Collins Children’s Annual 1958

I had this out last year while I was working on Enid Blyton’s Christmas Stories then and now. That series took me longer than expected, so I didn’t get around to reviewing the annual. I did take a photo of it, though!


When is a Christmas Annual not a Christmas Annual?

Given the cover I’ve always thought of this as a Christmas Annual. It would have come out in time to be a Christmas present, and the cover and endpapers are definitely Christmas-themed. Then inside are a surprising number of title pages/frontispieces also with a Christmas theme.

The contents show there are a couple of Christmas stories inside, too, but also ones set in summer. At first glance it almost seems to say Christmas Annual but in fact it is Children’s. There were Blyton contributions in four – 1958-1961, but it’s hard to find any solid information on how many there were.

There are many Collin’s Children’s Annuals I can see online, most of which have  Christmas or winter-themed covers, but there are some which don’t. I can’t find any information on whether these came out twice a year, or if some years were summer instead of winter. Most results are copies for sale and many don’t have a year on them as they are undated inside.

Collins were very busy in the annual world as I’ve seen references to their Holiday Annuals, Boys Annuals, Girls Annuals, Schoolboys Annuals, Schoolgirls Annuals, Toddlers Annuals, Painting Annuals, Aircraft Annuals, Sports Annuals, Railway Annuals, Motor Annuals, Adventure Annuals… I doubt they all ran at the same time, and some may even be the same annual with a name change, but still, it’s a lot!


Contents

There is only one Enid Blyton contribution inside – the main reason I bought this – but there are many illustrator names I recognise from their work on Blyton’s books. I have marked the obvious Christmas stories with an asterix – but there may be others!

STORIES

TAI-LU AND THE MAGIC JEWEL BOX
by Shelagh Fraser and Billy Thatcher
Drawings by Janet and Anne Grahame Johnstone 
IT HAPPENED ONE MORNING
by Enid Blyton Drawings by Frank Varty
A SUNDAY ADVENTURE
by Christine Pullein-Thompson Drawings by Roy Newby
SEA FEVER
by Martin Downes Drawings by Will Nickless
THE WISHING STONE
by Edward Boyd Drawings by Gilbert Dunlop
MUFFIN’S HAPPY CHRISTMAS*
Written and illustrated by Molly Blake
HUMPHREY – A BARGAIN
by Frances B. Clark Drawings by Hilda McGavin

PICTURE STORIES

RESCUE FROM THE RIVER
Illustrated by A. L. Bushell
THE CHRISTMAS STORY*
Illustrated by H. C. Gaffron
A VERY SHARP LAD
Written and illustrated by Racey Helps
THE PIED PIPER OF HAMELIN
Illustrated by Jean D. Howe
TOBY THE TUG
Written and illustrated by G. W. Backhouse

ARTICLES

CARILINO OF THE SOUTH SEA ISLANDS
by Lydia S. Eliott Drawings by Malcolm Tompkins
HOW THE WILD BIRDS FEED THEIR YOUNG
by David Stephen Drawings by Neave Parker

POEMS

NOSEGAY
by Marnie Harker Illustrated by Kris 
THE SNOW OWL
Written and illustrated by Racey Helps
PLEASE TO REMEMBER
by Marnie Harker Illustrated by Ionicus
IF A NONSENSE RHYME
Written and illustrated by Justin Michman
THE TALE OF GREGORY BEETLE
by Barbara Lindsay Illustrated by Hilda Boswell

GAMES AND PUZZLES

ALL-IN-ONE-LINE PUZZLE by Justin Michman
WHERE ON EARTH PUZZLE by ‘Mickey’
DOG PUZZLE by ‘Mickey’
HOW TO DRAW FIGURES
HOW MANY WORDS PUZZLE


TAI-LU AND THE MAGIC JEWEL BOX

I have just emerged from a lengthy Google search as I decided to look up Shelagh Fraser and Billy Thatcher.

As it turns out Shelagh Fraser was Aunt Beru in the first Star Wars movie, and Billy Thatcher, a theatre actor and writer. It looks like they’re only credited for writing one book about Tai-Lu but it appears they then wrote multiple short stories for annuals/story books.

Anyway, Tai-Lu is a cat – not just any cat – a Princess Siamese cat. She and her (talking) cat friends go on a picnic (taking sardine sandwiches and milk, naturally) and find a jewel box. Not just any jewel box – one which grows in size and turns into a secret entrance to an underground vault full of birds in cages.

From the colour plate above it looks as if the cats are going to have a feast – but they’re not. To reference Star Wars once more – it’s a trap! Any being who helps themselves to the strawberries and cream gets turned into a bird and caged. Luckily escape (and a little revenge) is all that’s served.

Illustrations here (and from what I could see, for all Tai-Lu stories, come from Janet and Anne Graham Johnstone who were well-known for their work on reprints of Blyton titles like The Enchanted Wood.


IT HAPPENED ONE MORNING

This is actually a Blyton story that only appears in one other book. It was specially written for this annual and then reprinted in another Collin’s title The Happyland Story Book 1962.

While the first story was probably not set in winter, this one seems all the more incongruous as it begins with Mother saying what a lovely sunny morning it is and suggesting the children have a picnic lunch.

Having taken their picnic to the woods the children are – unusually for a Blyton story – bothered by flies and decide to go up a hill to get away from them. (Michael says this is what reindeer do in lapland, so there’s a sort of Christmas reference!).

The hill they go up is thimble hill – named for its shape. Blyton did like an interesting-shaped hill – Billycock, Sugarloaf, Fang, Thimble – and probably more.

In a likeness to other books they climb a tree for their picnic (imagining it is a boat), accompanied by birds and a red squirrel. And, of course, as we know, trees give you a good vantage point to spot thing that are happening…

Which is an overturned boat on the lake with two people hanging on to it. Unable to find help they take a table from a cottage and (in another likeness to other Blyton stories) use it as a raft to go to the rescue.

Typically for a Blyton story there’s a moral there – the children were told they couldn’t go boating as the twins can’t swim properly. In rescuing two boys who couldn’t swim they realise Mother was right. And they get gifted the boys’ boat from their grateful father, so it all ends very nicely for them!

Illustrations are supplied by Frank Varty – not a name I recognise – but are nicely done. He ha did some UK covers for Nancy Drew books and also worked on the Hardy Boys books.


NOSEGAY

This is a short poem about wishing for a garden plot to grow flowers in.


THE SNOW OWL

This is a slightly longer poem, which gets one of the colour plates to go along with it. I hadn’t heard of Racey Helps before but Angus Clifford Racey Helps wrote and illustrated various books about woodland creatures.


RESCUE FROM THE RIVER

This was probably a peak time for children’s interest in ‘Cowboys and Indians’, as there were many TV shows and films in the 1950s. Blyton had some of her characters dress up and play these games (Those Dreadful Children, The Boy Next Door, Jock from Five Go Off to Camp) but as far as I know she never wrote her own version of the stories.

This is only a two-page story so there’s little time for detail. It ends in the chief of the Indian settlement swearing never to fight with white man after the children save his only son.


ALL-IN-ONE-LINE PUZZLE

A couple of puzzles where you have to trace the shape(s) without lifting your pencil or going over the same line twice.


CARILINO OF THE SOUTH SEAS

This is listed as an article and appears to be a factual description of life on the South Sea Islands. I’m not sure that Carilino is real, though, she may just be made up to personalise the article. Although the article starts out with factual statements and descriptions it then moves on to sound more like a fictional story, narrating how Carilino swims before breakfast then goes to school and finally takes part in a canoe race.

Lydia S Eliott was an Australian author who wrote various bible retellings, much like Blyton did, and adventure stories such as Kangaroo Country and Kangaroo Coolaroo.

The South Seas is a common Australian name for the Pacific Islands in Melanesian, Micronesian and Polynesian regions.


A SUNDAY ADVENTURE

I have heard of Christine Pullein-Thompson, but the extent of my knowledge is that she writes ‘pony stories’. I was never into that sort of thing when I was younger – I definitely never longed for a horse of my own! The closest I got in books was Bill, Thunder, Clarissa and Merrylegs at Malory Towers, or the family’s horses at Mistletoe Farm.

This story is told in the first person, where Maria relates a story of a golden August Sunday where she and Marcus must have been about eleven or twelve. 

I’ve always assumed that pony books including Pullein-Thompson pony books (something like 200 between Christine, her mother and sisters) were primarily aimed at girls but looking at the titles/covers/blurbs it seems that many were written to appeal to both boys and girls. In this case we have a girl and boy having an adventure, which features both horses and a train to widen its appeal.

Overall a thrilling story which makes me wonder what else I’ve missed out on by ignoring pony books!


SEA FEVER

At first sea/boat/ship obsessed Philip is disappointed that their floating holiday is on a houseboat and not at sea. But it’s not an ordinary houseboat – it’s a real ship, moored at the riverside.

The Ship – Waterwitch – apparently has as much sea fever as Philip does for she breaks her moorings in the night and is nearly washed onto the rocks in the tideway. In a dramatic (if far-fetched) effort to save themselves  Philip’s mother and sisters tie all their sheets and blankets together and this is hoisted up to act as a sail to steer them. Annoyingly Philip gets all the credit from the coastguards when they arrive.


To be continued in part 2

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Letters to Enid part 61: From volume 3 issue 23

Previous letters pages can be found here.


Letters page from Volume 3, issue 23. November 9th – 22nd, 1955.

OUR

LETTER PAGE

Today it is Sunbeam letter-page. I have chosen the letters to show you the varied things the Sunbeams do, but I shall only quote a few lines from each letter. The first one wins my letter prize.

We have been working all the year at making knitting needle cases, covering coat-hangers, painting tins for waste-paper baskets, making dish-cloths, aprons, string bags, tray cloths, egg-cases and many other things. We actually managed to make £38 10s. od.
Heather and Gay Beste, Banstead.

I am 17 1/2 and I started work last week. I send 5s. out of my first wages as a thank-offering for perfect eyesight.
Catherine Wright, Mossley Hill.

We sold our old story books and now send you 10s.
Angela Dyke and Gillian Curtis, Warminster.

My two friends and I made kettle-holders, dish-cloths and felt animals and the money we send is to buy a blind child a Christmas present.
Valerie Beale, Coalville.

Here is one more pound that the 1st Bampton Brownies have saved up in Queen pennies for your Blind Babies.
Tawny Owl, Bampton.

Here is £1 13s. 4d. which my friend and I earned by doing odd jobs for people.
Gillian Burley, Tripoli.

Here is 27s. which we earned by means of a Bring and Buy Sale.
Dawn and Eleanor Dendel, Barnstaple.

Here is some money I made by selling models of plaster. I paint and varnish them and they make lovely ornaments (especially Noddy !)
Trudy Morris, Yeovil.

I send you £1 1s. 41d. which I made by selling flowers from my own garden.
Sandra Dolman, Dorking.
PS – Daddy is making the cheque up to £2.


A slightly different letters page this time. Lots of good fundraising ideas there. Interesting to see a 17 year old writing in – wonder if she still got the magazine herself or if it was a younger sibling?

Not surprising that Heather and Gay won, having raised over £38. An online inflation calculator says that that equals £1,249.45 today!

The Magazine Club Coupon is intact in this issue, and I think this is what was cut out of the previous one. I’m not sure what the coupons were for but it must say somewhere in the magazine.

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Monday #606

December is nearly upon us. Normally this is about the time I’d turn on the snow fall effect here, but sadly WordPress took it away a year or two ago. We haven’t had any real snow yet, just a lot of cold days.

Letters to Enid 61

and

Collin’s Children’s Annual

Thankfully we are no longer in the same situation as we were in 2021, and there are warm places to go to get out of the house (which is marginally less messy now Brodie’s a bit older!).

It’s still cold, though, so a good time to revisit this post on winter.

Enid Blyton’s winters

Frost

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Enid Blyton Christmas Gift Guide 2024

This has been another hard one to write as there hasn’t been a great deal of new items out. Maybe there will be more soon with the Faraway Tree movie coming out. It’s a shame there hasn’t been any Malory Towers merchandise, actually.

(Previous guides can be found here, though I can’t guarantee all the items on them will still be available!)


New books

At least there are always new books coming out – not something you can often say about an author who last wrote a book 60 years ago.

For babies there are the two new lift-the-flap books (reviewed by me earlier).

Goodnight Fairy and Let’s Have a Picnic both £7.99 at Waterstones.

We also have two new Famous Five Colour Short Stories – written by Sufiya Ahmed. You know I can’t resist any book with library in the title so I’ll have to give that one a go, even if I know it won’t live up to the real thing.

The Library Mystery £6.99, and Five and the Missing Prize £7.99, from Waterstones.

Hodder have more short story collections with different themes again. You always know what you’re getting with these – 25-30 stories picked for their theme, some which have never been reprinted before (others, though, have already appeared in recent Hodder collections).

One a Day Christmas Stories, Magical Stories, Five Minute Summer Stories and Goodnight Stories all £7.99 at Waterstones (though Christmas Stories is on offer for £6.49 right now).

Plus there are two collections for children of very specific ages (ones for 5 year olds and 8 year olds are to come out next year.)

Stories for 6 Year Olds and Stories for 7 Year Olds both £6.99 at Waterstones.

More attractively designed is Poems for Every Season which has over 100 poems – it’s nice to see the poetry getting some appreciation!

Poems for Every Season £14.99 at Waterstones

There are a couple of new graphic novels too – Five Run Away Together and Five Go to Smugglers Top.

Five Run Away Together and Five Go to Smugglers Top both £8.99 at Waterstones.


Not books

You might be wondering why I’m suggesting a White Rabbit Lego set as that sounds way more Alice in Wonderland than Enid Blyton. But it’s a 3 in 1 build which can be a rabbit, a seal or a cockatoo. And the cockatoo is exactly how Stuart Tresilian depicts Kiki (as opposed to the scarlet and grey bird she is in the text).

Lego Creator 3 in 1 White Rabbit £17.99 at Lego.com

All booklovers need bookmarks (even though we often do with old receipts or scraps of paper, or at least, I do!). So why not these ones featuring Enid Blyton quotes like Don’t forget Bill Smugs?

Set of five bookmarks £3.50 by heirloomreading on Etsy.

That seller also has some packages of a book plus bookmarks:

Book plus three bookmarks £7.50 by heirloomreading on Etsy.

For Malory Towers fans how about an iron-on badge (as seen in the musical stage play)?

Malory Towers Badge £4.99, KTFAwarenesspins on Etsy

For Noddy fans how about a Noddy necklace?

Noddy necklace £18.00, NaomiWicksArt on Etsy


I found more than I expected in the end!

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My updated Enid Blyton wishlist

I wrote my original wishlist in 2015, and I thought it was about time I revisited it to see how many of those gaps I have filled since then.

While there are many books I don’t have these were – at the time – my ‘top priority’ ones.


Collections complete

Noddy

I had only begun collecting Noddy books when I wrote the list, and at that point I was missing

  • Noddy Meets Father Christmas (#11)
  • Noddy and Tessie Bear (#12)

I am happy to say that I now have those, though I am possibly not finished with the series!

At the time two of my Noddy books were paperbacks, though,

  • Noddy and His Car (#3)
  • Be Brave Little Noddy (#13)

I have since managed to replace Noddy and his Car with a hardback, but not Be Brave Little Noddy. A couple of my hardbacks are also the slightly later hardbacks with the different title font (like Noddy and Tessie Bear, above), so I may try to replace those. I probably won’t try very hard – many of my Noddys don’t even have spines – but if I saw one going cheaply I might get it.

The Holiday Books

I had started this collection a long time ago but was missing

  • The Enid Blyton Holiday Book
  • The Third Enid Blyton Holiday Book

Number 3 was easy enough to get, but number 1 can be tricky. The Second Holiday Book was reprinted as with the same title as the first, so unless sellers show the contents page it is hard to know which book you would be getting.

Macmillan Story Readers

I was frustrated to have seven out eight in this series but I have managed to get the last one – The Magic Knitting Needles and Other Stories.


Collections added to

Foyle Flower Story Books

You have to be careful with buying these too as there are abridged later editions around.

In 2015 I had four of the eight so was in need of

  • Poppy
  • Snowdrop
  • Water-Lily
  • Foxglove

I have since managed to get Water-Lily, Foxglove and Snowdrop.

However, my copy of Daffodil is the abridged one (it contains a whole 9 stories compared to the original 40!) so that actually remains on the list.

Macmillan Nature Readers

There are five of these, and in 2015 I had three. I was in need of

  • The Rabbit’s Party & Other Stories
  • Susan and the Birds & Other Stories

I have since managed to get The Rabbit’s Party (for a bargain £3.89 no less – yes I keep note!), but haven’t found Susan and the Birds at a reasonable price. I have seen it for sale a few times but it’s always priced far higher than the others in the series.

The cheapest I can find right now is £19 and there’s no picture on the listing.

Minute Tales

I only had one of these, so hardly a collection! I had Twenty Minute Tales, so still needed

  • Five Minute Tales
  • Ten Minute Tales
  • Fifteen Minute Tales

Now all I need is Five Minute Tales.

Enid Blyton Society Journals

I had 40 of these and my needed list was 1-3, 5-6, 8, 11, 14-18 23 and 27. I have since managed to get ONE of these – number 16.


Collections I have clearly forsaken

Famous Five Adventure Games

I had four of eight in 2015… and I still have four of eight. I haven’t even read or played them – so much for top priority! 

If I saw any of these in a charity shop or second hand bookshop (and they weren’t expensive) I’d grab them, but I don’t feel the urge to go hunting for them.

The Faraway Tree Series

I’m no further forward with this series, either. I was lacking Up the Faraway Tree then, and I still am now. However I have at least read The Enchanted Wood and The Magic Faraway Tree, when I hadn’t before.

Brer Rabbit

I had just bought my first Brer Rabbit book in 2014, and I haven’t bought any more since then. I noted that I didn’t have a list of them to work from, and I still don’t. I haven’t even read the one I bought ten years ago. Again, so much for top priority!

Happy House Children

This was always a long shot as Benjy And the Others is rare and expensive. A copy went for £500 recently, then another for £100, both far more than I’d want to pay for a book!

Miscellaneous

In 2015 mentioned a load of other things I had one or two of, but I haven’t bought a single thing to add to them.

  • Treasure Trove Readers 1/3
  • Marks and Spencers Books 1/3
  • Wheaton Musical Plays 1/6
  • Enid Blyton Nature Readers 1/35
  • Pitkin Pleasure Series 1/14
  • Brockhampton Little Books Series 1/18

Then I have 0/4 in the O’Clock Tales.

A few stand-alone titles I highlighted were The Birthday Kitten, The Adventures of Scamp, The Land of Far-Beyond and Tales of Green Hedges and I haven’t bought any of these either.


Have I added anything to the list?

Thankfully my list has gotten a little shorter as I’ve bought 11 titles from it in ten years. (Maybe I should be rewarded for restraint here?)

The only thing I have added is the Enid Blyton’s Magazines that I am missing, as I wasn’t actively collecting them then.

I actually only need four of these – 2.15, 4,23, 4,24 and 7.12 but apart from 4.24 (which one seller keeps listing at £15 over and over without selling it,) I haven’t seen any of these for sale. I keep this picture on my phone, though, to help me remember which ones I still need.


What does your Enid Blyton wishlist look like? Are you hoping to get everything she’s ever written? Do you like to buy multiple different editions of the same book(s)? Let me know in the comments!

 

 

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Monday #604

It’s Sunday evening as I write this and that’s good for me as I often write it on Monday itself, which is never my plan.

What’s not so good was the little conversation my brain had with itself this morning, which went something like this:

Hmm. Sunday. Monday post to write tonight. What will I write next week?

Pause.

What did I write this week?

Long pause as my memories were searched, and a blank was drawn.

Did I not get a post up on Friday? Maybe I did a quick letters page on Wednesday?

Maybe I should check…

I checked. I had written nothing apart from the Monday post.

That’s not exactly uncommon as frequently life-stuff gets in the way and I run out of time to get stuff written. But normally I at least notice! I’m usually very aware that I haven’t written/finished writing something. Last week, however, I clean forgot.

In my defense I was proof-reading Zoe Billings third adventure book, with a deadline of the 8th and that pretty much overtook everything else. But it’s done now, and The Challenge of Palores Point will be out soon! (Hopefully without any glaring errors in it, as error fixing was my job…)

I don’t know what the cover looks like yet, but I’m sure it will look good alongside books 1 and 2.

So let’s embrace deja vu and have the same topics of the week as last week.

My updated Enid Blyton wishlist

and

Christmas gift guide 2024

My original Blyton wishlist is from 2015, so if anyone wants to study it before I post my updated one here it is!

Fiona’s Blyton wishlist

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Monday #603

Halloween is over, and tomorrow is bonfire night, so it’s an acceptable time to start looking towards Christmas! I’ve actually started my shopping already, just need to keep up the momentum so I’m not left doing it all last-minute!

My updated Enid Blyton wishlist

and

Christmas gift guide 2024

While we are lucky to have so many fantastic illustrations across the original editions of Enid Blyton’s books I often find myself wishing that favourite scenes of mine had an illustration, or that something I can’t easily picture was shown. Or that there were more in colour!

The bargua, with its green scales with red-and-yellow spots I’m sure would have looked wonderful in a full colour illustration.

Well, I’ll just have to make do with Brodie’s fabulous effort! (He did a snake word search in an activity book, and there was also a page with partly-drawn snakes to finish and colour, and space to draw your own. So naturally he went for a bargua (but had to check with me to make sure he got the colours right).

 

 

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October 2024 round up

September has turned into October, so the nights are getting darker, and it’s generally colder. Though it’s still quite warm in the sun sometimes, the slippers and blankets are out at home!


What I read

I read a little more in October than I did in September – the only one I haven’t been able to list is the one I’m proof-reading for a friend. It hasn’t got a name/cover that’s been made public yet so you’re just going to have to watch this space!

What I read:

  • The Lighthouse Keeper’s Daughter – Hazel Gaynor
  • The Bookshop Ladies – Faith Hogan
  • The Ballad of Smallhope and Pennyroyal – Jodi Taylor
  • Book Lovers – Emily Henry
  • The Circus of Adventure – Brodie’s review to come
  • We Solve Murders (We Solve Murders #1) – Richard Osman
  • Pride and Premeditation (Nevermore Bookshop #3) – Steffanie Holmes
  • The River of Adventure – Brodie’s review to come.
  • Betty Church and the Suffolk Vampire (Betty Church #1) – M.R.C. Kasian
  • The Dubrovnik Book Club – Eva Glyn

I ended the month still working through:

  • Anne of Avonlea (Anne of Green Gables #2) – L.M. Montgomery
  • The Secret Island
  • Sweetpea (Sweetpea #1) – C.J. Scuse

What I watched

  • We are still on ER season 15 (the last one, and full of cameos from former characters), plus Only Connect, Taskmaster, Only Murders in the Building but we did finish Rings of Power  and moved on to Lego Masters Grandmasters.
  • With Brodie we watched The Lost World aka Jurassic Park 2 and Hocus Pocus.
  • I’m on to season seven of Charmed.
  • On Tuesdays my sister and I watched some of Ten Years Younger in Ten Days (which hasn’t aged that well!).

What I did

  • I started a new job! It’s only a one year contract (but hopefully it’ll be extended) but I am now a library supervisor or Library and Information Officer if you use my proper title. That means I get to buy a lot of books (all adult non-fiction so no Blyton, sadly.)
  • We went on some walks, including to a nature reserve where I tried (and failed) to find any four leaf-clovers, and a  country park where we found a whopping seven geocaches.We also went along a section of the Fife Coastal path at St Andrews.
  • Did some Lego building with a new set I treated myself to for getting (and surviving a week of) my new job.
  • Took Brodie for an eye test and it turns out he needs glasses!
  • Visited a local zoo where they have a lemur walk through.
  • Visited Scone Palace for the first time (pronounced Scoon, not either of the ways you pronounce the edible type of scone), where we toured part of the palace and explored the grounds. Scone is known for its peacocks including a rare white one called Alexander (who likes to try to steal visitors’ scones if they dare to eat outside!).
  • I spent some time sorting out my beach finds (I have way too much!) as I had several tubs dotted about the house which I’d emptied my pockets into.
  • Went to another country park for their Halloween trails and some hot chocolate.

How was your October?

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Letters to Enid part 60: From volume 3 issue 22

Previous letters pages can be found here.


Letters page from Volume 3, issue 22.
October 26th – November 8th, 1955.

OUR

LETTER PAGE

 1. A letter from a New Zealand reader, Busy Bee Kathleen Davison, North Canterbury, N.Z.
Dear Enid Blyton,
This is about my pet cat, Tinkerbell. A few days ago we heard a terrible din outside and went out to see what was wrong. We saw Tinkerbell chasing a big grey cat that had a wee bantam in his mouth. He was so frightened when Tinkerbell chased him that he dropped the bantam and scurried away. Mummy picked up the poor bantam, and while she was nursing it Tinkerbell came back and made such a fuss – purring and meowing as if to say, “I saved the little bantam, didn’t I?” And she really did. So don’t you think she is a good Busy Bee?
Love from
Kathleen Davison.

(Yes – your Tinkerbell is very good, Kathleen – and so is your letter. You win the letter-prize this week, and it is going all the way to New Zealand!)

2. A letter from John Brown, Bolton-by-Bowland, Clitheroe.
Dear Miss Blyton,
I am enclosing a ten-shilling postal order for your Children’s Home in Beaconsfield. We have a club called the Secret Seven Club and we got the money by charging a penny for each book borrowed by our members. Do you think this is a good idea?
Yours faithfully,
John Brown.

(Yes, I certainly do, John – what a lot of borrowings your Club made to make ten shillings! Please thank your Secret Seven members for me.)

3. A letter from Penelope King, London, N. 

Dear Enid Blyton,
I have a budgerigar called Cheeky. He can say, “I’m Cheeky, yes, I am.” And he can say, “What do you want?” and “What are you doing?” and “Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall,” and Merry Christmas, everybody,” and “Good morning, would you like a cup of tea?”
Love from
Penelope King.

(What a clever budgie, Penelope. I wonder if any other readers have one quite as clever?)


I do wonder if Tinkerbell wasn’t saying “Can’t have a tasty chicken snack?” but I’ll give her the benefit of the doubt as I don’t speak cat.

John’s club made 120 loans in order to make 10 shillings at a penny a loan. There were only seven Secret Seven books out by 1955, so if they were equally loaned out that was about 17 loans per book.

Cheeky sounds more realistic than Kiki, if less hilarious.

The missing portion is a coupon of some kind – not another letter – as you’ll see in the next few letter pages.

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Monday #602

Yep, I know it’s Tuesday but Monday rather ran away from me. There was taking Brodie to school, then going to work, and picking Brodie up from school, then a very busy Halloween party at the library. I was tired from just watching the kids do all the activities!

Letters to Enid part 60

and

October round up

Benjy and the Others isn’t a book I’ve mentioned often here – in fact I think I’ve mentioned it only once – as it’s something I don’t have and may never have.

It’s the third Happy House Children book, and having only had one printing, it’s pretty rare, and commands high prices.

A copy just sold on eBay for £500! But then another sold for just £100, which I suppose isn’t too bad by comparison.

The only copy available right now is sitting at over £200.

The “completed listings” filter on eBay is handy for seeing what a book might sell for, rather than looking at what people have simply listed them for.

 

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Malory Towers on TV series three – Episodes nine and ten

After a shorter break than previously, I’m back with more (probably over-critical) thoughts on two more Malory Tower episodes.


The Hamper

I think I’ve only just realised that all the episodes are The something. Which limits them a bit! This one sounds like another filler, but we’ll see if it develops the plots further.

What worked well in this episode

Miss Johnson continues to slowly and insidiously lock the school down. Incoming letters are now being read before they are passed on to the girls. She also shows that she really does have a prejudice against Darrell who gets all the blame for the mouse trick. (I actually think it’s fair, in this instance, that there is a punishment as they took advantage of the trick to leave class and go play lacrosse. I’m generally on the girls’ side when they play a trick that is funny while briefly disrupting class, but they took it rather far this time!) Mam’zelle and Matron’s reactions to the mouse were hilarious.

I was glad to see Matron back as, strangely, she was completely absent from the previous two episodes. I don’t know if she has other obligations, or if she was ill/in quarantine, but there was no on-screen explanation.

Alicia hiding her tricks in the cake was funny, especially as Matron almost ate them but was put off by the prunes. Her secret message was fun – very Five Find Outers.

It was also good to see Mavis again, and although it wasn’t good that she has laryngitis, it is good that they have continued that thread of plot.

In a rare moment from the books it was nice to see Darrell making the team, having thought she didn’t as she only checked the reserves.

What didn’t make sense

I was a little confused with the opening scene – Sally, gazing wistfully out of the window in her pyjamas, lamenting that recovering from mumps is no fun. Why is she back if she’s not recovered? She’s apparently not allowed to play lacrosse as she’s not well.

The mouse “trick” was terrible. I can see that being caught with a fake mouse would have gotten them into real trouble, but a grey sock on a string is a really pathetic mouse analogue – it’s massive for one, more rat-sized than mouse! As it was just a sock on a string Alicia could have just put a note in the cake telling them how to do it instead of sending one. Likewise, Darrell drawing attention to it in the dorm was silly. I doubt Miss Johnson would have noticed a balled-up sock sitting on a bedside table without her pulling it along on a string.

Matron takes the cake (very in-character) but leaves the girls with the rest of the hamper, all that food which they are not allowed to eat anywhere but the dining hall as per the new rules. Miss Johnson sees the cake crumbs in the dorm later and chastises them for leaving crumbs for mice, but makes no mention of the no food rule. Similarly, the girls are constantly talking in the corridors and often talking to Ron, which is also against the rules. Now I think about it – so is them wearing their lacrosse uniforms in the dorm!

The fake mouse suddenly made Mary-Lou worried that the mouse traps would catch a real mouse. An old building like Malory Towers would probably always have mouse traps set up as it would almost certainly have mice, given it has huge grounds and a load of girls leaving crumbs everywhere.

Darrell’s tantrum at the end was baffling. She, like Mary-Lou was worried about real mice being harmed. So it makes sense that she would sabotage the traps. But why on earth did she start wrecking the classroom to do so? Tipping out the contents of the bin and a drawer were unnecessary and a bizarre delayed temper tantrum. Darrell in the books often acted in the heat of the moment – she didn’t trash things after the fact, and certainly not for discovering she hadn’t made the reserve list.

I may be being overly critical again but how did Darrell make the team considering she didn’t exactly shine in the match at Malory Towers, and didn’t make the away match as she was in trouble? I’m glad they are showing that being a team player is important, not just scoring goals, but it seems unlikely.

What also makes no sense is having made it a complicated inter-school competition. If girls from 3 schools make up the team, who are they playing? How many fee-paying schools are there within a reasonable driving distance for games? Do they play against other mixed teams from the same three schools?

Other thoughts

I was left wondering if Darrell even be allowed to play any team lacrosse, seeing as she can’t keep out of trouble. (Which is at least in part her own fault, not just Miss Johnson’s vendetta!)

The final scene has Darrell making plans to use the skeleton key that Alicia sent. I wrote:

She’s going to get cauuught and in even bigger trouble!

Over-all this was a bit of a filler episode, as nothing major happened, but it did introduce the skeleton key which will be important later on I’m sure.


The Peaches

With a title like that this will surely be another filler episode.

What worked well in this episode

Jean’s little moment of turn-coating was well-done, as it turned out to be a deliberate plan to get Sally banned from the circus trip.

The whole peaches story might actually seem silly to children today – but tinned fruit was still rationed until May 1950, and series three is set in around 1949/50. From what I can gather peaches were rarer than some other tinned fruit and were a real treat. Saying that – while rationing has been mentioned once or twice it hasn’t seemed to have impacted their meals or midnight feasts much!

I loved their plan to swap the labels with tinned potatoes and managing to trick Miss Johnson with them. Thankfully she did blame Alicia and not Darrell! (Miss Johnson seems the type to decant tinned fruit into a pretty bowl before eating it, rather than eating it from a tin but perhaps this is a hint that she is not as posh as she seems?)

I liked the well-timed choreography of Mary-Lou and Irene getting out of bed in the san.

There are (possibly) little hints to the mystery here. Mary-Lou comments on the canvases being different to usual.

It was so good to see Matron and Mavis joining the girls’ side – at least for a short while – and hugely frustrating to see Miss Johnson sweet-talk her way out of trouble by pretending she had kept the conservatoire letters as a surprise. At least Mavis and Irene found out, though.

Lastly, it was good to see Gwen taking part in the midnight feast – the lure of peaches was obviously enough to sway her from the head of form duties!

What didn’t make sense

Miss Johnson’s TV seemed an extreme extravagance for the times (not that child viewers today might understand just how much!). There were only 350,000 TVs in the UK at that point – or in England, rather, as I’ve said before, Scotland and Wales didn’t get TV broadcasts until 1952! That (I think) works out at about one household in 20. A TV around that time would easily have cost seven weeks wages for an “industrial working” man. I assume this is to show that she’s not all that she seems, most teachers probably couldn’t afford a TV in 1950, even acting headmistresses – but again, would current viewers understand that?

The decision to keep four girls back for their plan was excessive, the more of them running about the more likely they are to be caught! In addition to that, the school wasn’t empty! Miss Johnson took six girls, leaving Matron and Mam’zelle Rougier (the only adults we know of) plus the cook(s), maids, presumably other teachers and all the other year groups. Covid has meant a really small cast but we are, I assume, supposed to believe that Malory Towers has more than fifteen people in it. Obviously it doesn’t make sense for us to see all the other girls going on their trips, but a two-second sentence like “The fourth-formers are going tomorrow,” would have created the illusion of other girls at least.

I have no idea why Miss Johnson kept the letters from the conservatoire, and Sally’s letter to Miss Grayling. Her plan was to prevent them from reaching their intended recipients, so why not destroy them?

Getting Mary-Lou and Irene out of the circus trip involved them sniffing onions to make them cough and sneeze. I don’t know about anyone else, but onions make my eyes run, never heard of them coughing sneezing and coughing!

Darrell and Sally are to paint pictures of Malory Towers as their punishment, but to free them up for searching Miss Johnson’s office Mary-Lou paints them instead. She doesn’t even try to paint less well – after Darrell and Sally protest that they aren’t good painters, nobody’s going to believe that those two painted those! (Spoiler, Miss Johnson rumbles them!)

Miss Johnson comes back from the circus early as she has so much work to do. Who is watching the girls then, and how are they getting back? For a woman who is so determined for them not to talk to the outside world letting them go to the circus in the first place seems risky – but to leave them there unchaperoned?

I can understand that they wanted to make the peaches more important than just something tasty the girls wanted, but the idea that a glass of peach syrup (tasty as it is) will cure laryngitis is ridiculous.


Other thoughts

I was convinced I had a nitpick about Irene looking through the keyhole and being able to see Darrell and Mavis behind the sofa, when the door to Miss Johnson’s office is on the other side of the room – but you can see another door to her room at the other side (which is never used). I can’t say I’ve ever noticed this before, but it has probably always been there.

I did go back to one or two episodes to see if I could see it, but the camera angle was wrong. I did notice, though, a bunch of paintings in her office – behind Sally when she first talks to Miss Johnson about the school rules…

This was just another filler episode, though. Yes, Darrell found out that Miss Johnson had hidden the letters, but as Miss Johnson managed to cover for herself we are no further forward. In addition to that Gwen has been criminally under-used! We’ve hardly seen her, apart from the odd line here and there.

 

 

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Rating the Secret Seven Titles

Once I have a good idea for a blog post I like to get the most out of it, which usually means turning it into a series of posts. I have already rated the Famous Five titles and have half had it in my mind to rate other Enid Blyton book titles.

Only, all the Adventure and Secret series titles are very straight forward, as are the Five Find-Outers and the Barney Mysteries…

But the Secret Seven are all extremely vague so I feel like I can summon up a few thousand words on that!

My personal view is that a good book title is one which tells you just enough about the book’s plot to make you want to read it. If it’s part of a long series it should also contain something that helps you differentiate it from the other books.

Some of the following book suggestions are serious, some are me mucking about as despite criticising the actual titles I couldn’t do any better. I’ll let you make up your own mind which are which.


The Secret Seven

What else would you call a book about the Secret Seven, other than… The Secret Seven?

Well, maybe something that told you a bit more about what happens in the book, and isn’t the same as the title of the series, meaning nobody knows if you’re talking about book 1 or all the books.

I actually have no idea what happens in almost any Secret Seven book as none of the titles are descriptive with the exception of Secret Seven Fireworks, but I’m sure there are actually fireworks in more than one title!

Anyway, this first one is about them restarting the Secret Seven in winter and sees them build a snowman. Having lost his Secret Seven badge in the snow Jack discovers strange goings on at an empty house near by, leading them to investigating.

Other title for this book could be Winter Adventure for The Secret Seven, or Secret Seven’s Winter Adventure, Secret Seven in the Snow or Secret Seven and the Empty House.

As this is the first book and it’s not too hard to remember that the first book is eponymously titled, I’ll be generous on the star rating.

⭐⭐⭐

 


Secret Seven Adventure

And here we fall straight into the issue that several Famous Five titles had. This could apply to all 15 books. Sure, some are slightly more adventurous, and others are more mysterious, but they’re all adventures of some kind.

The adventure in this case is investigating the theft of a necklace after seeing a man climbing a tree outside the house it went missing from.

Alternative titles could have been Secret Seven and the Jewel Thieves (or Thief, not sure how many there actually were, but I was inspired by one of my other favourites, Jessi and the Jewel Thieves), Secret Seven Catch a Thief or Secret Seven and the Stolen Necklace.


Well Done, Secret Seven

Continuing the vague theme, here we are congratulating the Secret Seven for… solving a mystery? Helping someone? Doing well at school? Who knows!

(Certainly not me – I’m having to look up synopses/reviews in order to briefly summarise them and come up with alternative titles.)

The story of this one is a bit more familiar to me – this is the one where they move their meetings to a tree house, only to discover another boy has been using it too, and he’s in trouble.

Other titles could be Secret Seven and the Runaway (though that could be confused with the later book about the runaway school girl) or Secret Seven and the Treehouse.


Secret Seven on the Trail

This is… almost descriptive. But on the trail of WHAT? They’re on the trail of something in pretty much every book.

This is the one where Susie forms the “Famous Five” and fakes a mystery, which then turns into a real one.

I can think of many possible titles – The Secret Seven vs The Famous Five (though this is rather misleading as it’s not the actual Famous Five, and could be mistaken for one of the other stories with this plot!), A False Trail for the Secret Seven, Secret Seven On the Track (as at least track links to the railway tracks in the story!).


Go Ahead Secret Seven

Go Ahead and DO WHAT?

This one is about how some practice shadowing sessions lead the Secret Seven into a mystery about missing dogs.

Missing dogs… now why couldn’t that have been in the title?

Secret Seven and the Missing Dogs. Secret Seven Sniff Out Lost Canines. Wagging Tails for the Secret Seven. Secret Seven and the Dognappers. Secret Seven Hunt for Missing Mutts.


Good Work Secret Seven

Pretty much the same title as Well Done Secret Seven. Perhaps we could have had fifteen of these?

Well Done Secret Seven
Good Work Secret Seven
Congratulations Secret Seven
Aren’t You Clever Secret Seven
Felicitations Secret Seven
All Hail the Secret Seven
Three Cheers for the Secret Seven (Yes, I forgot that this was already a title!)
Compliments to the Secret Seven
Excellent Mystery Solving Secret Seven
Bally Good Show Secret Seven
Rah Rah Secret Seven
A Round of Applause for the Secret Seven
Hooray Secret Seven
The Secret Seven are Jolly Good Fellows
Splendid Job Secret Seven

This is another Secret Seven vs Susie story, where Peter and Janet get accidentally kidnapped and they have to solve the mystery of who stole the car with them in it.

Better titles could have been Secret Seven Kidnap, Secret Seven and the Car Thieves, Motor Mystery for the Secret Seven.


Secret Seven Win Through

This says nothing about the book. As with the above title you could easily have fifteen titles along the lines of Secret Seven Do Well, Secret Seven are Successful…

Rather than a tree house this time the Seven have decamped to a cave in a quarry, but like in the tree house book (have literally had to scroll back up to check which title it was – Well Done.) someone else is secretly using their meeting place and they have to figure out who it is.

The location could have been included in the title. Secret Seven and the Cave, Secret Seven in the Quarry, Secret Seven and the Mystery Cave Dweller.


Three Cheers Secret Seven

Another congratulatory title, see above!

At the risk of making them all sound with Friends episodes this is the one with the toy aeroplane. The aeroplane is accidentally flown onto a balcony of an empty house, and much like in the first book (and indeed The Mystery of the Secret Room) something funny is going on as the house isn’t as empty as it should be.

Possible titles could have been Secret Seven and the Empty House (but that could apply to book #1 too), or Secret Seven and the Flyaway Aeroplane.


Secret Seven Mystery

They are literally ALL mysteries…

Secret Seven Mystery
Secret Seven Solve a Mystery
A Mystery for the Secret Seven
Secret Seven Have a Mystery to Solve
Mysterious Goings on For the Secret Seven
Secret Seven Find a Mystery
The Secret Seven Stumble Into Another Mystery
The Mystery of Why The Secret Seven Titles Are All So Vague
Ok I ran out of ideas quite quickly there.

Anyway, this is the mystery of a local school girl who looks like she’s run away.

I can see why the Secret Seven appears in each title in the same way as Five or Adventure or Mystery Of appears in other series titles, to make it clear what series it belongs to. Still, it’s quite limiting as it’s rather long already. But other possible titles her could have been Secret Seven and the Missing Girl or Secret Seven and the Hunt for Elizabeth.7


Puzzle for the Secret Seven

Well, that’s just another way of saying Mystery for the Secret Seven, isn’t it? And as we have already established, they are all mysteries!

This one isn’t about jigsaws – as much as I love them, the Secret Seven doing a jigsaw would make for a dull book. Rather it is about how the Seven help an old Gypsy lady, who then comes to stay on Peter and Janet’s farm, and the mystery of who stole the scarecrow’s clothes and an antique violin.

Perhaps also too vague but Secret Seven Do a Good Deed, or Secret Seven and the Scarecrow’s Stolen Clothes.


Secret Seven Fireworks

Finally – a title that hints to the contents of the book! Unsurprisingly this one is set in November and sees them making a guy for the bonfire. Meanwhile Colin’s grandmother is burgled and they must find the culprit.

This is by far the best title – though when I read it I always want it to refer to a (figuratively) explosive situation for the Seven.

There’s also the issue of Good Work Secret Seven being rather a lot about fireworks. I checked – fireworks are mentioned 40 times in Secret Seven Fireworks, and 35 times in Good Work Secret Seven. So Secret Seven Fireworks is about 14% more firework-y and I suppose deserves to get the title.

It could have been called Secret Seven Bonfire, Remember Remember the Secret Seven or Secret Seven and the Guy.

⭐⭐⭐⭐


Good Old Secret Seven

Yawn. See my list of congratulatory titles somewhere above!

This one’s very reminiscent of Five Have a Wonderful Time (an equally unhelpful title, I know – that’s the one at Faynights Castle with the kidnapped scientist with big eyebrows), with the Seven sharing a telescope with Susie and spotting a man’s head at the window of a castle tower.

This one was quite hard actually! Secret Seven and the Telescope sounds like they took up astronomy. Secret Seven Spy a Mysterious Head in a Castle Window is descriptive, but dreadful. Secret Seven Go to Torling Castle?


Shock for the Secret Seven

Not exactly descriptive, but a nice change from Congratulations, Mystery and Adventure.

Ruining my ideas for Go Ahead Secret Seven, this one’s about dognappers too. But it’s also about Jack leaving the Seven (making them the Six) and threatening to form a new Secret Seven with Susie and some of her friends.

Alternative titles: The Secret Seven become The Secret Six, Secret Seven Lose a Member, Secret Seven and More Missing Dogs.

 

⭐⭐


Look Out Secret Seven

Another slightly less vague title, but what are they looking out for? As they solve a mystery in every book they must always have to Look Out for the bad guys and/or Susie!

This one’s a double mystery – someone’s stolen a retired general’s medals, and someone’s stealing eggs from nests in the woods.

Two mysteries make this a more difficult one to title – though the eggs are probably a secondary plot. A Double Mystery for the Secret Seven or Secret Seven and the Medal Thief/Thieves?

Two stars is probably too generous but it’s at least better than many of the one star ones!

⭐⭐


Fun For the Secret Seven

Are we supposed to believe that the Secret Seven have not enjoyed their previous fourteen adventures, but instead, have reluctantly dragged their feet through all those mysteries? No? Then they were having fun all along? Thought so.

This starts out with the Seven trying to help someone and ends in a case of horse thieves (much like the first book!).

Though it could be confused with the first book, the horsey element is probably the strongest theme for the title. Secret Seven and the Horse Thieves, or if you’re into alliteration (and who isn’t!) Secret Seven and the Elusive Equines.


Obviously these “terrible” titles had no impact on the popularity of the series or the level of sales. They could have been called Secret Seven 1, Secret Seven 2, and still sold out. In fact they barely need a title – just the Enid Blyton name would have been enough!

I just wish they’d used something a bit more descriptive and interesting – and better than my suggestions!

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Monday #601

As it has been the school holidays I decided (rather last-minute) that I would take a writing break, hence the sudden silence here. Did I use that time to figure out the mystery of the Monday numbering? No, I did not. But I did watch a couple of episodes of Malory Towers, so that’s something!

Rating the Secret Seven Titles

and

Malory Towers on TV: Series three

The intriguingly titled The School Library Mystery is a recent impulse buy for me. I’d never heard of it, or the author – Agnes Furlong – before. But I do love children’s mystery books from the 50s, and you know I can’t resist a book with library in the title!

Review probably to come, at some point.

My copy doesn’t have a dustjacket, but doesn’t it remind you of the one for Smuggler’s Top?

 

 

 

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Letters to Enid part 59: From volume 3 issue 21

Previous letters pages can be found here.


Letters page from Volume 3, issue 21.
October 12th – 25th, 1955.

OUR

LETTER PAGE

A letter from Wendy Bowles, Germiston, South Africa.
Dear Enid Blyton,
One day two boys shot at the wild pigeons feeding on the roof of my friend’s house. They hit one, and it came sliding down the roof, and then fell to the ground. I took it to my playroom, and saw that the shot from the gun had broken and splintered one wing. I sent my friends to get the things I needed while I put a piece of white cloth out and prepared to set to work. Valerie held the bird and with my thin tweezers I eased the shot out and bathed the wing. The tricky part of the business was getting out the splintered bones. Then I put boracic powder on the injured part and put the pigeon in a quiet place. The wing took a long time to heal, but it is better now, and the pigeon is very friendly and can fly again. We now have our own “clinic” for the birds of the country around here.
Your loving friend,
Wendy Bowles.

(This is one of the most interesting letters I have ever had, Wendy. I am sure all my readers will like to read it. You win my prize.)

A letter from Ruth Husband, Southampton.
Dear Enid Blyton,
I am one of your Busy Bees and I have buzzed like mad this year, having delivered about 45 bottles to the dispensary, about ten boxes of tin-foil/milk-tops, and I am hoarding stamps, farthings, half-pennies and pennies which I shall send to Headquarters. All Daddy’s pals at work save tinfoil, Auntie does and Mummy does.
Much buzz from
Ruth Husband.

(Thank you, Ruth – you certainly are a very loudly-buzzing Busy Bee!)

A letter from Jeffrey Lines, Broadclyst, Devon. (Aged five.)
Dear Enid Blyton,
This is my first letter I ever wrote. I went to the dentist and I was brave and I got a Noddy book, and now I want to go to him again.
Love and XXXXX from
Paul Collins.

(I think you wrote your very first letter well, Paul. Write to me again soon.)


I wonder where Wendy learned to remove bullets and broken bones from a bird’s wing! Very lucky for the bird, I suppose!

Ruth certainly sounds very busy – her letter reminds me of the old Blue Peter appeals where they’d ask for scrap metal, stamps etc each year.

Luckily Brodie likes going to the dentist, but I’d not be above bribing him with books to keep him going if it was needed.

 

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Monday #600

I wanted to lead with some sort of exclamation of how can it be 600 weeks since I started this blog? But the maths just isn’t mathing there. It’ll be 12 years in around 4 weeks, so it should be more like Monday #620 today.

We didn’t do Monday posts to begin with. Then for a while we had unnumbered Monday posts. The first numbered one is actually Monday #166, because I counted up how many Mondays/weeks there had been since we started – and I skip numbers if I miss a Monday. So it should match up. But it doesn’t, so I’ve obviously gone wrong somewhere – and that’s after I renumbered dozens of Monday posts, having accidentally misnumbered one and then carried on.

It honestly doesn’t matter, but it IS going to annoy me. I feel like I’ve ranted about this before on a Monday as I’ve probably noticed the discrepancy at another milestone, and I’ll probably keep noticing it unless I get around to fixing it…

Me trying to figure out what went wrong

Letters to Enid part 59

and

Rating the Secret Seven titles

Enid Blyton has been deemed worthy of a Folio Society edition of The Enchanted Wood.

Featuring illustrations by Jonathan Burton, an introduction by Michael Morpugo and supposedly The truest text to the original 1939 publication*, the book costs a rather eye-watering £49.95.

It looks as if the other books will be done too, as it refers to the landmark new Folio series. 

I think it’s good that Blyton is being considered a classic and worthy of special editions, but you can generally buy an early, illustrated edition with the original 1939 text, for less than £50.

*It does appear that the children have their original names, but I assume some other changes have still been made.

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Malory Towers on TV series three – Episodes seven and eight

I think it was JUNE the last time I watched and reviewed any episodes of this. I was getting quite into it and the mystery of what Mrs Johnson was up to, but then the school holidays started and I think I just forgot about it. I remembered it a few weeks ago but never seem to have had time to do it. So here I am on a Sunday while Brodie is at the swimming, sitting down to watch at least one episode in the hope I can get two watched and reviews posted in the next week or two!


 The Dance

This episode reminds me rather of The Dress from series one. A whole episode which has nothing at all to do with the original book, and even in terms of the TV plot seems like a filler story.

In short, some boys from Thackery (the losers from The Quiz?) are coming for a dance lesson, but Gwen goes completely overboard, referring to it as a Dance (you can practically hear the capital letter) and making the girls dress up and decorate the hall. In doing so she manages to not only drop Mary-Lou into trouble but completely betray her into the bargain.

The side plot (which is a bit baffling) involves Mary-Lou and Darrell finding a statue in the woods.

Let’s start with what was good.

Although not strictly necessary it was great to see the girls in their 1940s dresses rather than their school uniforms.

Gwen’s dress is an odd choice, much more sombre than the others, and the dark burgundy velvet looks almost black in some scenes making her look like she’s attending a funeral, not a dance.

There was also much amusement with Bill, whose “best clothes” turned out to be trousers and shirt, and did not live up to Gwen’s expectations.

The costume dress she tried on was definitely worse. I thought for a moment (as Sally “accidentally” rips the collar) that we were in for a Ron Weasley job of removing unwanted embellishments, but no it’s just discarded, and she wears the trousers. I enjoyed Mam’zelle Rougier calling her tres chic much to Gwen’s disgust.

I also thought it was very like Bill’s New Frock, the Anne Fine book, where Bill (a boy) wakes up one day as a girl and must wear a frilly pink dress to school. Not sure if this was a deliberate homage though!

Although I often dislike Gwen, I enjoy Danya Griver’s acting as nasty Gwen, like when she responds to Darrel’s statement about not spending her married life organising tea dances with:

I don’t think anyone was expecting YOU to be a good wife.

Her inspecting all the girls’ clothing is also very well acted.

Mary-Lou draws the statue for the others, which was a nice nod back to her revealed skills in series two. Always like it when the writers don’t completely forget about these things.

Darrell and Sebastion’s rivalry and verbal sparring was fun.

Things that made little or no sense

Bill wearing trousers was a perfect opportunity for her to take part in a boy’s role as there are eight girls to four boys, but instead they have her sit out of the paired dancing. Similarly Irene brought down gramophone records, but ends up sitting out and playing the piano. It all works out in the end as Darrell and Mary-Lou are off getting in trouble, but it’s not as if that was pre-planned… This seems to be only to allow for extra drama as she rushes in to save Gwen from a banana peel. Again, it doesn’t make sense as one of the boys drops a banana peel and instead of Bill just picking it up, she cuts in, dances with Sally, saying they must “save” Gwen. I don’t know how she knows it’s for Gwen, and why she doesn’t then dance with Gwen to tell her/guide her to avoid it or even better, just pick it up or kick it to the side which is what she ends up doing anyway.

As both Jonathan Creek and Mythbusters have proved, banana peels are actually not all that slippery, but I suppose the Thackery boys wouldn’t know that.

The (frankly over-ripe and disgusting looking) bananas were provided by the school, though it’s pointed out that most people haven’t seen a banana since the war. So why has the school got them, and why have they been left to go off if they’re such a rare treat? Applying verbal historical context only really works if the actions match.

I expected Ellen to present a bigger problem, as we’ve already seen her struggle with the uniform. But she has a dress, which admittedly Gwen does call not very a la mode, hinting that it is a bit out of date, but I thought it was one of the nicer ones there. Certainly nicer than Jean’s stripy one.

I actually thought the idea of a dance lesson with boys was quite bizarre under Miss Johnson’s rule as it seems a) an unnecessary distraction from their studies and b) an opportunity for the girls to tell someone about the harsh new rules etc. Given she’s so adamant that the girls don’t leave the building, talk to the staff or write uncensored letters (more on that in episode 8) it seems weird to allow half a dozen boys in.

Darrell’s fake illness was terrible, as was them having a half hour break from a lesson which had barely seemed to start.

I remain baffled by Miss Johnson. She refuses to believe that Darrell and Mary-Lou saw a statue. Yet, she has no reason to believe they’d make up such a wild story especially when they take her out to see it. Of course it’s gone when they get there, so I’m sure she organised it to be removed. So SHE knew it was there, and she knew that THEY knew it was there… obviously she can’t admit to it, but why not just act surprised and only accuse them of lying when there’s no statue to be found? (I’ve sort of spoiled the big reveal by looking at the show on IMDb, I was just checking the episode titles but they come with a one or two sentence descriptor which gives rather a lot away… but a lot of her behaviour remains inexplicable)

At the end of the episode she reveals that she knew Gwen had lied about Mary-Lou, but still manages to turn the blame onto Mary-Lou for being gullible, and suggests that Gwen inform her of any misbehaving. Obviously she wants Gwen on-side, but is she really that worried about the third formers finding out her secret?

What I disliked

Not a criticism (this time) but I was FURIOUS with Gwen, and also sick and tired of all the other girls constantly forgiving her for her atrocious behaviour.

In her desperation to make the hall attractive she sends Mary-Lou out for ivy, telling her that as Head of Form she is allowed to give permission for them to leave the school.

Mary-Lou being Mary-Lou believes her, but Miss Johnson then reminds Gwen that nobody is to leave the school. The ivy is a dead give away that someone did leave the school and so Gwen blurts out that it was all Mary-Lou’s idea, and she tried to stop her…

UGH. I can understand her not wanting to get into trouble or disappoint her father but to tell such a blatant lie, in front of Mary-Lou… The girls are disgusted with her but I know by the next episode(s) they’ll have forgiven her.

Yes, a statue in the woods is strange and interesting, but Darrell’s wild determination to go off and look at it – for fun – is infuriating. The girls have been in SO MUCH trouble already for leaving school – and Darrell in particular over the temper tantrum with the book etc – that this seems like an extremely flimsy reason for her to risk more trouble. Helping a friends, sure. Looking at a bust (which they’re all convinced is massively rare and old and valuable for no reason) no way.

She declares that maybe it’s a clue, but to what??

She also ruins any chance she had of defending Mary-Lou against Gwen’s lie by losing her temper and while not exactly shouting, raising her voice and being argumentative. She also manages to dob herself and Mary-Lou for leaving school themselves.


The Sisters

This is another episode which has a new plot designed only to allow Miss Johnson to become more draconian. Felicity comes to the school to sit the entry exam and Miss Johnson starts to read and censor the girls’ letters.

What worked well?

I appreciated that Alicia was referenced in both this episode and the previous one. Normally girls who leave are forgotten, but I know that she returns, so this is perhaps a little foreshadowing?

While the letter censoring made me mad, it was fairly well done, and illustrated what a tight grip Miss Johnson has on the school. The girls are writing home as a class assignment, and Miss Johnson tells Irene not to mention order marks and that they must keep all their letters upbeat. It’s all so sinister!

The viewer is (I assume, like me) willing the girls to get a message out somehow, and they very nearly do, until Miss Johnson decides to check Felicity’s pockets on the presence it’s to prevent exam cheating. She’s given up even justifying her actions/rules as being for the girls’ benefit as she simply reads the letter and confiscates it.

What Darrell wrote –

An awful old demon with pointless and stupid rules that are driving us all potty.

Was hilarious, though also pretty stupid as she wrote it in class and her only defence was I didn’t mean it like that.

Frustratingly the tension continues as while Felicity is able to tell her father about the new regime at Malory Towers, Miss Johnson is more than capable of smoothly reassuring him on the phone. (There were hints of you wait until [our] father hears about this, ala Draco Malfoy here, but Mr Rivers is no Lucius.)

I liked Ellen getting to show off her intelligence by writing a coded letter which looks like a terrible poem. Even better that it gets past Miss Johnson’s censoring. But it’s being sent to Alicia – what good can she do, I wonder?

Spring crashes heavily over our lovely island,
Sweet little irises keep erupting,
And proud roses illuminate softly our nook.

Can you crack the code where Gwen and Mrs Johnson couldn’t?

Things that made no sense

Since Miss Johnson set her new rules the girls have banned from leaving the building without a permission slip. While it’s never stated that the girls don’t have them in this episode, they are seen lounging around by the driveway, visiting the greenhouses, going swimming and HANGING AROUND THE STABLES. It’s as if that rule has conveniently been forgotten to allow various parts of this episode to work.

Miss Johnson tells them that they are not to show Felicity the pool or the stables, so they decided to do it anyway including planning a midnight feast – risking getting into huge trouble yet again for something utterly frivolous. Felicity has visited the school before and will see all these things when she joins next term.

Their “genius” plan is for Mary-Lou to swap clothes with Felicity, and do the exam prep for her while she goes off for fun. The school only seems to have about ten students so it’s glaringly obvious that Felicity is not one of them, even in an orange dress and Mary-Lou’s glasses.

Mary-Lou fools Gwen (from behind, with a hat on) but Gwen is on a self-absorbed ramble. And Mary-Lou is stupid enough to react to an unkind comment and give it away in the end.

Gwen, presumably forgiven after the previous episode, decides not to tell on Mary-Lou, but tries to get the others in trouble for going down to the pool with Felicity. She really doesn’t think it through – it’s like she just can’t help herself. As, how can Felicity be at the pool, if Gwen hadn’t reported her missing from the classroom before now?

Felicity and Mary-Lou swap clothes back in under ten seconds which seems impossible. It’s not one continuous camera shot, but we see Felicity go into the hall, and Darrell walk upstairs. Darrell only gets halfway when she hears Miss Johnson coming along, talking to Gwen. Miss Johnson and Gwen then walk into the hall and find Felicity and Mary-Lou in their own clothes. Yes, Mary-Lou has her dress on inside out, but Felicity has had time to put on her dress, button it up, then her cardigan and hat.


 

 

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September 2024 round up

September has turned into October, so the nights are getting darker, and it’s generally colder. Though it’s still quite warm in the sun sometimes, the slippers and blankets are out at home!


What I read

I also had quite a slow month for books in September, although I enjoyed everything I read a few were quite slow starters that took me a while to get into.

What I read:

  • The Wisdom of War (Buffyverse #63) – Christopher Golden
  • Of Mice and Murder (Nevermore Bookshop Mysteries #2) – Steffanie Holmes
  • The Lamplighters – Emma Stonex
  • The Last Bookshop in London -Madeline Martin
  • The Masquerades of Spring – (Rivers of London) Ben Aaronovitch
  • The Ship of Adventure
  • The Royal Librarian – Daisy Wood

I ended the month still working through:

  • The Bookshop Ladies – Faith Hogan
  • The Circus of Adventure
  • The Lighthouse Keeper’s Daughter – Hazel Gaynor

What I watched

  • We are up to ER season 15 (the last one, and full of cameos from former characters), plus Only Connect, Taskmaster, Only Murders in the Building and Rings of Power.
  • With Brodie we watched Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs and Inside Out 2.
  • I’m on to season six of Charmed, and starting to think of what I’ll watch next.
  • On Tuesdays my sister and I watched Pride and Prejudice (the one with Keira Knightley) and Little Women (the one with Winona Ryder) 

What I did

  • We went geocaching a few times including along a bit of old railway line that we hadn’t been along before – it turned out to be a scorching day though when we’d left the house it was cool and misty.
  • Hung a bird feeder in our back garden, and the local birds have been devouring the seeds at an unbelievable speed! It has mostly been sparrows, with the magpies collecting up anything dropped as they’re too big to sit on it.
  • I did another Harry Potter jigsaw, 1000 pieces this time, and had to do the outside last as it was the hardest bit!
  • Visited the Botanic Gardens for a wander

How was your September?

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Monday #599

It’s the very end of September now and temperatures have plummeted. We’ve had frost in the morning, so it’s not a great time for our boiler to have started acting up. It should hopefully be fixed by Monday afternoon, though.

As much as I love reading about the 1940s and 50s, and I like the style and aesthetics of that time I very much like my modern central heating and have no desire to live without it! (Camping and outdoor living is also, not for me, but I say that mostly so I can add an illustration of outdoor living and not leave this post illustration-less.)

September round up

and

Malory Towers on TV series 3

I randomly select one page from the archive and then scroll though it to choose a post to highlight here. This time I spotted one of Stef’s posts where she came up with some ideas for Blyton products – and having had a read through at least 2 of them have happened. Maybe even 2.5 if you are generous. (I should get her to write another post hoping for Enid Blyton Lego…)

I think I may actually write a post on what did and didn’t come true soon.

What Blyton products we would like to see in 2016

 

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Reading The Mountain of Adventure to Brodie

I actually got confused today (it really doesn’t take much!) as I was idly trying to work out what part of Mountain we had got to, but couldn’t remember. We’re actually reading Circus at the moment, but as I’ve spent this week skimming through Mountain to remind me of all the things Brodie said, it felt as if we had just read it.

We actually read it from the 7th of August to the 29th of August – so I’m catching up!


A book of many emotions

I know that some people dislike this one (or at least, like it less) as they are not fans of the weird sci-fi stuff, and they find the Welsh whateffers to be silly and over-the-top. Brodie had a lot of feelings, but none of them were of dislike.

Horror

The idea that there might be wolves prowling around

The notion of men being forced to jump to their deaths

Even more so that one of the children might have to try out the wings

Dismay/despair

That David and the donkeys had abandoned the children and left them lost

That the helicopter wouldn’t fly, that they lost in the mountain, and that  someone’s coming up the ladder just as they are so close to escape… I swear he was quite breathless!

Fear

When the wolves came back at night and get between Philip and the cave he was quite frightened and wanted to sit close to me, and again when the dogs are hunting them near the end

Worry

He was extremely concerned about Kiki when she’s separated from Jack, and kept asking if they’d find her again. He was afraid the men would hurt her, and then that she wouldn’t make it out of the mountain with the others.

Relief

When the wolves turn out to be dogs

When Kiki is heard (and obviously alive), and when she flies out to join them once they’ve escaped.

Confusion

He was baffled by the cave – though he thought the wheel might drain the pool and lead to an entrance under water.

He wasn’t sure whether or not to believe in these marvellous wings (the story does seem to suggest that there ARE anti-gravity rays in the mountain) and kept asking me if they were really real. I think he’d love to have had a go if they were.

Disappointment

He really had hoped that Philip could keep all the dogs, and snowy!

Joy

As always he loved all of Kiki’s antics, and was particularly pleased that she saved the day again. As he put it

Kiki always confuses the bad guys and scares them off!

He also loved them feeding Philip secretly.


Reading aloud

This one required probably the most amount of thinking on my feet to adapt as I read.

There’s some irritating ‘poor weak girls’ stuff in this one, and also a lot of problems with the way Sam is described.

First up everyone was still after their donkey rides, not just the girls and Mrs Mannering.

Philip said Let’s get the food out. Instead of Get out the food, Lucy-Ann and Dinah. Not even a please! The girls wash the dishes afterwards, which is fine as the boys are busy unpacking the donkeys.

“Poor Lucy-Ann!” said Philip. “We certainly do happen on strange things. I think it’s very exciting. I love adventures.”
“Yes, but you’re a boy,” said Lucy-Ann. “Girls don’t like that kind of thing.”
“I do,” said Dinah at once. “I’ve enjoyed every single one of our adventures

I left that part as Dinah gets to disagree with him! Brodie agreed that girls can like adventures, like George.

I can’t remember exactly what I said but I know I changed (or maybe just skipped) the second half of this:

All the same it was a pity [Philip] wasn’t with the others—especially as now there was only Jack to look after the girls.

I decided NOT to go with black, black, black, when David runs off but hadn’t thought that far ahead and very quickly chose eyes, eyes, eyes! (I could have, with hindsight, gone with a face).

You could perhaps explain David’s reaction as him never having seen a Black person before – he lives in a remote part of Wales where there was unlikely to be many Black people in 1949. (In the 40s there were probably around 10,000 Black people living in the UK, predominantly in port cities).

I actually haven’t checked this in any modern versions – I wonder what it has been updated to?

Lucy-Ann’s reaction isn’t much better – certainly, you’d be surprised to see a face in a tree when you thought you were alone in the valley. But it’s not just that it’s a face, but it’s a black face, as if this is somehow more horrifying. Perhaps, again, it was merely meant to be surprising, but I felt that bit off anyway.

The blackness is (like with Jo-Jo) remarked on rather too often, so I omitted some of it again.

I did not use negro which both Blyton and the children use repeatedly instead of just man, particularly frustratingly they do this long after it’s established that his name is Sam!

For the most part this all meant very tiny differences between the text and what I read aloud. Omitting a single word here and there, switching a single for for man – as I try to stick as close to the books as much as possible.

Sam’s dialogue needed a bit more as I chose to not use such broken English.

Lucy-Ann rushing off to tell the others had to change too as it wouldn’t have made sense for her to rush off and say eyes, or a man’s eyes or anything. So she said a man and Philip said It must have been his eyes David saw.

Not the best bit of dialogue ever but best I come up with on the spur of the moment.

For the Japanese servants I missed off the references to little men and their little feet. I also referred to them as the men rather than the Japanese at least some of the time as it was annoying that they were referred to as a nationality rather than as people.

I definitely did NOT do the You be caleful, much bitee, stuff!

Anyway, on to accents now – all terrible.

The Welsh accents start from p5 but thankfully are gone by chapter 7 with the exception of a few rare words from David, and a few lines from Mr Evans near the end.

As I said above a lot of people are annoyed by the look yous and whateffers but I found them very useful for getting me into my “Welsh” accent, which I will never do in front of a Welsh person for fear of offending them horrifically.

I found Evans/Effans rather annoying as it’s one thing for Mrs Evans to pronounce their name with the F sound, but Blyton calls him it too and I was forever getting it muddled.

Meier got a vaguely German sort of accent which slipped towards Russia/Eastern Europe sometimes. Basically I switch in V for W and see where it goes. No idea what nationality Meier is supposed to be!

Brodie helped with some of Kiki’s noises. He likes to do all her hiccups and added the farmyard sounds as well. (Except for turkeys as I had to get Alexa to play that for him.)

I (as always) did not attempt any of her special sound effects like a car changing gear or the express train in a tunnel (human voice boxes are just not that good, or at least mine isn’t!).

Donkey noises I cannot do, but at least a goat is easy enough.

I was excited for the don’t forget Bill Smugs part, and his reaction was pretty great. Though he didn’t didn’t at first think it WAS Bill. I think he suggested it was Mr Evans or Trefor or someone equally improbable.


Other derailments

I feel like we didn’t have as many conversations/explanations in this book.

He did assert (several times) that of course they were going to have an adventure.

He (predictably) gasped when they mentioned Scotland.

He sighed and said yes, you have to wash when Philip asked – he doesn’t like having to wash up before meals any more than Philip does.

He didn’t think that spring water could be as nice as lemonade.

He asked what panniers were.

He predicted that they would get lost in the mist and inside the mountain.

The shuddering was an earthquake, and the crack in the mountain was a secret passage. 

He sang little bit of bread and no cheese when the yellowhammer was mentioned (he loves to sing this, sometimes when we’re out and hear a yellowhammer,  but also sometimes at random).

He knew what gravity is of course. I explained how Blyton often used the youngest of the group to ask what might seem like silly questions so that she could explain it to the readers and he was quite impressed by that.

The slow worm babies were so cute.


I forgot to ask him at the end who his favourite characters/what his favourite bits were, and he’ll never remember now!

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Letters to Enid part 58: From volume 3 issue 20

Previous letters pages can be found here.


Letters page from Volume 3, issue 20.
September 28th – October 11th, 1955.

OUR

LETTER PAGE

A letter from Caroline Hayes, Waikato, New Zealand.
Dear Enid Blyton.
I am going to tell you a sad story with a happy ending. One night my cat, Tuss, got into a terrible fight, and a cat clawed his right eye, and he became blind in that eye. I took him to the Vet who said that he would give me ten minutes to decide if he should destroy Tuss, or take out his blind eye, with no pain. I decided to have his eye taken out. Tuss stayed two days at the vet, then came home and after a week he was quite all right. He is now 13 years old and looks as young as can be and is as playful as a kitten.
Love and best wishes from
Caroline Hayes.

(What an interesting letter, Caroline. I have sent you my letter-prize.)

A letter from Anne Cooper, Meltham, Yorks.
Dear Enid Blyton,
If you remember, a few months ago you put in your magazine a coupon for anemones. I sent for them and put half of them in the garden. These last few weeks they have been in full bloom and are lovely flowers. We put the other half in last week and hope they will be as nice.
Yours truly,
Anne Cooper.

(I am very pleased you liked the anemones, Anne. Mine were lovely too.)

A letter from Briony Jordan, Hove 3.
Dear Miss Blyton,
Thank you very much for the lovely bicycle I won in your Diary Competition. I was so excited that I felt quite faint! My old bicycle is much too small now and nearly worn out, so this new one came just at the right time. Mummy and Daddy were very surprised and pleased too. Thank you again and lots of love, from
Briony Jordan.

(A very nice thank-you letter, Briony. I shall run the same competition in my Diary again this year, so look out for it!)


Unusual that of the three letters picked this week we have none that were about raising funds!

But we do have three letters of the type that Blyton also liked to pick.

One an interesting story about an animal (she often picks both pet stories and ones about garden wildlife).

Another about gardening, another popular topic.

And the last a thank-you letter – probably one of the less common ones as I’m sure she received thanks for all sorts of things constantly.

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