downstairs and moved to the window. He screwed his mouth up as he eyed up the tall looking tree just outside his window and knew that he would have to get up the tree to attach the aerial for his portable radio. He would have to do it under cover of darkness so as not to draw any unwanted attention.

He swung himself away from the window, moved his bags, put the few clothes he carried with him in the chest of drawers provided and set out his wash bag on the washstand. He lay down on his bed, and took out his notebook to try and make sense of all the facts as he knew them, running around his head.

The light began to fade, and he allowed himself to wander out of the room in search of some food, beer and gossip. He listened intently to all the gossip around him as he ate in the local pub, and noticed that he was being given a wide berth. That changed and his presence was accepted when he brought the bar a round. Anatoly didn’t get any new information but now he had a foothold in the local community, which was an important part of his job.

Back in his room, Anatoly collected the aerial and cable for his radio, propped open his window and slipped back out of the house before the landlady could catch him. He put the aerial in his pocket and began to climb the tree. He went as high up as he could and settled himself against a hefty branch to install the aerial and secure it to the tree. This took him a few minutes.

Running the cable through his fingers, he began to climb down, but when he was level with his bedroom window, he threw the cable through it with a master shot. He gave himself a metaphorical pat on the back and then began to shin down the tree and back into the house. With that done he knew he could turn in for the night.

In the morning he tuned his radio, and sat back waiting for his check in from London. When the communication came Anatoly was surprised not to be talking to Bill and even more surprised to be told that one of the children had turned up in Scotland. Anatoly was totally stunned, he had thought he was hot on the trail of the children. He was told to stand by for a messages for orders on his next move.

Disheartened, he signed off and slumped on the bed. The message Anatoly received later that day buoyed him considerably, however. He was to make his way to a small airfield some thirty miles north, where he would be picked up by Bill and some other agents, and then fly on to the mysterious valley he had been hearing about.

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

Bill drove himself and Philip to the air strip first thing the next morning, glad that the weather had settled. It was perfect flying weather now, though they would have to hope that it stayed that way across the continent. The forecasts had seemed all right, at least.

The drive was not a long one but he used the few minutes to pick Philip’s brain again, trying to build a better mental picture of the layout of the valley and the treasure caves. He had Philip wait in the car once they got to the air strip, refusing to let him out of his sight as he ran his final checks on personnel and equipment. When he was satisfied he fetched Philip and personally escorted him to his aeroplane.

“I’m not a child,” Philip grumbled.

“No, but I’m not risking you being spirited away again,” Bill replied. “Your mother would absolutely murder me.”

Up in the air Bill let his two best pilots take the controls, freeing him up to re-run all his plans in his head. The priority was safely retrieving the children, after that they would aim to apprehend Juan, Pepi and any of their comrades. Only then could they think about liberating the treasure, and ensuring its safe delivery to Julius Muller.

“Just to remind everyone, the children’s safety is our top priority, followed by the old couple in the caves,” he said aloud. “I do not want them caught in the crossfire. We’ll get the five of them first, and if that means any of the crooks slipping past you then so be it. We can do what we can to round them up later. Is that clear?”

There were a few slightly disgruntled faces but everyone responded in the affirmative. Philip waited until the murmurs of ‘Yes, sir,’ and ‘yes, boss’, had died down before he spoke up.

“Don’t forget Kiki, Bill.”

Bill pinched the bridge of his nose. “There’ll be a parrot around somewhere too,” he added to his men. “If you could avoid injury to her, that would be appreciated.”

That raised a few smirks, but they nodded all the same.

“We’re coming near to our pick-up point,” the pilot called back to Bill after they had been in the air some time.

“Take us down, then,” Bill said. “We’ll give our people until 10, then we’ll have to get on regardless of who has or hasn’t shown.”

To be continued…

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Malory Towers on TV – Episodes three and four

At the start of the lockdown the BBC released all episodes of Malory Towers onto the iPlayer ahead of their scheduled air date on CBBC on the 6th of April. Despite being very excited I’ve only managed to watch two episodes so far. I definitely liked what I saw, so let’s see what happens next.


A quick recap

So far we’ve seen Darrell head off to Malory Towers, making friends with Alicia straight away and attracting Gwen to try to make friends too. She falls out with Gwen who blackmails her, and we find out that Darrell has been asked to leave her previous school and this is a new start for her.


What happens in episode three

The girls play their first tricks. First, Alicia has a box of trick sweets (which Darrell appears to be in on) and they dye Gwen’s teeth blue. Matron confiscates them and dyes her teeth blue, which gives Gwen an opening to bond with her over the nastiness of the other girls. We also get to laugh at her life modelling as a viking for the first formers and unable to open her mouth lest everyone see the blue teeth – it reminds me a bit of Mam’zelle’s ‘treek teeth’ especially as Miss Grayling talks to her and she’s mortified.

Darrell then pretends to be deaf in Mam’zelle Rougier’s class. Yes, Darrell. Not Alicia as in the book. I was surprised by this as although Darrell enjoys a trick she isn’t big on playing them herself – and given her chat with Miss Grayling in the last episode it seems unlikely she would do this. As in the book she then genuinely goes deaf and gets into trouble for playing a second trick. Mam’zelle Rouger is not as sharp as the book version but she does get the great line

Fool you once, shame on me. Fool me twice, shame on me. I will have no shame on me.

The other main plot centres on Alicia’s ghost stories again. Mary-Lou, who we see properly for the first time in this episode, is particularly scared by these. It’s not helped by a ‘bloody’ handprint being left on the dorm room door in the night.

Of course there is no ghost and the handprint is jammy and made by Irene who is sleepwalking and sleepeating. The only solution to this problem is for matron to sleep on a camp bed in the middle of the dorm… but Matron is not a good sleepwalking minder as she sleeps through Irene getting up again, and Sally following her out.


What happens in episode four

Darrell continues to get into trouble. She forgets to do her prep for one, and then the bit I’ve been waiting for actually happens.

Gwen ducks Mary-Lou in the pool. Not like Alicia and Darrell are ducking each other and laughing but it honestly looks like she’s trying to drown her as she pushes her under and holds her repeatedly. Darrell races over and slaps Gwen hard across the face, has a row with Katherine and storms off.

She then apologises to Gwen, and the other girls have a meeting about it all. Darrell swings their opinion somewhat by apologising to Katherine, but it’s all muddied by Mary-Lou saying she and Gwen were just playing around, and Gwen saying that Darrell hasn’t apologised and is a liar.

Then, near the end, we discover why Darrell left her last school. According to Miss Potts she was actually expelled and it was for pushing a teacher down the stairs. Miss Grayling remarks that she’s not certain they know the whole story there.

We end on Darrell and Sally becoming quite friendly, talking about Mary-Lou’s fears.


What did I think?

I thought these were two good episodes, though I have my reservations about a few details.

As I said above it doesn’t make a lot of sense to have Darrell do Alicia’s deafness trick, especially given what we find out about her at the end of episode four. If she’s truly embracing a fresh start (guilty or not) she wouldn’t be daft enough to jeopardise it for a few laughs, surely?

Gwen continues to be brilliantly awful – using Mary-Lou to try to get out of swimming by pretending they both have heat-stroke, telling lies, sneaking and generally being very unlikeable. Unlike book Gwen the other girls don’t seem to see through her so well, and so she gets away with a lot more.

Gwen doesn’t understand the purpose of a bathing hat.

In the book she says I don’t call it an apology, which to me implies that Darrell did apologize but poorly, with bad grace or whatever. In the series she out and out says that Darrell is a liar and hasn’t apologised at all. In the book Katherine is much harder on her, and they explicitly say they believe Darrell while on TV they seem more ambivalent.

The other strange thing is Darrell and Sally. Book Sally barely says two words until they have the fight in the music room – other than to say she doesn’t have a baby sister. Here we have her boldly state that sending someone to coventry is just as bad as slapping them, following a sleep-walking Irene and getting chummy with Darrell. We even see her making a few jokes. I wonder how she will develop later on, and whether they will still have her argue with Darrell and get pushed over.

There’s more of a sense of the teachers knowing what’s going on in the series. Miss Potts keeps popping up and although she doesn’t know that Darrell has slapped Gwen she knows the first form are having a meeting, that Darrell is upset and that Gwen is being shady. We are privy to several conversations between the teachers and this is where we get various tidbits of information about the girls and what’s going on.

Darrell’s spelling issues continue. She appears to write Mallory Towers which is a sin in anyone who calls themself a Blyton fan let alone a pupil of that very school (in my eyes at least!) and she later can’t spell witches without looking it up. I’ve seen a spoiler that she has some form of dyslexia or similar and I’m not sure how I feel about that. Darrell in the books is a gifted writer, not just a story-teller, and it is odd to suddenly give her this problem. I can understand them wanting to feature such a problem, to show children watching that it’s OK to struggle with academic elements and help is out there but they could have used another character to do so. Darrell already has her temper to overcome and of course the added expulsion.

I was surprised that Gwen moaned to Jean about the non-existent mark on her face after the slap, considering Jean is played by an actress with a facial disfigurement. At first I thought it was quite cruel – both by Gwen and the writers – but then I thought it was actually very clever. Firstly it shows how self-absorbed Gwen is and secondly Jean’s sarcastic reply was wonderful and all the more meaningful.

Mary-Lou is very well acted, she is small, quiet and very much how I imagine her. She manages to be likeable despite being rather spineless at times.

Mam’zelle Rougier seems more likeable than in the books and I wonder if she is an amalgamation of the two Mam’zelles. She’s tall and slim but her more pleasant demeanour could be from Mam’zelle Dupont.

Matron continues to amuse, first with the blue teeth and then by trying to talk to Mam’zelle Rougier in rather bad French. I had been wondering how she got blue teeth towards the end of an episode but I now wonder if Matron hadn’t snuck her a trick sweet after being spoken sharply to.

I’m really glad the slap was kept in. I know it was one instead of four, and delivered slightly differently but given that some recent reprints have turned slaps into shakings one slap is far better than none.


Has anyone else watched this yet? If so, what did you think?

Next post – Malory Towers on TV – Episodes five and six

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Monday #366

Malory Towers on TV: Episodes 3&4

and

Fan fic Friday

Cunningham and Petrov: The Mystery of the Missing Aeroplane chapter 6

“That’s the thing about books. They let you travel without moving your feet.”

― Jhumpa Lahiri, The Namesake

Not a Blyton quote, obviously, but something hopefully true at this difficult time. We might not be able to travel very far (or at all) right now but we can escape into Kirrin, Peterswood, Malory Towers, onto islands, into secret passages, mysterious castles, beaches and villages galore just by opening some of Blyton’s books.

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March 2020 round up

I’m not even sure how to introduce this one, this has been quite the month. I don’t think I’ve ever seen so many ‘breaking news’ headlines in so short a time.


What I have read

Thirteen books (so far) isn’t bad – I’d love to say that being in lockdown has vastly increased my reading time, but it really hasn’t.

March’s books:

  • Castle of Books – Alessandro Sanna
  • This Book Can Read Your Mind – Susannah Lloyd
  • A Symphony of Echoes (The Chronicles of St Mary’s #2 ) – Jodi Taylor
  • When A Child is Born (The Chronicles of St Mary’s #2.5 ) – Jodi Taylor
  • Kidnap in the Caribbean (Laura Marlin Mysteries #2) – Lauren St John
  • A Second Chance (The Chronicles of St Mary’s #3 ) – Jodi Taylor
  • Roman Holiday (The Chronicles of St Mary’s #3.5 ) – Jodi Taylor
  • Jaws – Peter Benchley
  • The Naughtiest Girl Helps a Friend – Anne Digby, reviewed here
  • A Trail Through Time (The Chronicles of St Mary’s #4 ) – Jodi Taylor
  • Christmas Present (The Chronicles of St Mary’s #4.5 ) – Jodi Taylor
  • No Time Like the Past (The Chronicles of St Mary’s #5 ) – Jodi Taylor
  • Immortal Unchained (Argeneau Vampires #25) – Lynsay Sands

As always I’ve got some on the go that I haven’t finished

  • Jane Eyre – Charlotte Bronte
  • Child Whispers – Enid Blyton
  • Feminism: Ideas in Profile – Deborah Cameron
  • What Could Possibly Go Wrong (The Chronicles of St Mary’s #6) – Jodi Taylor

I didn’t realise how many of the Jodi Taylor books I had listened to until I had to type them out. The new one comes out in two weeks, though, so I’ve got a lot more to get through. Meanwhile I’m not sure why I continue to read the Argeneau books – the series should have ended several books ago!


What I have watched

  • Hollyoaks
  • Only Connect
  • Outlander season five
  • Born to Be Different – I’ve watched this from early on and the children are now in their late teens. I didn’t even know it was back – thankfully my Tivo box recorded it for me.
  • Aladdin (the live action version) and Toy Story 4 as we’ve just signed up to Disney+

What I have done

  • My work closed early in the month so I’ve been at home, mostly.
  • Seeing as I’m ‘working from home’ I’ve started creating a book display every day from things in the house
  • We’ve gone out for a walk most days, just for our own sanity
  • We did have cake out and go to the transport museum before everything closed


What have I bought this month?

I normally only include this if I’ve bought something Blyton-related like a book, but this month I got some storage boxes for my Enid Blytons Magazines. Please excuse the toy-filled living room! The boxes are for A4 paper so fit the journals with a little room around the edges for lifting them out. Two boxes is enough to hold one volume of up to 26 issues.


What has your month looked like?

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A ranking of Blyton’s tricks, jokes and pranks

I had thought about doing an April fool of my own but with current events as they are (and a lack of particularly convincing ideas) I thought instead it would be fun to have a look at the best tricks, jokes and pranks from Blyton’s books.


The school tricksters

Blyton’s schools always seem to have at least one trickster in each class. Alicia Johns at Malory Towers, and her cousin June, Janet Robins and Bobby Ellis at St Clare’s, Tom at St Rollo’s and Julian at Whyteleaf. Saying that, half the classes seem to get involved at one point or another – and even the mistresses aren’t immune to a trick now and again.


Malory Towers

The first trick we see at Malory Towers is played by Alicia – she pretends to be deaf and the class find hilarity in repeating things more loudly for her, while she deliberately misunderstands them. She plays it on Mam’zelle Rougier, the French mistress always a target for these things as she rarely suspects a trick is being played on her.

Mamzelle: Can you not hear?

Alicia: What do I fear?

Betty: Can you not hear?

Alicia: Beer?

Unfortunately for Alicia this backfires when she genuinely becomes a bit deaf after swimming underwater, and Miss Potts believes it’s another trick and moves her to the front of the classroom.

alicia johns malory towers

7/10 for how funny it is, but only 2/10 for ingenuity as her brother had already played the trick and told her all about it.

The next attempt is just as funny – and a bit more complex. Alicia has some magic chalk that when rubbed on a surface is invisible, but when warmed up it turns bright pink. She rubs it over the music master’s chair and turns his derriere bright pink – the beauty of it that he has no clue it was a trick.

Darrell then goes to repeat the trick on Mam’zelle but goes a step further and writes ‘oy’ on the chair (backwards of course). This is even funnier as she goes around flashing OY on her behind – but it’s so obvious that it’s a trick that they have to stop her and clean it off before any mistresses see it.

9/10 for hilarity and a solid 10/10 for bravery in setting it up

The third form sees the girls deploying some sneeze pellets. These have been sent by one of Alicia’s other brothers, and once wet they produce a vapour that causes whoever is within four feet to sneeze like mad. They play it on Mam’zelle Dupont of course, and she ‘snizzes’ over and over, so much she falls off her chair. Miss Pots comes to investigate the noise and then she is overcome with sneezes too. Mam’zelle looks so ill that Matron is sent for and then she starts sneezing too. It’s a wonder none of the girls had rolled onto the floor with laughter.

Even Darrell catches a sneeze as she disposes of the pellet. Unluckily they get caught out on this one and have to forfeit the next half-holiday, but it sounds like it was worth it.

10/10 for being hilarious, I can just imagine the three adults sneezing away helplessly!

As often is the case a trick is played near the end of term, just when the girls’ spirits are flagging. In the fourth form the trick is played after they’ve sat their exams. This time it’s something Betty has brought in, more pellets, but these produce large bubbles when wetted. These bubbles float down and when they burst they make a loud ‘ping’.

This one’s also played on Mam’zelle, who is of course entirely baffled when something ‘pings’ right by her ear. She’s especially baffled when nobody else can hear anyof the mysterious pings.

Mamzelle: Do you not hear a ping, Sally?

Sally: You don’t mean a pong do you?

Irene: Perhaps she means a ping-pong

Miss Williams rumbles the trick, but she’s a sport and doesn’t get them into trouble as she’s found it quite funny herself.

8/10 for being funny though so much of that is from Mam’zelle’s reactions

In the fifth form the girls think they are too old to play tricks and so the tricks come from the lower form, the second form in particular. June has followed in her cousin’s footsteps and ordered tricks from catalogues. Her first is a balloon contraption which she can inflate and deflate under her clothes giving the illusion she is growing and shrinking.

Of course she plays this on Mam’zelle Dupont, who else? Mam’zelle is very alarmed to see June swelling up in front of her eyes. Unluckily the valve breaks and she’s left alarmingly swollen just as Mam’zelle races off for Matron. There’s nothing for it but to burst the balloons and try to hide the evidence.

6/10 for the funny factor, 8/10 for the unintentional humour of June’s trick backfiring on herself.

The unintended consequence of June’s balloon trick is that Mam’zelle Dupont confiscates her trick books and orders herself a set of terrifying false teeth which she uses to play her own ‘treek’ She dons these plastic fangs and walks around the grounds one afternoon, flashing them at unsuspecting girls. This is terribly funny by itself, it becomes ten times funnier when Miss Grayling spots her and wants her to talk to the parents of some prospective pupils. Mam’zelle manages to mutter a few comments, then, forgetting, she gives them a grin of terrifying proportions and has to scurry off to laugh at their faces.

It ends with her laughing the teeth out onto the grass, revealing the trick to the fifth formers who have gathered around her.

10/10 for how funny this is, and also 10/10 for the unexpectedness of the French mistress playing a trick of her own.

June’s next trick involves a very powerful magnet. She knows that any mistress would suspect a trick if she plays it, so she gives it to Susan who uses it to pull all the pins out of Mam’zelle Rougier’s neat little bun at the end of a French class. Of course her bun completely unravels and she is alarmed to think perhaps she forgot to pin her hair up that morning as there are certainly no pins there now.

They are so enamoured with their joke that they play it on Mam’zelle Rougier again – a very bold move as almost nobody dares play a trick on her once let alone twice – and this time Harriet wields the magnet. This time she deposits the pins by the classroom door for Mam’zelle to discover.

They even play this one a third time so that the staid sixth formers can have a laugh. Nora comes to their classroom while Mam’zelle Dupont is teaching and uses the magnet on her bun. She is just as alarmed as her colleague to discover her pin-free hair flapping down her back.

The second form then go one better. Felicity comes to the sixth form classroom this time and steals Mam’zelle Dupont’s hair pins. She rushes off to repin her hair, and when she returns a curious hissing noise fills the room. Alicia investigates and follows the sound to the chimney where of of the second formers has stuck a pellet which forms a hissing snake. There they have also hidden a pin cushion full of hair pins…

Mam’zelle suspects the sixth-formers have tricked her, but of course they haven’t and know nothing of snake-pellets. They are therefore amazed when Nora arrives to steal Mam’zelle’s second lot of hair pins and place a second pellet and pin cushion behind the blackboard.

10/10 for hilarity and 10/10 for sheer audacity


Whyteleaf

At The Naughtiest Girl’s School it is Julian who plays the tricks. At first he sticks to curious noises – a pot bubbling over, a hen clucking, turkeys gobbling, violins being tuned and so on to amuse the other children and disrupt lessons and meetings a little.

4/10 for hilarity but 8/10 for skill

His other tricks are less funny. He begins a campaign against Elizabeth who he feels has wronged him. First he creates an ingenious spring which he places under her books in class, it slowly unfurls and tosses all her books to the floor. Deftly he places another when she picks her books up, and then a third causing her to be sent from the room.

He then pastes some pellets above her chair so that little drips land on her throughout a lesson.

Lastly he puts sneezing powder in the pages of her textbook causing her to sneeze violently.

If these had been played in good humour on a teacher or pupil I’d score them quite highly. As they were played with malice and caused Elizabeth to get into a lot of trouble I have to give Julian a 0/10 for humour, and a grudging 7/10 for ingenuity.


St Clare’s

There’s at least one joke per term at St Clare’s with Bobby and Janet vying for the role as class prankster.

First Janet puts firecrackers up the chimney to give Miss Kennedy a fright. Miss Kennedy is a bit of a poor soul and doesn’t cope well with the sudden explosions. Foolishly Janet tips the rest of the box in and when Miss Roberts comes back they all explode and she is furious.

This could have been quite funny but it was directed rather maliciously at Miss Kennedy, and given how upset she was and then how much trouble the girls got into I can only score this a 2/10.

Also mentioned in The Twins at St Clare’s are Janet’s trick pencils, which have varying qualities such a lead that slides back in, lead that wobbles and lead that just won’t write. These are only described in passing and unfortunately we don’t see them deployed.

6/10 if you imagine how funny they would be when given to an unsuspecting mistress.

The next book has Janet’s magic ink blot and blotting paper. The ink blot is a fake one – ordered from the same sort of catalogue that June Johns buys – and she puts it on her French prep to make Mam’zelle think she has ruined it with her fountain pen. Mam’zelle is mortified, even when June magically manages to blot it off without so much as a smudge. She then puts it on Doris’ desk, making Mam’zelle shake her pen in disbelief and causing several real inkblots to appear.

7/10 because it’s both clever and funny and Mam’zelle doesn’t suspect a thing.

Unfortunately they follow that trick with a cruel one and fill Mam’zelle’s glasses case with beetles, pretending the glasses are there and she is imagining things. She almost has a breakdown thinking she is having real problems with hallucinated beetles.

0/10 because it’s just mean

It’s Bobby’s turn next and without the aid of any joke books she hatches a plan. She sends a false note to Miss Roberts, luring her from the room. While she’s gone Bobby changes the time on the clock so that they get out of class ten minutes early and thus avoid a test.

This is more clever than funny, so 6/10

Bobby’s next trick is to use a squeaking biscuit toy to pretend there is a lost kitten in the classroom. Mam’zelle does fall for it but the whole thing makes her very angry and although they waste half a lesson cat-hunting they earn themselves an extra test too.

Quite funny as they all hunt for a nonexistent cat, but Mam’zelle’s reaction dampens it all a bit so another 6/10 for Bobby

Another trick by Bobby involves a plate connected to a rubber tube. Settling the plate at Mam’zelle’s seat at the head of the table she then presses a little bulb at the end of the tube and causes Mam’zell’s plate to tip and jiggle alarmingly. It happens over and over during the meal yet all the girls pretend not to notice anything.

Mam’zelle goes quite wild and when Miss Theobald comes over to investigate Bobby can’t help but make the plate move one more time. Luckily both teachers see the funny side of the joke!

This one’s really funny and as it’s taken in good spirit all around it gets 8/10

Janet plays the last trick as she has bought some little glass stink pellets. She lets one off in Mam’zelle’s class and it positively reeks. The poor girls have to suffer for a few minutes before it reaches Mam’zelle who feels bad she didn’t believe them at first. By the time she fetches Miss Theobald, however, the smell is gone. They play a variation on this after, pretending there is a bad smell when they haven’t actually created one. Mam’zelle fetches Miss Ellis who, excuse the pun, smells a rat.

Unfortunately for the girls Bobby has a stink pellet in her pocket and accidentally breaks it. The girls have been warned against a single protest about any smells so they have to suffer in silence. Miss Ellis can smell it too, and knowing it’s a trick leaves the girls some work to do and escapes the horrendous odour leaving them to suffer.

This is pretty funny, though I think Miss Ellis getting her own back might be even funnier. 7/10 for the original gag and 9/10 for Miss Ellis’ revenge.


St Rollo’s

There’s a couple of tricks in Mischief at St Rollo’s played by Tom Young. First he ties some cotton-reels to thread, puts them in a cupboard and then runs the thread to his desk so he can jiggle them from afar. He does this in Monsieur Crozier’s class (what is it with school kids playing tricks on the French teachers?) and causes alarm at the suggestion it may be mice. He actually then pretends to have found a mouse and chases it all over the classroom, landing himself in rather a lot of trouble.

7/10 for the original part of the trick as it’s clever but only 3/10 for the mad mouse-chase as it wa a bit over the top and blew the whole thing.

He is a master at thread tricks it would seem as later he ties threads to pegs on the blackboard and causes it to fall down not once but twice during a lesson. Unfortunately one of the other boys rats him out and he is caught with the threads in his pockets.

This is more clever than the first and is only rumbled due to spitefulness from someone else so 8/10.


Other tricks

I couldn’t think of many tricks outside of the school books. There are probably various ones amongst the short stories but I haven’t had the time to search them all.

Pip plays an excellent trick on the rest of the Find-Outers in The Mystery of the Invisible Thief when he puts on oversized shoes and walks through the flower-bed to make Fatty think that the invisible thief has come their way. It has the added bonus of helping them solve the mystery.

8/10 for being so clever, both purposefully and inadvertently.

Although Julian and Dick mention some tricks played by boys at their school I can only think of one trick actually played out across the 21 books and 8 short stories. In Five Go to Billycock Hill Toby dares to play a trick on George. She says she’s not afraid of spiders so he dangles a huge fake specimen over her at their camp, and manages to give her rather a fright.

Not hugely hilarious but he’s very brave to play a trick on George, 6/10

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Monday #365

I’ve rather lost track of the days but I think it’s Monday now!

Blyton’s best jokes and pranks

and

March round up

As you know I’ve been watching the CBBC adaptation of Malory Towers. I’ve also discovered there is a novelisation of the series, written by Narinder Dhami who has already written more books for the Wishing Chair series and a short story in the recent Malory Towers collection.

It might be worth a look if you’ve enjoyed the series. I rather like reading books based on TV series as it can often give a deeper insight into character motivations and so on.

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Fan fic Friday: Cunningham and Petrov: The Mystery of the Missing Aeroplane chapter 5

Previously, the children go missing on an unknown aeroplane and Bill and his men mount a search. The last instalment had Bill receiving a call to say that Philip had surfaced in Gairdon…

Chapter 5

Within half an hour two planes were ready, and had been filled with Bill’s chosen agents. It was regrettable that some of his preferred choices were already in Europe, on a wild goose chase it seemed, but he was happy enough with who he had. A few burly fellows, good for physical fights, one or two who excelled in scouting, one with a particular expertise in explosives, and the rest were good all-rounders. All of them were armed, dangerous and ready to face whatever was thrown at them.

The flight to the North-East of Scotland took an hour and a half, and they were lucky to be able to land at a private air-strip only ten miles from Gairdon, so the last part, made in a Scottish police-car seemed to take no time at all.

The landscape was rugged, the location remote. Snow topped the craggy mountains which loomed in the near distance, and Bill hoped the other children weren’t somewhere as inhospitable as that. They hadn’t been dressed for it at all.

He strode towards the police-station and was relieved to see that Philip was looking well, if rather filthy. Inside the police station Philip poured out his story…

Bill could hardly believe what he had just heard, and seen in the notebook Philip had presented to him. He had been shown to a telephone, and planned to make use of it, but first he needed a moment to digest Philip’s tremendous story.

So the children were in Austria. Not Scotland. He wouldn’t have to fire anyone after all, that was a relief. On the down side, it would be a few hours’ flight into Austria, and he’d need all sorts of clearances for it. He ran through a mental list of calls to make. He’d need to let Allie know that Philip was safe, and that he knew where the other children were too. He would need to let the two agents back at the planes know that they needed to be prepared for a long flight. He would need to speak to someone at headquarters, giving them an update. He would need to get clearance from the Austrians to enter their airspace, he didn’t want to have to waste time with evasive manoeuvres. And lastly, he realised, he could arrange to pick up a few agents if they could get themselves to a convenient point in Austria. He wanted Anatoly, for one. He deserved to be in on this, seeing as his information about Otto Engler had been spot-on. He felt sure that given another few days Petrov would have identified the children’s location.

So Bill set to work phoning everyone he needed to phone, starting with headquarters so that clearance for the flight and the requests to the Austrians could be put into motion as quickly as possible. He also asked headquarters to radio in to the agents already in Europe to get as many of them as possible to meet at a quiet airfield for a pick up to raid the valley. He’d need all the men possible, especially his best ones to search the valley. The question on his mind next was whether he should take Philip as well, and that he needed to call the boy’s mother.

Philip was absolutely adamant that he ought to go, and eventually Bill gave in. As he said to the boy, he really didn’t know what trouble he would get into if he was left behind. They would need to eat first, however, and Philip was in no way presentable enough to enter the local hotel, he would need at least two baths and a change of clothes for that, so they ate at the station.

In that time the wind picked up outside and a call came to inform them that there was a severe warning for gale-force winds, delaying their plans to take off for the time being. Bill used the time to show Philip their valley on a map, and was glad to have been available to take an update on Otto Engler, which he passed on to Philip too. He spared a thought for Anatoly also, chasing down Engler for no reason now.

The weather took a turn for the worse, and the next call was with the news that their flight would certainly not be able to take off until the next day.

“I’ve still to call your mother,” he said to Philip. “I’ll let you speak to her, of course, as she’ll be desperate to hear your voice. Just try not to tell her that you’re coming with me again? I’m not sure she would take that well…”

He placed the call to Allie with Philip waiting nearby. “Hallo, Allie,” he said warmly, glad he was finally able to give her some good news.

“Bill? This really had better be good news,” said Allie’s usually friendly voice. She was still very annoyed with him, Bill knew. He hoped that his news that Philip was with him, would lighten her attitude towards him somewhat, along with the information that the knew where the others were and that he was going to bring them back to her as soon as he could possibly manage. He wondered if he could arrange for her to be brought to the airfield when they knew they were flying back with all the children so she could meet them off the plane. He wasn’t entirely sure he could pull that one off, but as he was likely to get dragged over the coals for the fact that he children had been on the airfield in the first place, he didn’t see how one more person was going to completely ruin the trouble he was already in.

“It is,” he promised smoothly. “I have Philip safe and well right beside me, Allie. And I know where the others are, too. I’ve got planes ready to collect them, as soon as we can get flight clearance.” No point in mentioning they were grounded due to the weather.

“You have Philip? Can I speak to him?” Allie asked, all of a fluster. “And why aren’t the others with him?”

“I’ll put him on in just a minute,” Bill promised as Philip strained to hear what his mother was saying. “He managed sneak himself on a flight back here, but it was too risky for them all to do the same.”

“Oh my goodness!” Allie said, sounding a little overwhelmed. “Well at least let me talk to Philip now, Bill! Where are you anyway? Did he find his way back to London?”

“No, we’re in Scotland, actually,” he replied, motioning Philip to the telephone. “Mind you don’t say anything to worry her,” he whispered.

Philip nodded and took the receiver. “Hello mother!” he trilled. “Hope you haven’t been worrying too much, we’re all fine, though it was a bit of a shock when we realised we were on the wrong plane! We landed in an abandoned valley, and I managed to find a new pet, Dinah of course wasn’t happy about old Lizzy, but then she shouldn’t be so squeamish!”

Bill smothered a laugh; it was just like Philip to immediately start talking about one of his animals. He wondered if Allie would get any sense out of him at all. “She’s a lizard…” he heard as he wandered a short distance down the corridor to give Philip at least the illusion of privacy. The call didn’t last long, however, as Philip came to find him less than five minutes later to report that he had been cut off.

“Must be the weather,” Bill remarked as the wind positively howled around the station, making at least one loose shutter bang violently.

“We won’t be able to take off in this weather, sir,” remarked one of the men with Bill. “Should we sort out some sleeping arrangements?”

“Yes. Check with the hotel, see if they’ve rooms enough for us lot,” Bill said. “Davis and Murray will just have to bed down on the planes unless someone at the airstrip offers them something better.”

“It’s a shame we couldn’t stay in the police station, Bill! I’d love to try and sleep in a cell! After a week on makeshift beds, any sort of bed would do me. I’m also rather tired,” he admitted a bit bashfully.

Bill laughed. “Oh I’m sure that could be arranged. Actually, I’d feel rather reassured if I knew you were locked in a cell here, overnight. At least I’d know you’d still be here in the morning!”

It was just as well that Philip was so keen for a night in the cells. The hotel was a small one, and even with two men to a bed and several on sofas, there would only have been room for Philip if he slept in the bath.

Philip climbed sleepily into the cell bunk when he’d had some supper and had a wash at the small wash stand. He would have to sleep in the clothes he had arrived in as he had nothing else, but as soon as his head touched the pillow and the blanket was pulled over him, he was sound asleep.

Bill pulled the door of the cell shut, smiled wryly to himself and then had one last pipe before turning in himself, in the cell next to Philip’s.

To be continued…

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Malory Towers on TV – Episodes one and two

I’ve heard positive things from anyone who’s managed to watch it before me, so I have my fingers crossed that this will be a positive review (a rare thing here, sometimes it seems!). I could also do with some cheering up seeing as we’ve just entered a state of ‘lockdown’, so escaping to Malory Towers is just what I need.


A general non-spoiler review

I’ll start with an overview of what I thought for those who haven’t seen it yet, and then I’ll talk in more detail about some of the plots so avoid the rest if you don’t want any spoilers.

Overall I thought the first two episodes were very good. I was pleasantly surprised, in fact.

As we already knew, it is set in the 1940s and the war is briefly referenced. This was absolutely the right choice – it’s always the right choice to me, which is why I think the 90s Famous Five is superior to the flared 70s version.

The building posing as Malory Towers looks very much like the illustrations in the book, and the outdoor pool looked magnificent. The indoor sets looked good as well, as did the costumes, and the language used is a good mix of old-fashioned quaint sayings as well as clear language that modern child viewers will understand.

So far it has stayed fairly close to the book; the main plots being Darrell’s friendship with Alicia and her disagreements with Gwen. Miss Grayling’s speech featured and although it was not word for word from the text, and in fact is rather shorter it quoted a few important phrases and was well-delivered.

Exams aren’t our only measure of success. A Malory Towers’ success is someone good hearted and kind, loyal and trustworthy, good sound women the world can lean on.Women unafraid to forge a new future. You will all gain tremendously from your time with us. See that you give a lot back.

Matron features several times and is suitable strict and a figure to be feared at times yet kind-hearted at others. She takes an instant dislike to Darrell and I think she will be on her case a lot.

The girls themselves are a more diverse bunch than Blyton wrote, and so far all the acting has been good.

From left to right (not including the girl with pigtails talking to the teacher) we have Darrell, Alicia, Sally, Gwen and Mary-Lou.


What happens in episode one

Episode one sees Darrell heading to Malory Towers for a ‘fresh start’ – this detail will be relevant later. She instantly makes friends with Alicia while Gwen sets off on the wrong foot by being a tell-tale and being difficult.

Alicia apparently loves a ghost story and tells them about about the ghost of Malory Towers, Gwen is completely sucked in but Darrell is not a believer. The girls have a midnight feast, but Gwen is not invited which causes a rift between her and Darrell, though Darrell doesn’t know that.

Gwen reads a letter Darrell has started writing home and is upset that she has named Alicia as the friend she has made. She confronts Darrell by the pool, they fight and she falls in. She uses this to blackmail Darrell – she will tell Miss Grayling that she was pushed into the pool and get Darrell expelled unless Darrell does her French prep.

Darrell does this initially but then tells Miss Grayling the truth to get it off her chest. We then discover that Darrell is the girl who’s rumoured to have been asked to leave St Hilda’s school.


What happens in episode two

Alicia steps up her ghost tales and leaves a spooky message on the mirror for Gwen. Darrell and Gwen’s gym shoes go missing right before lacrosse try-outs so that neither of them can take part, though Darrell is offered the role as a substitute. Sally Hope makes the team, and she tells Darrell emphatically that she doesn’t have a baby sister.

During an exam Darrell’s pen leaks and blots and in trying to write a few more lines she knocks her ink all over the page. She then gets to do the exam over, which Gwen makes a big deal of and calls her a cheat. Gwen then begins a campaign to find out why Darrell had to leave her last school.

This culminates in her going down to the village late in the afternoon (alone, against the rules) to telephone her cousin who went to St Hilda’s.

Darrell, despite her problems with Gwen, insists on going to fetch her and the rest of their dorm have to distract Matron so she doesn’t realise they are missing. Darrell finds Gwen who tricks her into admitting she was in fact asked to leave St Hilda’s, but we don’t find out why.


Some more thoughts

I jotted down lots of little things as I watched so here are some of them.

Darrell’s character is a little different from the book. She is rushing, late for the train at the start, she is shown as being clumsy and a bit careless even and she is not good at spelling. I suppose this gives her room to grow, however. I’m not sure at all about the story of her being asked to leave her last school. It’s such a departure from the story we know, but it will presumably give a plot line that will run through most of the first series as we wait to find out what happened.

Alicia is also a bit different. Alicia in the book is a joker, but she is also very very sharp-tongued and unkind at times. We don’t hear her ‘smooth voice’ or sharp tongue, really. Just all the spooky ghost stuff. She’s also got a Canadian accent which takes some getting used to.

The pool incident is a trifle disappointing as it really looks like an accident that Gwen fell in. They are both tugging on an end of Darrell’s letter and she just falls in. Darrell does not push her in a rage, but she instantly apologies in absolute horror. I suspect book Darrell might have pushed her in anger – even if she didn’t mean her to land in the pool – and would have needed a little time to cool off before apologising. She also would have been more dignified in her apology rather than over the top.

Also, Gwen swims out of the pool without any real fuss – not the water-hating Gwen we all know!

The midnight feast was a nice touch but the girls make a hell of a noise ‘sneaking’ out for it.

I do think that Matron is pretty great but she entirely over-reacts to a mouse in the dorm (I’m sure children would have thought that bit hilarious, but I found it over the top) and although clever and funny it seems unbelievable that she wouldn’t notice two girls missing from the dorm especially when she’s said several times that she’s marked Darrell as a trouble-maker and will be keeping an eye on her.

Miss Potts is very good, there is one scene in particular where she shines. She praises Darrell for a good essay and when Gwen asks how hers was, she clearly struggles to be tactful. Her facial expressions were wonderful.

I like Miss Grayling though she seemed a fair bit younger than I would have imagined. She was still very poised, kind but firm, and I liked the little hint we got that she had lost someone in the war.

Gwen and her mother saying goodbye was another scene that was probably over the top – it almost seemed like they were acting at being so upset but I actually enjoyed it and thought it quite funny.

Gwen is probably one of the best things about this adaptation, though Darrell, Matron, Miss Potts and Miss Grayling were all good.

There are some nice details such as Pamela featuring as head of games, and Emily sewing a tear in Darrell’s dress which tells me that the people making this really, really read the books and are trying to recreate as much of the world of Malory Towers as they can.


What’s next?

I expect we will see a bit more of Sally soon, to deepen that mystery, and as I said above I suspect they will draw out the mystery of Darrell’s last school for a while along with a campaign from Gwen against her. I’m not sure about the pool slapping, that may already have been replaced with the ‘push’, but we might get some more lacrosse and I’d like to see a bit more of Irene as so far she’s been very much in the background.

It’s a lovely change for me to heartily recommend an adaptation of Blyton’s books, but I really do. If you have access to the BBC iPlayer you should definitely watch this.

Next post: Malory Towers on TV – episodes three and four

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Monday #364

I’m excited to watch the new Malory Towers adaptation which is coming to the BBC iPlayer today. It might make self-isolation that little bit more bearable. If it wasn’t for Brodie I would be devouring books – many by Blyton of course – but it’s hard to read over the cries of Mum, Mum, MUM, MUM MUUUUUUUUM.

Malory Towers, finally on TV

and

Fan fic Friday

Cunningham and Petrov: The Mystery of the Missing Aeroplane chapter 5

The best way to treat obstacles is to use them as stepping-stones. Laugh at them, tread on them, and let them lead you to something better.

Something a little more inspiring than my usual choices. This bit of advice comes from Mrs Brown, Jimmy’s mother. I’m not sure many of us feel like laughing at the current obstacles we are facing, but hopefully we can make the best of things and move on to better things in the future.

 

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The Naughtiest Girl continued: The Naughtiest Girl Helps a Friend

A few weeks ago I reviewed the first Naughtiest Girl continuation book by Anne Digby. I didn’t think it was very good, but seeing as I borrowed all six and I can’t return them due to coronavirus self-isolation, I thought I might as well read some more. Maybe they get better as they go on?


The Naughtiest Girl Goes Off to Camp?

It is half-term at Whyteleafe and those who aren’t going home are getting to camp in the school grounds. We start right in the middle of this being set up and find out that Joan is a ‘tent monitor’ in charge of three other girls. These girls turn out to be Elizabeth (of course) the stuck-up Arabella and a junior called Teeny.


Joan’s strange behaviour

Joan is nothing like the sensible girl of the books. She is in the second form (how this qualifies her to look after Teeny who everyone expects to be coddled, though it’s not clear just how young she is, I don’t know) but she has becomes a weak, anxious and silly girl.

First she makes a terribly big deal about going to buy batteries and makes herself and Elizabeth late for kitchen duty. She receives a ticking-off from Miss Ranger about this and instead of taking it on the chin she just about falls apart.

It is obvious from about the second chapter that Joan is afraid of the dark. First, the panic over having batteries for her torch. Then insisting they sleep with the tent flap open even though it is cold. It takes Elizabeth until the last chapters to find out, however, and only because Joan tells her to her face.

Their solution is for Joan to sleep in a culvert in the dried up stream every night – even though a big deal has been made by everyone about the importance of the tent monitor looking after the younger girls. She doesn’t do this, though, as Arabella catches them out of the tent and after a failed attempt at fake sleepwalking they are all caught.

the-naughtiest-girl-helps-a-friend


Teeny Tina

As I said above we don’t know how young Teeny is. She a trembly, frightened child, however. There are hints that she might be being bullied, and I thought perhaps she has some complicated back story. But no.

She wants to join a club amongst the juniors but is too afraid to complete any of the dares they set as a condition of joining.


What else happens?

Almost nothing else happens.

There is a little arguing between Arabella and Joan/Elizabeth over the torch, the tent being open, a mirror and so on. There are two Meetings where these grievances are aired, and Joan temporarily loses her position as tent monitor, but within pages has it back when Arabella commits the enormous sin of letting Teeny out of her sight.

There are a couple of meals, a nature walk that is described in about fifteen words. Oh and the ‘dramatic’ rescue of Teeny at the end which takes all of two pages.


The illustrations

This is a different, newer, edition than the first one and so it is illustrated by Kate Hindley as was the paperback I compared to the original text recently.

The children continue to wear strange uniforms on their strange angular bodies.

I had particular issues with two illustrations, though.

Now I can’t draw to save myself but that’s supposed to be a circular bell tent with a central pole. Why, then, does the line where the tent meets the grass run in a rather straight line?

And that’s supposed to be a culvert at the end of a dried up stream, not a railway tunnel. Some culverts can be quite big but this one is described in the text as a tiny tunnel and a little tunnel into which only one girl could squeeze at a time. It’s supposed to take a tiny stream under a road – if that’s the case here then the road is about six inches deep, and has nothing to stop cars going right over the edge.


Why do I even read these?

Honestly, I don’t know. This was disappointing on almost every level.

Elizabeth was impetuous on occasion but never got into any real trouble, and was not as whole-hearted or determined as she normally is. Joan was ridiculous.

The reveal of the dare club was weak and a lame reason for Teeny’s behaviour. Their identity is shown by them turning up the collars of their shirts in a very 90s way.

A huge deal is made all the way through about Teeny needing looked after, and it really seems like a massive over-reaction. Yes she’s a shy little girl but she’s not a baby.

It’s not consistent with the original books and it isn’t even consistent with the previous one. In the original books the monitors sit around a table in front of William and Rita at meetings. In The Naughtiest Girl Keeps a Secret they sit six on each side. In this book they always sit behind the head boy and girl. It’s a silly little detail and Blyton wasn’t always known for attention to detail (just think of the James/Alf problem) but she was churning out a huge output over years and years.

Not a huge amount happens in the story and there is precious little in the way of the ‘filler events’ that give Blyton’s books their character. It’s almost as if these have been dumbed down for even younger readers than the first three books were for.

I do not recommend this book!

Next review: The Naughtiest Girl Saves the Day

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Letters to Enid 21: From volume 2 issue 9

Previous letters pages can be found here.


Letters page from Volume 2, issue 9. April 28th – May 11th 1954

OUR

LETTER PAGE

 A letter from Judith Allen, 273 Saddlebow Road, King’s Lynn.
Dear Enid Blyton,
I get sixpence a week at school for washing up cups and saucers for my teacher. Fort en weeks I have been saving these sixpences, and now I send 5s. to help your Sunbeam Society.
Love From
Judith Allen.

(You’re a kind child, Judith, and I do thank you for all your hard work.)

A letter from Anite O-Connor, 87 Oldham Road, Ashton-under-Lyme
Dear Enid Blyton,
I would like to tell you a strange thing. Every time I am reading one of your books, I go completely deaf to anything that may be said while I am reading it. Don’t you think that is strange?
Yours sincerely,
Anite O’Connor.

(Dear me, yes, Anite! I wonder how many other children go deaf when their heads are in a book? I know quite a few!)

A letter from Carol Peare, 36 Frankfort Park, Co. Dublin.
Dear Enid Blyton,
I have an interesting hobby, breeding bantam hens and cocks. My champion game cock has won seven first prizes in Belfast. His name is King William (Billy for short). He is a very cheeky cock. One day he was very funny, he got up on top of the hen-house and started to crow. But the wind came alone and blew him off. Billy was very annoyed about this, and funnily enough I was laughing, and Billy chased me all round the garden because he thought I was laughing at him. He is now the happy father of five bantam chicks.
Love from
Carol Peare

(What an interesting letter, Carol – and what an unusual hobby you have. I like the sound of your Billy.)


 

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Monday #363

Letters to Enid part 21

and

The Naughtiest Girl continued: The Naughtiest Girl Helps a Friend

The dragon ought to be left to sleep as it is. If you stir it, there’s no telling what might happen.

Morgan Jones’ warning to the Five in the completely alternative reality as found in The Shuddering Mountain Game, based on Five Get Into a Fix.

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