Reblog: Five Go off to Camp by March House Books

In a change to the schedule, I thought it was best to bring you something rather than nothing given my no show last week. I’m struggling a lot at the moment to write and read due to work stress and depression,  so this is proving quite difficult for me. I apologise.

March House books have provided a lovely walk down memory lane in taking a look at Five go off to Camp (one of my favourite Famous Fives). I hope you’ll enjoy Barbara Fisher’s words.

The link can be found here: March House Books Blog – Five Go Off to Camp

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If you like Blyton: Mischief at Midnight by Esme Kerr

Mischief at Midnight is set at Knight’s Haddon, a girls’ boarding school, and the first chapter or two sounds rather like Malory Towers.


ON THE SURFACE

The language is different – but it has a clear posh boarding school sounds – for example most of the  girls are just back from some rather ‘brillo-pad’ holidays. Malory Towers girls would have gone for smashing or wizard (especially in the lower forms.)

There are familiar things like dormitories though Knight’s Haddon’s hold four girls each , and there are two dormitories holding our main characters. When the story starts the girls are settling in, all organised as to who is in which dorm when Matron comes along to ruin it all.

There’s a new girl joining, in the middle of the school year too, and she is to be put in with Edie (our main character) while her best friend Anastasia goes next door.

Matron is just like a Blyton matron – no nonsense! The headmistress, Miss Fotheringay, is more approachable than the kind but rarely seen Miss Grayling.

She has an even closer relationship with Edie than the other girls, even having her to stay in the holidays as she is an orphan. Edie dares to see the headmistress to complain about the dormitory change, and is told that the new girl has been taken on at very short notice, from a bad circumstance, rather like the orphaned Edie herself. (This is actually the second book in the series so I don’t know how much of Edie’s backstory is known at this point). Edie is therefore to take this Janet under her wing.

And so Janet arrives and immediately stakes a claim to the role of Elizabeth Allen (the Naughtiest Girl, to bring another series into the mix). She is not happy to be at Knight’s Haddon, and intends to behave as badly as possible to be sent home. Soon she is picking up order marks by the score for being late to class and breaking any other rule she can think of.


THE OTHER STORY LINE

The other main story involves Anastasia, who is the daughter of a rich and famous Russian. In the previous book someone tried to kidnap her, and she and Edie hid out at a nearby tower which the school has used for sleepovers. The big news here is that the tower has been sold. Unbeknownst to most of the girls, it is Anastasia’s father who has bought the tower and surrounding land so her mother can keep an eye on her. In a fit of rebelliousness, Anastasia decides she is going to celebrate her birthday by taking a sneaky trip to a gypsy fair being held ten miles from the school.


BACK TO BLYTON

So far, it’s all sounding reasonably Blytonian, isn’t it? The surprise for me came in the second chapter when it’s revealed that this is not in fact the 1950s. It is the present (or at least very recent) day. Knight’s Haddon has banned all technology, however, which is a neat way for the author to get around many of the problems that modern technology throws into books that hope to have any air of mystery in them. There are no mobile phones, and the only computers are for the exclusive use of the sixth formers.

The girls all have quite old-fashioned names, Edie (Edith), Anastasia, Sally, Alice, Janet, Belinda (who draws caricatures and sketches like Belinda Morris), Rose and Phoebe, and perhaps because they are all rather posh they manage to sound like they’re from the 50s anyway. Rose in particular sounds very much like Helen George playing Trixie from Call the Midwife.


AT THE FAIR

At the fair there is a strange group of young men there to protest the destruction of the woods around the prefects’ tower. Not much trouble ensues though, until a drunk follows the girls and thrusts a basket containing two ferrets on them, asking them to pass them on to Josie (whoever she may be, he must think she goes to the same school as the girls as he recognises their logo on a rucksack). Anastasia wants to keep the ferrets and manages to smuggle them back to the school even though the girls are found at the fair by Mrs Fotheringay and another teacher and escorted back.


FERRETS!

The next part of the book revolves mostly around the ferrets. Anastasia is gated for the rest of term – meaning she can’t leave the school grounds, but she is also banned from the animal house (like Whyteleaf the girls have a big shed where they can keep pets like rabbits or indeed ferrets). That doesn’t stop her sneaking out to see Precious and Treasure (I kid you not). It’s around now that she starts to seem quite spoiled and annoying and I wonder why Edie is such friends with her – but there was some sort of explanation at the start that they stuck up for each other as neither truly fit in. At this point though it seems Anastasia rather uses Edie.

She also blames Edie for them getting caught – accusing her of tattling to the headmistress. For that reason she is instructed to pretend the ferrets are hers, so that they can be kept. Miss Fotheringay sees through that, but lets the ferrets stay anyway. On one hand Anastasia is pleased, but on the other, she feels this just backs up her idea that Edie is Miss F’s pet.


THE RETURN OF JANET

Janet comes back into the story now too, and starts seeming like a better person. She adores the ferrets and spend a lot of time properly playing with and taking care of them (unlike Anastasia who wants to pamper and cuddle them). This leads to even more strife between Edie and Anastasia as the latter feels Edie and Janet are trying to steal her pets (made worse by Janet renaming them Thing One and Thing Two).

Then two mysterious things happen: first, Janet is very worried when she hears the ferrets were meant for a girl called Josie, and then, in the middle of the night, someone sneaks down and sets the ferrets loose.

Anastasia immediately blames Edie, as Edie had (perhaps foolishly) said she’d like to set them loose and be done with them. Despite appearing as a bit of a misfit, who needed Edie, Anastasia turns practically the whole school against her. It doesn’t help that Edie’s dressing gown was found the next morning, covered in mud at the bottom.

Janet is the only one on her side, but the mystery around her is deepening. Her mother turns up, in a helicopter no less, bad mouths Janet to the other girls then whisks her off for an afternoon. Janet then gets dumped on a train to come back. Janet then sneaks out to town when she’s supposed to be in lunch but refuses to tell Edie why.


I’ll stop there, and continue in another post, as this has gotten a lot longer than I intended!

Next post: Mischief at Midnight part 2

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Monday #251

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Putting the Barney Mysteries in Order

As discussed in perhaps tedious detail, I didn’t have all the Barney Mysteries when I was younger. The Rilloby Fair Mystery was one I know I didn’t have, but I’m not sure which of the others I definitely even read as a kid.

Anyway, as always let me start with my favourite and work my way down the list.


THE WINNER IS…

My absolute favourite Barney book is The Ring O Bell’s Mystery. It has all the requisite elements of a good mystery – a shifty character, a rude and difficult custodian, a secret passage, strange noises in the night and a few mysterious tales from long-ago times.

I love the way the old tales are woven into modern times, and while believing that a local woman is a fairy-tale witch might sound silly, it works in the dreamy environment of Ring O Bells.

The drowning of the boy is actually a bit dark for Blyton, I always think, but it adds a really creepy element to the story and extra fear and danger to the journey through the secret passage at the end of the book.


NEXT UP

I am putting the first book into second place – the first in any series will come near the top for most people I would imagine.

The Rockingdown Mystery also has a creepy and mysterious tale from long-ago, and again it’s a little dark with the deaths of two small children. It also features an underground passage and noises in the night but these are cleverly supplemented with a suspicious tutor and a bit of kidnapping to form an exciting mystery story. It’s a pity Mr King couldn’t have cropped up in other books, I think he could have made a good Bill-like character and been perhaps a better role model for the boys than Mr Lynton!


A HARDER CHOICE

I went back and forth a bit here, trying to choose between The Rubadub Mystery and The Rilloby Fair Mystery. Both are pretty strong (though rather different) books. In the end I have gone for The Rubadub Mystery for third place.

Over-all Rubadub is probably the stronger book, but I find it hard to love it as I find it quite hard to read through the callous treatment of Barney at the hands of Mr Marvel. It’s just awful when he realises he has been double-crossed and isn’t going to meet his father after all. (Of course they do make up for that in the end.)

Apart from that unpleasantness, though, there is plenty of humour in this book (perhaps more than the others) what with the guests at the Rubadub Inn and the two dogs. Snubby is irritating as always but at least he’s irritating a number of even more irritating people!


AND OF COURSE

That means that The Rilloby Fair Mystery comes next. Rilloby Fair has a lot of strong points – the amusing stuffing-up of Great-Uncle Robert with the Green Hands Gang, the inclusion of a travelling fair with its stalls, animals and terrifying boss, a very solid ‘locked room’ mystery and some satisfying night-time adventures. The reason it comes lower down for me is that it’s a pretty homely and safe mystery on the whole. The children set out from their own home each day and are never really at the mercy of any of their enemies. It’s funny, as Kirrin adventures with the Famous Five can perhaps be ‘homelier’ and ‘safer’ than some of their others but I love them all the same – the location is special in its own right in a way that the Lyntons’ house in a regular old village can’t compete with.


KNOCKED DOWN TO FIFTH

Is the Rat-A-Tat Mystery. I couldn’t resist the pun, sorry. The Rat-A-Tat Mystery could have been great. The setting is perfect – the four children snowed into an old house with just the housekeeper/cook between them and smugglers… yet it falls a bit flat. The whole walking snowman part is silly and spoils what could have been quite a scary time in the book. The criminals seem particularly dumb throughout, in fact so it’s less of a feat for the children to have beat them.


LAST PLACE FOR THE LAST BOOK

I think most people agree that The Ragamuffin Mystery is a bit of a disappointing end to the series. There are actually some elements I very much like – for example, Snubby dressed as a ragamuffin fisherboy accidentally receiving a coded message isn’t too dissimilar to the Two Trees message ending up in Dick’s hands in Five on a Hike Together. It is perhaps a trifle more contrived but for me it works.

Unfortunately the rest of the book doesn’t live up to the start. Mr Llewellyn is a poor criminal even with the backing of his two friends from London. I think you should either make your baddies entirely evil and despicable or truly deserving of the reades’ sympathy and understanding in a book like this. It’s fine to have more ambiguous baddies (for example Severus Snape in the Harry Potter books) when you have time to develop a character and flesh out their motives and history, but in The Ragamuffin Mystery we just get a weak baddie who we neither despise or feel sorry for.

The end is also pretty luke-warm, despite involving a secret passage. It’s just not utilised to its full potential.


So there you have it – my ranking of the Barney Mysteries! What would your order look like?

 

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Monday #250

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December 2017 round up

How is it 2018 already? We hope you had a jolly festive season and aren’t too down in the dumps about getting back to work. Here’s what we did in December:


WHAT I HAVE READ

December is such a busy month that there wasn’t much time for reading. I got some books for Christmas so I will have to make more time for reading this month!

  • Dear Santa – Rod Campbell
  • Dirty Gertie Mackintosh – Dick King-Smith

I’ve got two on the go also:

  • A Wind in the Door (A Wrinkle in Time #2) – Madeleine L’Engle (audiobook)
  • The Faith Trials – Buffy TV Tie-in

WHAT FIONA HAS WATCHED

  • Hollyoaks (so no surprise there!)
  • More ER
  • We finished Stranger Things
  • The Call the Midwife Christmas special

WHAT FIONA HAS DONE

  • The usual routine of rhyme time and baby groups, plus some Christmas parties for Brodie
  • Managed to wrap all my presents in good time
  • Celebrated my birthday
  • Did NOT stay up for the bells at midnight for the new year!
  • Watched Brodie learn to roll onto his side, grab his feet and get up to even more mischief

WHAT STEF HAS READ

I didn’t actually get much reading done in December, it was fairly busy one way and another. So we’re going to start afresh from Janurary’s round up! Haha


WHAT STEF HAS WATCHED

I watched:

  • various Top Gear episodes
  • A few episodes of the Grand Tour
  • Mock the Week
  • QIXL
  • Iron Man 2, Thor the Dark World, Captain America Civil War, Avengers Age of Ultron (me and my boyfriend went on a Marvel movie marathon!)

WHAT STEF HAS DONE

Well, I have managed this month to do my Christmas shopping, wrapping, break a lamp shade at a Christmas party and damage my knee! I’m now waiting on an appointment to see an orthopaedic surgeon. Oh the joy! Just what I didn’t want from 2018, but it looks like I got it!

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If you like Blyton: The Mystery of the Clockwork Sparrow by Katherine Woodfine

24463265.jpgThe Mystery of the Clockwork Sparrow. Now if that doesn’t sound Blytonian I don’t know what does. It makes you think of the Five Find-Outers and Dog, which is a good place to start.  However what I’ve read of the book so far is very much out of the Five Find-Outers category, the title is as far as this comparison can go for this particular Blyton creation and we now move more into the territory of Adventure Series.

Let’s take a closer look.

Edwardian Timeframe

Set in that rose tinted timeframe of the Edwardian era, we are introduced to Sophie Taylor-Cavendish, an orphan left penniless when her wealthy army-based father dies without making provision for her. She finds herself a job as a sales girl in the newly set up store Sinclair’s (an approximation of Harrods, Fortum and Mason and Selfridges). With the store about to open, Sophie is very busy helping the other girls and boys prepare the store for the wealth of interest but strange things begin to happen that can potentially upset the smooth running of the store.

Unfortunately I haven’t got very far in, so can’t really tell you what happens to create so many issues, but so far even I’m a little stuck with who could possibly be messing up the grand opening of the store.

The Edwardian time frame, somewhere before the First World War as a clip from a newspaper article tells us that the German ships were being debated in parliament,  allows for a very Downton Abbey/ Selfridges feel to the world, the plush riches and the stark poverty that come with the time in history, and is still very prevalent today. So not only are we racing towards the opening of the shop, we are also against time as the First World War draws closer and the world will be turned upside down and the lushness of the world destroyed.

I have high hopes for this book, what I have read so far and the reviews that I honestly think this is going to be a real smasher of a book and a mystery. Woodfine states in several places that she was influenced by Enid Blyton’s books amongst others. The two heriones are shaping up to be strong characters, and there are several mentions of food already in the way Woodfine writes. Hopefully I’ll get a chance to read this next week and be able to give you an better review next week!

If you get a chance, go to your local library and find a copy, I think this is going to be one worth reading!

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2017 birthday and Christmas present round up

I am lucky every year that I receive some Blyton goodies. I asked for a few of them this year, but also got a surprise.


THE FAMOUS FIVE COLOURING BOOK

So as you can see, I got the Famous Five colouring book which has the illustrations from the 21 covers by Eileen Soper (a mix of first editions and some of the later reprints, though it does have the original backwards telescope from Five on Kirrin Island Again). It also has some of the designs from the latest reprints to increase the number of pages to colour. I don’t know when I’ll get time for it but I’m looking forward to cracking out the colouring pencils.


JOLLY GOOD FOOD

I also lack time for cooking or baking but I couldn’t resist asking for the new Enid Blyton recipe book. I will need to look through it soon and review it for you all as I’ve heard that not all recipes are truly Blytonian.

Those are printed jam-stains on the  cover, by the way… I haven’t spilt my breakfast on it (I say that because I actually tried to wipe the jam off earlier…)


FIVE LOSE DAD IN THE GARDEN CENTRE

I clearly haven’t learned my lesson here, and I’m giving another of the Bruno Vincent books a go. I also grabbed Five Go Parenting for a pound from a second hand book stall so there may be a couple more reviews coming your way this year.


THE FAMOUS FIVE JIGSAW

This may actually have been my favourite present this year (and I got an elder wand from Harry Potter so there was stiff competition) and it was a total surprise. I can’t wait to get stuck in to this (and review it for you).

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Monday #249 – Happy New Year!

It’s 2018 now and we are back after our Christmas break. We hope you had a great time!

 

Apologies that the week off turned into a two week holiday, but welcome back into the World of Blyton!

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Merry Christmas

As you may be aware Monday was Christmas day, so we didn’t post a blog then, but in the interest of spending Christmas with our loved ones, and Fiona enjoying her first Christmas with Brodie, we’re staying off the blog until the New Year.

Hope we can count on your support for 2018 that you’ve shown us throughout 2017, I hope you’ve enjoyed all our blogs! See you for the first blogs in 2018 in a weeks time!

Love

Stef and Fiona (and Brodie)

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Enid Blyton’s Book of Christmas Treats

I was lucky enough to find a copy of this in my branch library a week ago and knew I had to have it for the blog. Much like the Christmas Stories I reviewed last year this is a collection of short stories which were probably mostly used for the magazines but that doesn’t make them any less magical.

Perfect for young children

Make no mistake, when he’s a bit older, I will be getting Brodie a copy of this book. The stories are the perfect length for bedtime stories. They are also full of morals and lessons that the various toys, animals and children learn throughout the book. What could be better for a child than to have moral lessons at Christmas, learning that others are not as fortunate as themselves but a nice thing to do goes a long way!

They are like the short stories we know and love from Blyton in her magazines and articles. One of the stories in the book is about Bobs, her beloved little dog, Bimbo her cat and a little puppy called Topsy. They wonder how the presents arrive on Christmas day and set about trying to find Santa and put up their own stockings. Its a rather adorable story and nice to have little Bobs included in the Christmas stories as I knew he meant a lot to Enid Blyton when he was around and she adored him.

There are twenty five stories in this volume, so there is a lot to get through but if you think about it, and start reading them with your child on the last night of November, you could do a story a night right up to Christmas eve, which would be a nice little thing to do at the end of  a busy day in December. It would be a good way to spend time with your child as well and that was what Blyton always promoted I suppose in a way with her writing, the togetherness of families even though her own family life couldn’t have been more different.

May I recommend purchasing a copy of this book for yourselves or your little ones as I really think its a good thing to have on the shelf, especially with all the messages about being kind at Christmas. There are so many gems in this collection that its hard to put a finger on the best one, but I really think its a book worth investing in!

Merry Christmas!

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The future of Blyton on screen?

The news that the Faraway Tree Series adaptation for the big screen has made some progress got me thinking. Blyton wrote so much, so what else could be adapted?


WHAT HAS ALREADY COME TO PASS

Obviously there are a fair few things out there already (for a full and detailed list see my guide);

The Famous Five

  • 70s TV series
  • 90s TV series
  • Two Danish feature-length films (Five Go Adventuring Again and Five Get into Trouble)
  • Two serialised adventures in the 1950s/60s (Five on a Treasure Island and Five Have a Mystery to Solve)
  • Four (so far!) German films

Noddy

  • There are at least eight different Noddy TV shows so far

The Adventure Series

  • 90s TV series
  • Island of Adventure movie in the 80s
  • an 8-part Castle of Adventure series in the 90s

The Secret Series

  • 90s TV series

St Clare’s

  • Four German movies under the name of Hanni und Nanni

The Five Find-Outers

  • Japanese TV series (running to hundreds of episodes) in the 60s

Fantasy Adaptations 

  • The Enid Blyton Book of Brownies in Germany
  • The Magic Of The Faraway Tree
  • Enid Blyton’s Enchanted Lands – More Adventures at the Faraway Tree
  • The Adventures Of The Wishing Chair

(The last three being cheapish looking cartoons).


TO REPEAT OR NOT TO REPEAT?

With the above in mind, it would seem quite sensible to say ‘enough of those’ and suggest some of Blyton’s currently over-looked books for a change. But I’m not the sensible type! (As you may have noticed).

First up, you can never have enough of the Famous Five! While the 70s and 90s series both did some pretty good work, I’d love to see even more. In particular my favourite book – Five Go to Smuggler’s Top – would make a great movie! It would have to be set in the 1940s of course, with smashing pull-overs, galoshes and plenty of jolly language.

I didn’t think an awful lot of the 90s adaptations of the Adventure Series or the Secret Series, though the Castle of Adventure mini series wasn’t all bad. I’d love to see either of these done as a new series – but more faithfully and, again, set in the 40s, not the present day. In particular I think that The Secret Island would make a great movie – as long as it wasn’t bulked up with lots of extra adventure. It’s a fabulous book with a few key dramas and doesn’t need any more. Oh and my favourite Adventure book – The Circus of Adventure – would also make for a good movie. Philip rescuing the circus camp for the bears would be thrilling on screen.

I’ve never seen the Five Find-Outers’ TV series, and I doubt many British people will have. I think that with fifteen books there would be a lot of scope for a TV series. Fatty cycling about as red-headed boys and dressing up as old women would add plenty of humour, and Mr Goon would be an easy ‘baddie’ for kids to dislike. Two series of 7 or 8 hour-long episodes, perhaps? Or each book broken into a few episodes might work – I don’t really know how long each one would take acted out.


THE NEVER SEEN BEFORE

I think one big omission from the Blyton catalogue are the school stories. There has been nothing apart from the German forays into St Clare’s. Perhaps the film and TV people thought they wouldn’t appeal to both genders?

Malory Towers

I think that the six Malory Towers books would make an excellent TV series. Each book is made up of a series of incidents, spread over the course of a school year. A single book could then be broken down into perhaps 8 or 12 episodes. For example, the first book could have an episode around Darrell getting ready for and arriving at school, introducing us to the main cast. An episode could be dedicated to the fight in the pool between Gwen and Darrell, and another to the incident where Darrell pushes Sally and Sally ends up getting operated on with appendicitis.

A mock-up for Malory Towers The Movie

Whyteleaf

The three Whyteleaf books would also make for good TV, or perhaps three films. The bold, bad girl Elizabeth Allen would make a striking main character and I think kids would really like her because she is brave and kind but also impetuous and prone to losing her temper.

The Secret Seven

It’s actually quite surprising that the Secret Seven has never been adapted. There are fifteen books – enough for two series easily. None of them require expensive locations (a few steam trains though!) and would surely appeal to younger children?

The Barney Mysteries

Being only six books these might be more awkward to adapt but they are cracking mysteries for the most part and I would happily sit and watch them!

The Farm Books

I can see these being made into a load of short 5-10 minute episodes aimed at young children to teach them about caring for animals. A few minutes of the children encountering something new on the farm, and then a trip to Tammylan to meet a wild creature or hear an animal tale. What’s not to love?

Stand-alone books

There are so many good ones to choose from! I would love to see Hollow Tree House or Those Dreadful Children as films for a start.


MORE LIKELY, THOUGH…

Is that we will get two more Faraway Tree films (should the first one be a success). I can also see Noddy appearing yet again – Dreamworks now own the rights and could make his first movie.

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Monday #248

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If you like Blyton: The Mysterious Boy by Julie Robinson

The Mysterious Boy by [Robinson, Julie ]It’s a bit late I know but it is a crazy time of year so I hope you’ll forgive me. As stated I am going to take a look at Julie Robinson’s first book The Mysterious Boy.

Julie is someone I have known for a long time now, and her writing has always been detailed and interesting to say the least and she’s written many a long tale about the Five Find Outers and Dog which can be found on the Enid Blyton Society Website. This is her first published book however, so let’s take a look.

The Cornish setting

Julie is native to the beautiful county of Cornwall so it makes sense for her first novel to be set somewhere close to home, so the description is top notch and the locations are actually places you can visit which adds to the texture to the novel. As it’s based on the feeling of an Enid Blyton adventure draws us in.

However the actual story is a complete change from a typical Blyton novel. It’s hard to decide if I want to tell you this part at all because it does completely change the outlook and the feel of the book. It adds a layer of mystery to it which settles beautifully with the mysterious Cornish surroundings and the delightful mystery.

Definitely for children

I love Julie, she’s a great person and her writing is a delight but her book The Mysterious Boy is very much aimed at the younger audience. Without a doubt it would capture the young minds in a way that Blyton once captured them, but for me, it was an easy read through and maybe a little predictable, but then I am a 26 year old librarian so I do read a lot and I read very widely as well. However, I would love to give this book to someone who is the age its intended for and see how they react to it. I believe it would be a truly enchanting novel for them to try. Luckily I have a supply of children I could ask at work, and failing that, I’ve only got to wait approximately 7 years and five and a half months for Fiona’s baby Brodie to be old enough to read it himself. No time at all right?

I love finding these books to share with you guys, I really do, but the whole premise of the plot revolves around a fire that happened a long time ago and the desperate search to find and clear the named culprit’s name. Luckily the children have some help to guide them through this challenge. We see the world through the children’s eyes once more, as it’s told in the first person, much a different style from Blyton’s but the use of twins is once again a shout back to Blyton’s own novels where twins were always a fascination in her books and well used.

Verdict

Go out, and buy this book for you and the young children in your life. More so for the children as I believe that’s where Julie’s audience is, and her fan base lies. I have a few children I might offer the book to as a Christmas read, and get some opinions from. In the meantime, may I suggest that you purchase the book from Amazon here, and let us know what you think of the book below in the comments (as well as reviewing it on Amazon.)

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Putting Malory Towers in Order

I have quite enjoyed ranking books in order of favourites so far, so I thought I would do yet another series. I have already done The Famous Five , The Adventure Series  and The Secret Series.

As there are only 6 books I hope this series will not give me as much trouble as the Famous Five did. Saying that, The Secret Series has only 5 and it took me a long time to decide on my favourite!


SECOND FORM BUT FIRST PLACE

I have chosen Second Form at Malory Towers as my favourite. This is one of the ones I didn’t originally have as a child, but I did borrow it from the library more than once.

Second Form has perhaps a more settled feeling than First Term – as our main character has been at the school a while and has developed friendships. There are some new characters though – this is where we meet Belinda Morris (one of my favourite characters) and also Daphne who is the catalyst for the mystery of the thefts around the school.

The best part of the book has to be the dramatic cliff-top rescue involving Mary-Lou and Daphne. I just love it.


 

FIRST TERM IN SECOND PLACE

Often I have the first book of a series near the top, and so often that’s because that’s where it all starts and when we first meet our new friends, the main characters. Of course that is the case in Malory Towers. We meet Darrell, the heroine, and go with her as she first attends the school and meets all her classmates.

For that reason everything is quite new to us so this one can lack the cosy familiarity of the later books. It does have Darrell at her best/worst as she struggles to control her temper – and I’m sure we are all cheering her on when she slaps Gwendoline. The mystery of Sally is interesting if a little sad as well.


IN THE FIFTH, NO THIRD SIR, THIRD.

In the Fifth was another much-borrowed library book for me – I ended up buying it! I love the whole pantomime story, and the success of Darrell’s script. The Moira and June subplot adds some mystery and darkness, and although Moira is a pain in the behind and often not a nice person we sympathise with her. I know some people also feel sorry for Maureen but I tend to find her boasting and lack of self-awareness annoying enough that she deserves the bit of teasing she got.

(That’s a Monty Python reference in the heading there, in case anyone was puzzled.)


FOURTH PLACE FOR THIRD YEAR

The third year has several interesting stories going on. There’s the new American girl, Zerelda, who is mistaken for a teacher as she is made-up so maturely. Then there’s Bill, always in trouble for thinking of nothing but her horse who ends up ill in the night, and Mavis who sneaks off for a singing competition and ends up in a lot of bother.

I like these stories that look at other girls but they do take us away from Darrell who is a real favourite of mine. The only real Darrell-centric story is how Sally is jealous of Darrell and Alicia’s friendship when she returns from being ill.


UPPER FOURTH, FIFTH PLACE

Upper Fourth has Felicity, Darrell’s younger sister joining the school. This starts a new era if you like, where much of the story-telling is split between the first form and the upper fourth girls. I do like the insights into the lower school – it’s funny how quickly the older girls forget how small they once were themselves – but I can’t stand June and a lot of the lower form stuff features her. On the plus side it means we get to see more tricks again, the upper school being too staid and grown-up to be doing them any more.

Up in the upper fourth, we’ve got new twins – Connie and Ruth who Stef wrote about a while back. They’re an interesting addition as we’ve rarely seen twins at real loggerheads in Blyton’s work before. Also new is Clarissa who gives Gwen a new reason to behave like an absolute idiot.

Poor Darrell has a real set-back here. She had been made head of the upper fourth but she loses this honour after losing her temper with June (the little beast deserved it IMHO!)


LAST PLACE FOR LAST TERM

Darrell’s last term continues the split story-telling of upper and lower school. Amanda and June bring the two threads together but I don’t really like either of these girls! I do enjoy Jo’s story though, her and poor little Deirdre running away together and so on.

And of course this is the last book so it feels very sad at the end when Darrell and Sally have to say good-bye to our beloved Malory Towers and (unless we delve into the continuation books by Pamela Cox) we’ll never be back there again!

So far I have always had the last book of a series in last place – but this time it’s definitely nothing to do with the quality of the writing. This is one of Blyton’s earlier series, and had finished by 1951, so long before her writing declined.


So there we have it, my definitive ranking of the series. What order would you have put them in?

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Monday #247

I’ve just calculated where in the year or coming year we’ll be when we get to Monday post #250, and it will be the first Monday of the New Year, actually New Year’s Day! How strange is that? We’ll have been going for 250 Monday’s worth of blog posts (even if I have been less than adequate lately). Let me break that down for you a little.

That is:

  • 4 years and 8 months of blog posts
    and
  • 1000 blog posts (by our 250th Monday)

If you think about that, its masses and masses of writing, time, and on Fiona’s case massive massive effort, even when she’s been on maternity leave with Brodie (I want to know how on earth that little tinker is 4 months old already!) So I just want to thank her, especially, but also want to thank all those who have written for us over the years, it really has made our job easier and filled our blog with much more delightful content than we could ever have hoped for. If I could reach you all, I’d give you a pat on the back!

Anyway as it stands, here’s our 247th Monday post and what’s coming up this week. And Yes, I WILL FINISH THIS BLOG!

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Putting the Secret Series in order

I have already ordered the Famous Five (in four parts!) and the Adventure Series and so now I’m going to do another favourite series of mine, the Secret Series. I’m hoping this will be quite an easy one as there are only five books.


THE SECRET OF THE WINNING BOOK

In the other two series I’ve looked at I knew straight away what my favourite book was, but it’s not so clear here. I have two possibilities – the first book, The Secret Island and the second book, The Secret of Spiggy Holes.

Both books are great but they are very different. The first book is really very unlike the rest – in fact I have seen several people say it doesn’t feel like it even belongs to the same series as the others. The remaining four books have strong similarities to the Adventure Series – a group of kids accidentally stumbling upon some sort of danger or mystery which they then solve or escape from. Island is still fairly adventurous but has more in common with something like Hollow Tree House as it is a planned running-away and survival story. None the less it is a marvellous book – I love reading about how they set up their new home, building willow house and maintaining a farm and crops to sustain themselves. There’s also plenty of drama and excitement from the initial running away and then when the trippers come and the men hunting for them. And of course it has that brilliant happy ending when Jack tears into the hotel to tell the Arnold parents their children are safe and well. I may shed a tear now just thinking about it!

Spiggy Holes is certainly the best mystery of the series for me – I love them discovering the long lost secret passage in Peep-Hole and the way that links up to the other passages connecting the old house to the beach. I also love their ingenuity in signalling to Prince Paul and their plan to rescue him. There is also a strong supporting cast in Miss Dimity (a little like Miss Pepper but perhaps softer) and George (somewhat like Alf/James or Andy of the Adventurous Four). There is a strong sense of danger through the book, despite the children having Miss Dimity around and George’s back up at times. George works well because although he is older and tougher than the children he’s probably only in his mid teens and therefore not quite enough of an adult to take charge and take over the rescue proceedings. He’s just happy to lend some muscle.

So that still leaves me stuck – which one is my favourite?

After rather a lot of very hard thinking I have decided to go with Secret Island, and that’s because of the children’s bravery. No doubt they are brave in Spiggy Holes as they try to rescue a complete stranger, but the bravery in Secret Island is different. All four children are abused and mistreated which can easily lead to feeling worthless and like it is deserved. But they rise above it and choose a new path for themselves – knowing they will have to be entirely self sufficient. They cope admirably with supporting themselves on an island and I think they all learn a lot about themselves along the way. They gain new skills and Nora in particular grows up a lot. Of course it’s ironic that they needn’t have survived as long as they did – but they didn’t know that. To them the threat of being found and returned to a miserable life was totally real. They not only make the best of an often cold and lonely existence on the island but they actually flourish.


THE BOOK WITH TWO NAMES

My next favourite is The Secret of Killimooin (see journal 58) which has now been renamed The Secret Forest. This is a quite deliciously creepy tale with fearsome robbers appearing in the mist and then disappearing again. Of course the children crack that mystery and find their way into the robbers’ lair, but then the problem becomes getting out again. We have Ranni and Pilescu along for a good part of the ride and they are a great pair of adults – a little like Bill as they do their best to keep the children (particularly Prince Paul) safe but still respect their determination to keep up and be brave.


THE BOOK THAT DOESN’T EXIST ANY MORE

Not my favourite of the series by some way but The Secret Mountain is still a very good book and I can’t stand the fact that this has simply been chopped out of the series altogether. This is at least partially why Killimooin was renamed I think – as without The Secret Mountain all the remaining books follow The Secret of format. Making it The Secret Forest means The Secret Island is not unusual. But of course they could just have left Mountain in place and Killimooin as Killimooin.

Anyway, Mountain can suffer from the ‘rather like another book syndrome’ as it has a lot in common with The Mountain of Adventure (which came later). They both feature hollow mountains with civilisations inside, both have a flat enough top to be used for insane rituals/experiments and both are found after the initial guide abandons the children.

The Secret Mountain is a little less crazy-seeming perhaps, as it is not high-tech at all, rather it involves a (potentially) ancient cult who worship the sun. Mafumu is great throughout, very brave and resourceful and Captain Arnold’s dagger throwing at the end can certainly rival don’t forget Bill Smugs.


AND THAT JUST LEAVES US WITH…

…The Secret of Moon Castle. It’s strange how the last book in the series is often a least-favourite. With some series that’s because the last book came out in the 1960s when Enid Blyton’s writing powers were starting to wane. However Moon Castle is from 1953 (the same year as Five Go Down to the Sea) which is well within her peak writing years. That is, though, ten years after the previous book in the series. Revisiting the Arnolds and Prince Paul after such a long gap could have contributed to it seeming a weaker book.

It has some strong points,  all of Enid Blyton’s books do though! The strange pins and needles the boys suffer are convincingly scary, as is the dark figure in their room one night. The twang-dongs are funny but not overly silly and the Brimmings are mostly decent adversaries (if a tiny bit affected at times). The fact that most of it takes part inside the castle (with several adults round) and only the boys get to go down into the mines (and the creepy abandoned village is not made enough use of) contribute to it being the least favourite for me.

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Monday #246

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November 2017 round up

Golly gosh, it’s December already! We are so close to Christmas now. But before we get too festive, here’s what we got up to in November.


WHAT I HAVE READ

A fairly short list again, but I don’t have a lot of time for reading as Brodie keeps me on my toes!

  • One Winter’s Day – Christina M. Butler
  • Dr Xargle’s Book of Earth Relations – Jeanne Willis
  • Frankie Dupont and the Science Fair Sabotage (Frankie Dupont Mysteries #3) – Julie Anne Grasso
  • Club Dead (Sookie Stackhouse #3) – Charlaine Harris audiobook
  • The Journals of Rupert Giles (Buffy TV tie-in) – Nancy Holder

I’ve got one on the go also:

  • A Wind in the Door (A Wrinkle in Time #2) – Madeleine L’Engle (audiobook)

WHAT FIONA HAS WATCHED

  • Still Hollyoaks and Only Connect this month (though Only Connect keeps skipping random Fridays?)
  • The new series of Red Dwarf 
  • More of ER – now we’re up to season six, or is it seven?
  • The new series of Stranger Things on Netflix.
  • Some random movies on Netflix like Hotel Transylvania 2 

WHAT FIONA HAS DONE

  • Taken Brodie to more rhyme times, playgroup and quite a few more lunch dates.
  • Most of my Christmas shopping (a lot of it online) – now I’ve just got a few bits to buy and lots of wrapping to do.
  • Watched the fireworks from my back garden, and Brodie watched from the window.
  • Went back and visited my high school one last time before it gets knocked down.
  • Made Brodie a sensory box for him to lie in
  • Bought tickets to see Steps next summer

WHAT STEF HAS READ

I haven’t read very much this month, somehow that thing called life has gotten in the way for me and I’ve been very busy with work, and my new relationship as well as my exercise. So I am just going to give you the books I’m trying to read at the moment.


WHAT STEF HAS WATCHED

I haven’t actually watched much this month either.

  • Sherlock Holmes with Robert Downey Jr in it cause I hadn’t seen it before.
  • Russell Howard’s Wonderbox
  • QIXL

WHAT STEF HAS DONE

Stef has mostly been running around after her two jobs, new boyfriend and pokemon Go while trying to maintain the illusion of being calm and in control (Yeah who am I kidding?) I have done a bit of Christmas shopping but not enough. Still got a few weeks to go yet! Fiona doesn’t even have a birthday present, let alone  Christmas, never mind Brodie!!! I am such an unorganised person!

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Blyton’s Winter Reads – A Reblog

It has been about five years since I presented you with the blogs detailing the books that Enid Blyton wrote that could be considered as wintry books. I thought perhaps, as the weather’s taken a turn for the worse, we might be in a mood to curl up with a few of the favourite Blytons and pretend we’re in a far off time.  I’m going to list the books for you and link you to the blogs from five years ago so you can refresh your memories

Blog part 1

The books you’ll be able to find out about which are wintry reads are:

  1. Five Go Adventuring Again
  2. The Mystery of Tally-Ho Cottage
  3. The Six Bad Boys
  4. The Rat-a-Tat Mystery
  5. The Secret Seven

    The full blog can be found here.

    Blog part 2

    The second blog of wintry reads contains information on:

    1. In the Fifth at Malory Towers
    2. The Christmas Book
    3. The Mystery of the Strange Bundle
    4. Five Get into a Fix
    5. Shock for the Secret Seven

    The Christmas book illustrated by Treyer Evans in 1944

    So there we are, that’s what’s on the second blog and you can read more about those books here.

    Can you think of any wintry books we may have missed? Let us know in the comments.

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