My sixteenth Noddy book: You’re a Good Friend, Noddy!

So we’re back to #16 in the series this week, for my 16th review. I was supposed to do this one last time but got the order wrong!

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This is a strange little story, I have to say.

We begin with the postman instead of the milkman, and Noddy receives an invite to a party at Big Ears’ toadstool house. Tessie Bear, the grown up Tubby Bears, the Wobbly Man and Miss Fluffy Cat are also invited according to the postie who has a lot of gossip to impart along with letters.

After a minor incident with a Toy Soldier and his gun Noddy gets himself ready for the party and uses his car to ferry some of the guests there. It turns out that it’s the birthday of Whiskers (Big Ears’ cat) and that’s what the party is in aid of. Everyone is glad that Tessie Bear has left Bumpy Dog at home they know he would cause chaos.

You can see where this is going, can’t you? Yes. Suddenly there’s barking in the distance. The Bumpy Dog then gatecrashes the party and Whiskers runs off.

Big Ears is absolutely furious and does a lot of shouting before using his stick to hit Bumpy Dog – which I’m sure will have been edited out in newer editions. Saying that, it’s illustrated on the back cover and I wonder if that’s been changed as well.

Big Ears blames Tessie Bear for not locking Bumpy Dog up securely and the party breaks up with very bad feelings between Noddy and Big Ears.

Of course nobody holds grudges very long in Toy Land and the next day Noddy goes to check on Big Ears, to see if Whiskers has come back. He hasn’t and Big Ears has gone to search for him.

Noddy and Big Ears end up in Toy Cat Town as they think that’s where Whiskers might have gone, even if he is a regular cat and not one who talks or wears clothes. Some of the Toy Cats look down on “common” cats who walk on four paws and only say miaow and hiss.

Anyway, Whiskers only passed through Toy Cat Town on his way to Wizard Town. Noddy is apprehensive of tangling with wizards, but being a brownie, Big Ears is unfazed. Wizard Town is full of houses with towers and quickly find a shop selling black cats, which of course, are good for helping wizards with spells.

Big Ears faces off with the first wizard he comes across and snaps his wand (I wonder if he had problems after that, like Ron Weasley, and ended up dribbling slugs.) He then finds out the shop has sold Whiskers to Wily Wizard for sixpence.

Naturally they then seek out Wily Wizard, who turns out to be not that wily at all. He just talks and talks and goes on and rambles and doesn’t let anyone get a word in edgeways. Between that and his ardour for Noddy’s car it means Big Ears is able to fetch Whiskers with little trouble.

I’m not going to give away the ending but it’s not as simple as Big Ears just walking, or driving, off with Whiskers. Wily Wizard not being that wily and Noddy being very generous contribute to the solution, as well as some rather un-Blytonian trickery from the good guys.

So there you have it! I prefer the Noddys with an element of mystery to them and in general I would place the magical or fantasy tales (from any of Blyton series) at the bottom of my preferences.

 

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The Wishing Chair Again reviewed by Laura

Out of the two Wishing Chair books I owned as a child, I always preferred the second – The Wishing Chair Again (published in 1950) – because the adventures were longer and seemed more interesting. It also introduced the character Winks the brownie, whose sheer naughtiness led them into some very unusual situations. So I was delighted to find this book in my husband’s childhood book collection and wrote this rather-long review (I just really enjoy this book!).

Cover by Hilda McGavin

Cover by Hilda McGavin

It starts with Mollie and Peter coming home for the holidays and wondering where Chinky and the Wishing Chair are, as they can’t be found in their playroom at the bottom of the garden. Chinky has been looking after the chair while they’re at school and since he couldn’t get into the playroom because the door was locked, he had to keep hiding it in the garden all morning!

In the first book the initial adventure is quite short, but this time they end up on a much longer first adventure (starting in the second chapter) when Peter tells the chair to take them to “Goodness Knows Where” – apparently it’s a real place – but the chair first takes them along a moonpath and then to Chinky’s cousin Sleep-Alone.

From here, they go to consult Goodness and then find the chair has been stolen, so they have to spend a couple of chapters first getting home and then finding their chair in Pin Village. But life’s never that simple and after a goblin called Tricky gets to it first, it takes until the end of chapter six before they finally have their chair back.

This is, of course, only the first adventure of many, with the chair taking them to the Village of the Slipperies and having its wings cut off. The growing ointment they get to solve this problem soon leads to another when the children use it to make their toys and Chinky’s wand grow wings and they take off for Toyland. The children and Chinky set off after them and find that the toys have ended up at Mister Grim’s School for Bad Brownies!

toys with wings wishing chair hilda mcgavin

This is where they meet Winks and Mister Grim, who appears to be the male version of Dame Slap from the Faraway Tree as he asks ridiculous questions – if he takes 52 hairs from his floor-length beard, how many will be left? – and deals out strokes with a stick for punishment. The stick is actually Chinky’s wand and the pixie soon devises a plan to get it back and use it to escape, so they can lead an army of toys to the school (led by a Golliwog – I’ve got one of the older versions that hasn’t been changed) to rescue the toys belonging to Mollie and Peter.

The children and Chinky rescue Winks at the same time and the brownie simply can’t stay out of trouble. There’s a visit to the Land of Goodies (one of my favourites from the Faraway Tree books), with delicious-sounding jam tart flowers, a ginger-beer stream and ice-cream growing on another plant in the cool valley. Winks first orders red pepper soup to be funny and then starts breaking and eating someone’s house, so he’s left behind and has to find his own way out of the chocolate cake prison.

The brownie is some help when Chinky and the chair disappear while the children are at the seaside – apart from dyeing his hands blue when they go to Mr Spells for help – but soon afterwards he steals a wand from Witch Wendle and turns Chinky into a puff of smoke. He in turn becomes a horrid smell as Chinky cast a spell with his own wand at the same time and the children have to go to Witch Wendle to find out how to get them back.

Witch Wendle says that the still smelly Winks really has to go back to school, but Mollie pleads for him to stay until she and Peter have to go back to boarding school. On their last day of holidays they make another attempt to get to the Land of Goodness Knows Where before deciding to land on Island of Surprises instead.

Like the last land at the end of each Faraway Tree book, the Island provides them with mostly nice surprises, like the car race and the ice-cream fountain. Winks tries to misbehave several times, but here the magic punishes him for being greedy or naughty and when he finally manages to annoy a witch, he’s sent back to Mister Grim then and there. Peter feels sorry for him and gives him the Tidbit Dish that he won in the car race, so he’ll get enough to eat at school – every time you lift the lid there’s a tidbit there, like a sausage or a bar of chocolate. Winks is sent off on a swan and the children and Chinky have to leave too, as the Island of Surprises always disappears at sunset.

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First Monday of June

Wow, where has the year gone? It will be summer before we know it! We’ve had a great week on the blog, and smashed our best daily views record too. This is what our stats page looked like that night.

65views

Hopefully we’ll have another good week this week, here’s what we’ve got for you to read:

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P.S. Thanks for the get well soon messages. I’m feeling much better now!

I will just end with a few pictures from my last walk (from before I fell ill!)

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The Ship of Adventure

The Ship of Adventure I bid on. Picture taken from eBay listing.

The Ship of Adventure I bid on. Picture taken from eBay listing.

I finally got around to finishing The Ship of Adventure for this week’s blog, at approximately 8pm yesterday (Sunday) and then had to sit down and write the blog. It was a good thing that I re-read the book as although I could remember vague details I didn’t remember enough to write a review on the book.

Just to summarise the story for those who don’t know, The Ship of Adventure starts with Dinah, Philip, Jack and Lucy-Ann trying to decide what they are going to do in their summer holidays, and wondering what Mrs Mannering has planned for them as she’s being all secretive. The children are excited to find out that she’s taking on a big cruise ship around the Mediterranean where she can “keep an eye” on them so they don’t fall into any more nasty adventures.

First of all, I would like to admit to something, something I only realised with this re-read. Now I have only read The Ship of Adventure once before, so I hope you can forgive me for not realising this until now, but I assumed that the Ship that was referenced in the title was the Viking Star, the big cruise ship that the four children and Mrs Mannering join to go on their cruising holiday. However in fact I believe the ship is actually the one that is found in the bottle that Lucy-Ann gets Philip for his birthday, as that is the one that starts off the big adventure.

Anyway so off the children go on this big ship with not a whiff of adventure in the air. This reminds me a little of one of the Famous Fives, Five go Down to the Sea I believe, where Julian makes them all promise (for Anne’s sake) that if an adventure comes their way, they shall just leave it and walk away. Its a similar feeling for the Trents and Mannerings in this adventure, because the first half of the book is a little slow paced, like nothing is going to pick up. Its not until just after half way through the book that things start to happen.

Naturally before Lucy-Ann finds her ship in a bottle for Philip’s birthday, the aforementioned boy finds himself another pet. This time a monkey called Micky that he rescues from a group of unkind children. Micky the monkey then plays a big part in the adventure and discovery of the all important treasure map. He also, strangely enough, gets taken home to England, allowed through customs and taken home. I don’t think Mrs Mannering would have been too impressed. I suppose Micky being allowed home with Philip is maybe a sign of how different things are now. Perhaps in the updated versions he’s left at the last place they visit or something. I don’t have a modern copy handy so I can’t check.

So the children are settling into their cruise when a boy joins them, Lucian who is accompanied by his Aunt and Uncle, Mr and Mrs Eppy. Mr Eppy always wears dark glasses and doesn’t like his nephew or the children. This makes him one of those grownups that has to be avoided and quite naturally (and rightly) the bad guy. We find out that Mr Eppy is extremely rich and likes to buy and sell islands in search of treasures, which for this treasure hunt makes him the perfect adversary.

There are lots of ins and outs in this adventure, lots of little things that add up quite quickly to a big adventure. Part of the reason everything seems to happen in the second half of the book is that poor Mrs Mannering has to leave to go and look after Aunt Polly, who you will remember from The Island of Adventure, (and oddly enough is described in this book as Mrs Mannering’s aunt rather than that of Philip and Dinah – have I missed something here?) Anyway, Bill offers to look after the children for Mrs Mannering and comes out to join the cruise. So far the children have found the map to the treasure and done a little investigating but are being stalled and stalked by Mr Eppy who is keen to know their secret.

Whereas they do not tell Aunt Allie what is going on, the children agree to let Bill into the secret. (Note that the Famous Five never tell a grown-up until its time for the police to be called in!) Bill agrees they should see if they can get to the bottom of the mystery and in the end, they all end up on the island of Thamis where the map is showing the treasure is buried. Bill seems intent on ignoring his promise to Mrs Mannering by letting the children drag him into an adventure and this turns out to be have been the worst thing he could have done because they get stranded on the island; something rotten abounds.

I won’t give away anymore, but all I can say is that this is where the real excitement and page turning begins. Bill saves the day in a way, through having brought a colleague who tracks them down on the island, and Philip’s monkey Micky also helps save the day. Its lucky Philip adopted him really!

Anyway, this is all very thrilling, but my romantic soul enjoys the very last chapter the best where Mrs Mannering hears the whole story and tells Bill she won’t be able to trust him again. Distraught at the idea of losing Bill from their lives, Lucy-Ann comes up with a plan! Why don’t Aunt Allie and Bill get married? Then they can all keep an eye on each other and the children get a new father. It seems a very sudden arrangement, because apart from Allie and Bill being seemingly fond of each other, I never picked up on anything more than that, but right there in the last chapter is the moment where you can feel that there is something more in the air.

I could tell you what the outcome of this is, but I shall leave you to read the book yourself… you won’t be disappointed.

Overall Ship isn’t one of my favourite Adventures. There are some beautifully classic moments in it, and I do enjoy the romance at the end, but it takes a long time to build up even though the exotic setting is enjoyable because its somewhere new and back in the fifties that sort of holiday would have been out of the reach of most of the children reading the book.

So go and read The Ship of Adventure and let me know what you think of it!

Next review: The Circus of Adventure

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Five Fall Into Adventure: An Exciting Dramatised Adventure

I’ve been very good this week and actually listened to this in advance of blogging day. I was also a bit forgetful and forgot to turn off the shuffle feature at first, so started with a random chapter. Oh well!

Trouble/Adventure Audio

I sometimes wonder if there are any two recordings with the same voices for the Five. This one has George played by someone who has voiced Anne in other recordings; she’s a bit too girly for George and it makes me think Anne’s speaking when she’s not. Timmy is back to sounding like a very small, yappy dog unfortunately. Dick is voiced by the same actor as he is in Five Go Off to Camp (the only Blyton cassette tape I had as a child) and even though he has rather a lisp (he’s really imprethed at one point) he’s Dick to me. Julian and Anne are perfectly fine, but I can’t recall which recordings if any they have been heard on before.

I did notice, though, that we don’t hear Anne at all until the face appears at her window (chapter three in the book). She’s mentioned by the narrator but I didn’t hear her make a peep before then.

Some updatings have crept into the story – George and Jo both wear jeans instead of shorts and Julian is no longer Master Julian when Joan speaks. I think some of the descriptions of Jo and her father have been tampered with too, but I didn’t have the book to hand while I listened so I can’t be sure.

Plenty has been left though – they still talk about how boys shouldn’t hit girls, and Dick and Jo still come to blows.

There isn’t a huge voice cast in this recording, but then there perhaps aren’t as many incidental characters. There’s the Five, obviously, plus Aunt Fanny and Uncle Quentin (briefly so they don’t make too much of an impression). Then there’s Joan, Jo, Jo’s father Simmy, Jake, Markhoff, Red Tower and one policeman.

Markhoff and Red Tower are both given stereotypical Russian sounding accents. Votch instead of watch and so on. It’s almost like Grandad in Only Fools and Horses doing his best German. “Vot is your name?” and all that. Both of them sound pretty similar. As do Simmy and Jake when it comes down to it, I just assume Jake has dialogue towards the end at the house on the cliff as it was hard to tell who was talking sometimes. Simmy/Jake may also have been in Five Go Off to Camp, actually, as it sounds rather like Wooden Leg Sam.

Anyway, Jo’s decent if a bit girly and Joan does a good ‘country woman’ accent.

There’s one big omission that I’m quite disappointed in. The whole chapter where the Five have to put out one of Uncle Quentin’s notebooks to be collected is just narrated. So we don’t get to heard Sid at all. I would have liked to have heard his ‘coos’ and about him being ‘partial to chocolate mould’. I know, it’s a fairly inconsequential part of the story and there isn’t room for everything but I just really like that part!

Normally I don’t notice all the little bits that are cut to make it fit into an hour, it’s not until I’m flicking through the book that I go “oh yes, they missed this, or that,” but I really noticed the lack of Sid. Poor lad.

And that’s all I really have to say about it, I think! A good listen, even for one of my less favourite Fives. But then, you can’t really go wrong with the Five, can you?

 

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Famous Five Go to Hogwarts, chapter 3

CHAPTER THREE: DIAGON ALLEY AND PLATFORM 9¾

It had been two weeks since the argument. Still no answer from Uncle Quentin back at Kirrin. They were now residing in The Leaky Cauldron, London. Aunt Fanny had said to them that they were going to Hogwarts, no matter what.

They bought all their school equipment, except for their wands. They didn’t buy their wands because they didn’t need them just yet; they were practising doing very simple potions with Aunt Fanny and so far they didn’t need wands to do them.

Most days, Anne and George spent much of their time in Magical Menagerie, helping take care of the cats, owls and toads. Anne also bought three-legged and part-blind cat, Apollo, when she found out that it had been living in the shop for a whole year and nobody even considered buying her. Julian bought an owl, Ook, so they could communicate with his parents. As for Timmy, he would be going to Hogwarts on one condition: He would have to stay with Hagrid and Fang, not go into the Owlery and return to Hagrid’s in the evenings.

On July 15th, a letter arrived. It was delivered via owl; Julian had sent Ook to Uncle Quentin. His letter was very damp (possibly Ook had done a little wee-wee or Quentin had been crying) and very short. It said:

Dear Fanny, Georgina and the cousins
I am very sorry. Please come back. I’ve missed you. I was shocked, that’s all. I am very proud of you, Georgina, and Julian, Dick and Anne too. Fanny, dear, I was only offended that you told Joanna but not me. Come back home to me.
From Quentin

Suddenly, Aunt Fanny burst into tears. ‘Sorry, my dears, it’s just that I d-did not expect this from Quentin. Julian, can you send a letter to your uncle saying that we’ll be home tomorrow? Anyway, I have to pull myself together! I need to get your wands!’

Fifteen minutes later, they were in Ollivander’s Wand Shop, waiting for a wand to Choose them. George was up first. Mr. Ollivander was at the counter. He handed George a wand. ‘Thirteen inches. Cedar. Unicorn Hair. Brittle. Just give it a wave.’ She did so.

Immediately after, Mr. Ollivander’s glasses chipped. He was slightly shocked, but seemed to forget it a second later.

‘No, no, that is not the one for you, my boy!’ he croaked, putting the wand back in its case, putting it away and picking another one. Julian, Anne and Dick giggled slightly. ‘Thirteen and a half inches. Dogwood. Dragon Heartstring. Unyielding.’ Once again, George gave it a wave.

Suddenly, wind flowed around her hair and light flooded into the room, like a spotlight. It was as if a dragon had ripped the wall off.

‘Ah, that is the wand for you! It looks perfect with you, my boy! That’s eleven galleons,’ he beamed. After Aunt Fanny handed over the money, the process went over again until everyone had a wand.


 

‘Aunt Fanny, can we go into Quidditch Quality Supplies? Oh, look at that beautiful broom!’ Anne begged.

‘Sorry, m’dear, first-years don’t do Quidditch. Anyway, we have to go pack and go back to Uncle Quentin!’

With that news, the children tried to pack as fast as possible but it was quite hard as Timmy kept chasing after Apollo, messing up their trunks. ‘Oh, Timmy, go annoy someone else, I need to pack otherwise we’ll never get home!’ George snapped.

Eventually, the trunks were packed, even fuller than before. Many times, one of them would have to sit on the top while the others clipped it back shut. To make the bag matter worse, they now had a three-legged cat, an owl plus Timmy to look after.

Fanny had hired a taxi, to get them back to King’s Cross Station, then on to Kirrin.

However, the driver gave them some very weird looks because of Ook’s constant squawking but he was just a Muggle, so he would do.


‘Aunt Fanny, where in fact is Platform 11¾?’ Anne asked curiously.

‘Don’t you remember from when we actually got off the train when we came here?’ Aunt Fanny asked.

‘Well, I was a bit tired and a bit preoccupied, given that we’d just been told we were wizards and we were heading to London, so the answer is no, I don’t remember.’

‘It’s between Platforms 11 and 12. The Hogwarts train is between 9 and 10, on Platform 11¾, which is where you’ll be very soon. Anyway, we need to hurry, because we’re awfully late and our train leaves very soon!’

Aunt Fanny started to walk towards Platforms 11 and 12 with a much faster pace until she eventually came into a halt in front of a plain brick wall.

‘Now, to get to Platform 11¾, you must run straight at the wall,’ Fanny said simply.

‘What?’ George and Dick said in unison. Their eyes were almost popping out of their head in surprise.

‘Yes, you run at the wall. Don’t worry, though, you won’t hurt yourselves. This is the way to get to Platform 11¾, so unless you want to walk home, you must do as I say.’

‘This just gets madder every day,’ Dick whispered.

‘Oi, I heard that, young man!’ Aunt Fanny scolded. ‘Now, as you were so cheeky, you will be the first to go. Make sure you’re subtle, or the Muggles will notice. Oh, go on!’ Dick was very wary.

However, when the moment was right, he charged at the wall and, to everyone’s disbelief, disappeared.

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Muddle Up Monday

I know what you’re going to say! “How come Stef’s doing the Monday post? It’s Fiona’s turn!”

Well, our dear Fiona isn’t feeling her best today and last night so she asked me to blog on her behalf so she can get some rest and hopefully feel better sooner! I’m sure we all wish her the best and a speedy recovery!

Also this week, though unconfirmed we might be switching blog days around with me blogging about The Ship of Adventure on Thursday and Fiona listening to the Five Fall Into Adventure Audio book on Sunday. Or we might keep to our own days, it’s a little up in the air at the moment.

Our contributor this week, making her long awaited return (and we may have to wait a little longer for the next chapter) is Abi, with the third chapter of The Famous Five go to Hogwarts! I hope you’re all as excited for it as we were when Abi got back in touch with us with the chapter. If you need a refresher, check here.

With that, I shall leave you with some pictures from my last trip to London. Enjoy!

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Adventures with George and Timmy 4: The Footprint in the Sand

Adventures with George and Timmy containing the first three Just George stories.

Adventures with George and Timmy containing the first three Just George stories.

This is the third story in the omnibus that I have of George and Timmy adventures. The Footprint in the Sand as a title doesn’t really have much to do with the story, unless I missed something very important. However I shall get on to that. As you may remember I haven’t been the biggest fan of Sue Welford’s George and Timmy stories,  which is a shame because if I was a child I think I would really enjoy them, but I’m just too old so that the excitement of them doesn’t catch me.  I would recommend them as a way to ease children into the Famous Five novels though, and shall certainly be doing that at work when I take the book back on Tuesday.

I wish I could say that The Footprint in the Sand was a nice story to finish on, but it felt the same as the other two stories, very samey and unfortunately we face very much the same problems as before with George not liking Holly, the little girl. There is a lot of disobedience from George and judging going on as she makes up her mind not to like Holly even before she sets her eyes on her – just because she is a girl. George does a lot of pre-judging in these books, and makes decisions based on what people look and sound like. This doesn’t feel like the George we love and know who in usually is fair minded enough to give everyone a chance.

Welford also keeps reminding us that George is ‘a little girl’. As an adult I sort of sighed and wished there were other ways to describe her. Blyton came up with a good few, stubborn girl was one that always worked well with George.

Anyway, the main story is about Aunt Fanny (I will always call her that) being nice to the new people in the village who have a little girl, and wanting George to play nicely with Holly. Holly is a bit scared of everything, and also wears dresses. George just can’t stand anyone who wears dresses and also never really gives the girl a chance because she doesn’t like Timmy.

George begins to act in her very selfish way by putting what she wants over being nice to Holly, and forces the girl to retreat as she plays with Timmy. The next day she even skips out of playing with Holly by going off to Kirrin Island with Timmy. This is where the adventure really takes off and George discovers people trespassing on her island.

She overhears the men planning to rob a house “with a blue door, behind the church” and Timmy breaks cover to nip at the men’s ankles meaning that they discover George and hold her prisoner. She has a little cry when she thinks the men have left her on the island and taken Timmy away from her, but the little puppy has chewed his way through his rope and creeps back to chew through the rope for his little mistress.

The head back to Kirrin cottage to tell a grown-up that there will be a robbery, but Aunt Fanny is not at home, she’s visiting the Barrett’s. George hurries along, all dirty from her capture and her mother is appalled to see her daughter in such a state.

We go through the whole rigmarole of George not being listened to by the grown-ups and then the girlie girl, Holly being the only one who listens and tries to help George prevent the robbery.

I feel the need to keep apologizing to Sue Welford for my reviews of her books. I really do try and find things I love about them, but I’m just not the age group she was writing for, and because they’re not the Timmy and George I know and love, its hard for me to see them in such a different way. But as I said at the start, I would recommend these to people who want to maybe introduce younger children to the five; they would see the magic I’m lacking I’m sure. I shall certainly do my bit for recommending them to readers in the library because as we know, Blyton never goes out of style! 😉

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The Island of Adventure – How has Blyton’s original text fared in a modern edition? part 9

As planned, and after a month since the last post (where does the time go?) I’m back to looking at the changes to The Island of Adventure. It is chapters 17 and 18 this week, as we move into the second half of the book and the real adventure begins.

Earlier posts: parts one, two, three, four, five, six, seven and eight.

My own copy of the book is an 8th impression from 1955 (my mum’s before it was mine) and the modern copy I’m comparing it to is a Macmillan one from 2001 (borrowed from Stef).


CHAPTER SEVENTEEN: JO-JO IS ANGRY

As noted in the first post the chapter title has been updated to reflect Jo-Jo’s new name.

The red/reddish rocks and stream continue to be corrected to green or at times bright green.

One instance of queer becomes strange, but the other two are left alone. This happened in the last few chapters too, as if all of a sudden the editor changed their mind about having to update it, or just became sloppy and stopped paying attention. Jo-Jo’s black face still becomes his face, though.

That leaves us with only three new changes in the chapter. The first is another word added that changes the meaning of a sentence, in a way that seems to confuse things. He (Jo-Jo) opened that inner door and went into the back cellar with the boxes – the cellar where the trap-door is -… is what Dinah says originally about Jo-Jo. In the newer edition the part in parenthesis begins and the cellar. The parenthesised part is supposed to simply add to the description; saying that the back cellar is the one with trap-door. With an and there it becomes “he went into the back cellar, and into the one with the trap-door,” as if they were two places.

The other two changes have been made to Aunt Polly talking to and about Jo-Jo, in a similar way to what has been done in earlier chapters. Her original words are you must be mad,  and then, he’s a bit crazy. She becomes somewhat kinder to Joe and says you must be imagining things and he’s very bad tempered instead.

There was one thing left in that stood out to me – Jo-Jo saying you ought to be whipped. So many references to violence have been removed or made weaker.


CHAPTER EIGHTEEN: OFF TO THE ISLAND AGAIN

This chapter feels the editor’s pen several times in relation to the gender roles of the boys and girls.

It has Philip say you know boys shouldn’t hit girls in both editions, yet the following line is cut.

Jack, although he never did hit a girl, couldn’t help agreeing that Dinah deserved what she often got.

It is replaced with Jack couldn’t help giving Dinah some advice.

Also cut is “Clear out and get over your bad temper,” said Philip, his ear stinging and going very red. And then “Go on, clear out,” said Philip. I don’t know why Philip can no longer tell Dinah to get lost when he’s angry.

In both editions the boys still debate Should they take the girls this time – or not? But instead of saying We may as well take the girls when they’ve decided, it becomes We can take the girls as well.

Lastly on that topic Philip no longer thinks How silly girls were! They never could find anything. Surely lots of boys think girls are silly, and vice versa, without it being so offensive or sexist that it can’t be included in a book?

The majority of the remaining changes are nothing new. Hyphens are removed from ink-bottle and ink-pot  and replaced with spaces. (Surely those terms are too outdated and obsolete for today’s children anyway? Really, Uncle Jocelyn should have said “My Biro’s run out,” and Dinah could have fetched him a new one? No, wait, that’s silly. He should have said “My laptop’s battery is dying and I can’t find the charger.” That’s better, isn’t it.)

The red (and once copper) colours on the island get corrected to green still and references to Jo-Jo’s colour are removed. Twice queer appears and is not changed, though.

Lastly, and inexplicably, part of Jack’s line gets doubled up. Instead of Wind up, Tufty – here goes! He says Wind up, wind up, Tufty – here goes! 


That’s only nine changes this time (compared to 32 in the last two!) but it brings our total to triple figures – 101!

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Five on Finniston Farm reviewed by Chris

This is the last of my reviews of my top three Famous Fives, the others being Five Go Adventuring Again and Five Go Down to the Sea. It is the 18th in the series and was first published in 1960 by Hodder & Stoughton. My copy is the 1968 Brockhampton Press (a subsidiary of H&S) edition, but with the same illustrations and cover jacket (both by Eileen Soper) as the first edition, as pictured here. For other reviews, see those by Keith Robinson and by Nigel Rowe on EnidBlyton.net and by Terry Gustafson on The Enid Blyton Society site. Images in this review are taken from the Enid Blyton Society website.

finniston farm cover eileen soper

We are in Dorset for the summer hols. Unusually, there is no complicated back story of illnesses or other family problems. Also unusually the boys have arrived first and meet the girls off the bus at Finniston Church near Finniston Village because they are going to stay at … Finniston Farm. There are great descriptions of the countryside and a classic stop at the village shop for ginger beer and ice cream. Then it’s off to the farm where we meet “kind, tired” Mrs Philpot, her taciturn farmer husband and their children, the usual twins – in this case Harry and Harriet, analysed by Stef on this blog. The ‘Harries’ are unfriendly, and we later realise this is because they resent the strains put on their mother by having to take paying guests. We also meet the twins’ Great-Grand-Dad and it’s immediately clear that he is a crusty old character, with a low opinion of outsiders in general and the younger generation in particular.

No surprise, perhaps, when we meet the other paying guests. They are the brash American Mr Henning, set on buying up English antiques to take home, and his loathsome son named only as “Junior”. And boy – as he might say – is Junior awful. Fat and “pasty-faced”, greedy and sneering, he is obnoxious in every conceivable way. He has terrible manners, treats Mrs Philpot as a servant and, we later learn, mistreats the farm animals. Perhaps his father has spoilt him but, then again, even his father doesn’t seem to like him very much. The Five, Timmy included, loathe him on sight and, frankly, so do we readers.

The children settle into farm life, sensitive to and appreciative of its ancient accoutrements, and readily sympathising with Great-Grand-Dad’s hostility to selling these off to Mr Henning to be shipped to America. They are shocked to learn that the Americans expect to have breakfast in bed, and on their first morning George offers to take “lazy little pest” Junior’s tray up to him. In the process, she splashes boiling coffee on his arm and sets Timmy on him, with a nice illustration to accompany it. It’s really bullying of the nastiest sort and yet we don’t mind, since he seems so vile. At all events this episode puts the Philpot twins firmly on the side of the Five.

Breakfast excitements over, the Five are taken over the farm on a rackety old Land Rover – Junior tries to join them but Timmy chases him off – and  there are some great descriptions of the fields and a sense of their ancient history from Bill the farm hand. This history is later filled out by old William Finniston, proprietor of the village antiques shop. He tells them that there was once a Finniston Castle which was completely destroyed in the 12th Century. All that now remains is a chapel, now used as storehouse, but the old man believes that the dungeons and cellars of the castle must still exist, and might contain treasure. He also believes that there was a secret passage between the castle and the chapel. He says that he is descended from the Finniston family that lived in the castle. Puzzlingly, he says that Great-Grand-Dad is called Jonathan Finniston and that the two are great friends, and this is repeated several times later. Yet, surely, their shared surname suggests that they are relatives, not simply friends, and that Great-Grand-Dad is also a descendant of the castle-owners, as indeed he later implies to be the case? This is never properly explained.

What is explained is that Mr Henning is hell-bent on finding the secrets of Finniston Castle, and that he has an accomplice, apparently English rather than American, but at all events “a dried-up little fellow wearing thick glasses” called Richard Durleston. Later we are told that he is “surly”, and I like the pleasing euphony of ‘surly Durleston’. He is an antiques expert advising Henning on buying up old artefacts at knockdown prices. It’s important that they do not learn of William Finniston’s beliefs about the castle and its treasure but, alas, sneaky Junior has eavesdropped on the children talking about it. However, at this point, no one even knows where the castle once stood, and the children start to search for it. Soon they find what Julian says is a “kitchen-midden”, meaning a rubbish tip for the castle, which fixes its location as being nearby. But alas, Junior overhears this, too, and tells his “Pop” and Mr Durleston. Initially poor old Junior is given short shrift but when he drops in the technical term ‘kitchen-midden’ the adults take him seriously.

As a result, Mr Henning offers the Philpots the sum of £250 (about £4000 in today’s money) for the exclusive right to dig in the vicinity of the castle, without of course mentioning that he knows that this is the castle’s location. The impoverished farmers accept with alacrity and the next day Henning brings a gang of workmen to excavate the site. The children are now unable to explore it, but there is one piece of information that Junior hadn’t overheard, namely the possibility of a secret passage between castle and chapel. If the children could find this then they could use it to enter the castle literally under the feet of the American interloper.

And, what do you know, with shovels and spades they do find the passage, and it takes them into the castle cellars! There follow some great, atmospheric scenes of exploration as the children find gold coins, ancient armour and weapons even as above them the drills of Henning’s workmen get closer. There is a splendid illustration of Timmy sneezing at a dusty old wooden chest which is so decrepit that it promptly collapses, revealing the coins. After some difficulties when they are nearly trapped the children return to the farm via the chapel and tell the Philpots all about their discoveries, producing as evidence a couple of the gold coins and a sword. Great-Grand-Dad is especially delighted.

Treasure!

Treasure!

Now there is a final showdown with Henning. He has reached the castle cellars but has not at this point found any treasure, although he suspects he will find something valuable. He offers a further £250 for the rights to anything he finds but is refused, even when he raises the offer to £5000. This by the way seems to me an enormous sum (£80,000 in today’s money) to offer when he does not even know about the treasure. Great-Grand-Dad produces the gold coins and sword to show that there is treasure worth far more than that, and when Durleston dismisses these as “junk” William Finniston is on hand to contradict him with quiet authority. Utterly humiliated, Mr Henning is told to leave immediately without even being allowed to pack his things, and when he not unreasonably demurs Great-Grand-Dad chases him off with the sword. Meanwhile, Junior is subjected to vicious run-down of his character flaws (e.g. “cissy-boy”) and yet again has Timmy set on him. It has to be said that they are very harshly treated since they have not, after all, done anything wrong apart from being brash, grasping and, well, American. Never mind, we are pleased to see them go and the future of Finniston Farm assured, and with that the adventure ends.

This is a splendid Famous Five. It has a denser story than usual, with a really strong sense of place and history (it was based on an actual Dorset farm that Blyton owned). The relatively slow build up allows this to be established far more than in others in the series. The plot is tight with no loose ends except perhaps for another minor issue about names: why if Great-Grand-Dad is a Finniston is his grandson called Philpot? But that could be explained if his daughter was Philpot’s mother.

In particular, the context is very strong. This is an impoverished farm in a Britain that has ‘won the war but lost the peace’ and is coming to terms with being supplanted by the United States in terms of wealth and power. Finniston Farm is a microcosm of that, replete with the clash between new and old, materialism and virtue, price and value. We also glimpse the resentment of the farmers at having to take in paying guests, with a key plot line being the way that the twins warm to the Five because they, unlike Junior, are happy to help out with farm chores. This is quite unlike other Famous Five stories where farmers and other locals are usually characterless and blandly welcoming.

Unlike other Fives, the baddies are not criminals – Mr Henning seems a bit of a sharp operator, but his failings are moral rather than legal. In this way it is more realistic than the others in the series. Junior is splendidly obnoxious but he isn’t the grotesque outsider found in so many of the Five’s adventures. It’s true that there is a strong vein of anti-Americanism in the book, but at several points the children mention that they like Americans in general. About the only thing that is slightly below par is the food, which is slightly less commodious than that of some in the series. For example, on the first night they are given meat pie followed by stewed plums and cream. Nice enough, no doubt, but hardly the spread we might hope for, although there are some reasonable high teas provided. And I miss Uncle Quentin being on the scene. Other than that, with wonderful countryside, a perfect village shop, secret passages, a castle and treasure everything we love is there.

Other reviews, mentioned above, complain that this is an identikit Five, with too many repetitions of devices used in other books and thus being formulaic. I disagree. I think that with Finniston Farm Blyton brings all the elements of the series together in near-perfection, and in my view it deserves the accolade of being the best Famous Five adventure.

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Mid May Monday

So we’re half way through May already, and we accidentally forgot to publish Chris’s post on Wednesday, so this week we’ll bring you the review of Five on Finniston Farm that we promised last week!

Fiona is planning on reviewing the text changes in the next couple of chapters for Island of Adventure, and I’m hoping either to review the next Adventure book, which is Ship or the next Timmy and George story to round of my reviews of Sue Welford’s prequels.

Well we haven’t really got much news for you this week so I’ll leave you with some of the pictures I took in Twickenham on Friday! Hope you like them!

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Famous Five 90s Style: Five On Kirrin Island Again

I think that by far Five on Kirrin Island Again is the most faithful adaptation of the books in the 90s repertoire. Apart from the usual issue of it being a little rushed, the story is pretty much all intact, complete with villains which are not quite as comical as the ones in Five on a Treasure Island or Five Go Adventuring Again for example. In fact they give a very scary and dangerous feeling. 3

Given that Five on Kirrin Island Again was supposed to be the last Famous Five book that Blyton was to write, it is a fitting tribute that the 90s episode keeps so closely to the story. Obviously there are bit chunks missing, such as a lot of the falling out between George and Dick, and the meal between the Curtons and the Five, and Martin’s hurt ankle. This is clearly down to restraints on time. It is my personal opinion however that this episode would not have been made better by splitting it into two like some other episodes, but could have just done with being more feature length.

The detail is remarkable in a way, they even included the tunnel under the sea from Kirrin Island, which is necessary, but somehow it feels like it was the one thing that might have slipped. Another good feature is that the production team clearly felt that the lighthouse and the lighthouse keeper were important enough to stay in the episode. I mean let’s face it, as avid Blytonites and Famous Fivers, we all would have been a bit miffed if the old chap in the light house wasn’t around!

The only thing I think I have a problem with on the detail front is that the tower that is erected on Kirrin Island doesn’t really remind me of a tower. Its more like a workshop on stilts. Not to mention the fact that I always imagined the tower as tall and silver. There is a scene in the book where Blyton describes how the five had to really struggle to climb the tower and Timmy didn’t like the slippery surface of the stairs. This gave me the impression that it was a very tall tower. Unfortunately, the tower that was chosen for this adaptation has no real impressiveness to it, and its a gaudy shade of red. My inner child doesn’t like this very much.

2I think a notable acting credit needs to be pointed towards Christopher Good as Uncle Quentin in this episode. Usually he’s very good, if a little stereotypical in his portrayal of a nutty professor, but in this episode where he has to act serious as the children, his work, Kirrin Island and most of the bay are threatened to be blown up, he shows a remarkable depth to the character. The scene with Jemima Rooper when George finds him prisoner in an underground cave is particularly touching as the two really seem to connect as hot-headed father and daughter with a tenderness that shines through in those odd moments in the books. Its really nice to get an idea of how much Quentin really loves his daughter even though they’re too similar to get along normally.

Other good scenes include the one in the quarry when the Five meet Martin properly for the first time, and the boys aren’t sure how much to trust him with the information about George finding a secret passage. The whole quarry scene is nicely done and its nice to see that it was kept in, given that secret passages seem to mostly change where they are from book to screen.

Overall it’s a very satisfying episode of the bunch, probably the best adapted – there must have been some sentimental value somewhere when they did this one! Maybe it was someone’s first Famous Five? –  and that comes through on the screen. Once more Jemima Rooper’s portrayal of George really shines through, and her scenes with Christopher Good are touching and beautifully done as they reveal how much father and daughter really love each other and what an understanding they have deep down.

If you have to watch any of the 90s TV series, and don’t know which one would be the best, I recommend Kirrin Island Again as it stands head and shoulders above the rest in terms of sticking to the story. Why don’t you have a watch and make up your minds and let me know what you think? I promise its 25 minutes well worth it! Go on, spoil yourself!

 

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My fifteenth Noddy book: Noddy Has an Adventure

A confession to start: this isn’t the book I was supposed to do this week. I’m trying to do them in series order so You’re a Good Friend Noddy should have come first. But Noddy Has an Adventure is what I promised on Monday and so that’s what I’ve read.

A second confession before we get into the book is that again I forgot to organise things for Wednesday, so you may have noticed there was no post. Chris’s review of Five on Finniston Farm will be rescheduled for next week! (Then I just have to remember to put it on!)

So, to Noddy now.

noddy-has-an-adventure


It seems tradition for Noddy books to start with him getting up in the morning and having his milk delivered by the milkman who takes payment in making Noddy’s head nod. This time however it begins with him going to bed at night, then sleeping right through the milkman’s visit the next morning.

His heavy sleep isn’t much of an alibi, though, when Big Ears comes rather angrily to his door, complaining that someone’s stolen all of his washing. What has that got to do with Noddy? you ask. Well, Big Ears happened to hear a car during the night, one that made a parp-parp noise just like Noddy’s little car does.

The next morning Mr Big-Bear discovers all his flowers have been stolen and again, Noddy’s car has been heard nearby. Mr Plod is soon on the case and you know what’s coming, don’t you? Yep – Noddy’s being blamed.

I have to say he seems a very poor policeman. Surely he knows by now that Noddy’s no criminal, no matter how many times he is accused of various crimes? You might almost put him on a par with Mr Goon, only he doesn’t have a hatred for Noddy.

DSCN2488

Thankfully Noddy has friends, and Bumpy-Dog (from Noddy Meets Bumpy-Dog) returns, taking on a Buster-type role and sending the annoying policeman packing. Tessie Bear is there as well, as she looks after Bumpy dog and they hatch a plan to prove Noddy is innocent.

His alibi this time will be that he has stayed at Tessie Bear’s house overnight. If any crimes occur then they can’t have had anything to do with him. Tessie Bear’s Uncle Bear is there, and he tells them the story of The Three Bears who he claims were relatives of his!

The upshot is that Mr Plod is ‘glad’ that Noddy’s not to blame for the theft of the plums from Mr Golly’s orchard that night, and drops all investigations into him.

There’s still the mystery of the car that sounds like Noddy’s, though. And what’s even more mysterious is that he discovers his car is all muddy… as if it’s been driven through an orchard, perhaps. But it has been locked in his garage the whole time and he is very insistent that he always locks his car away safely at night.

DSCN2489

Unfortunately the juicy mystery is somewhat spoiled when Noddy suddenly announces that oh, yes, he did have two keys for the garage but recently lost one. It seems a bit of a lazy solution that didn’t require any effort on Noddy’s part to work out.

It’s somewhat redeemed by the idea he and Big-Ears come up with to catch the thief, however. In a sort of Blue Peter Make moment they use paper, paint and dustbin lids to create post boxes to hide in. They must do a good job as Mr Plod passes and doesn’t see anything amiss (even though two brand new post boxes have appeared on either side of the road outside Noddy’s house).

DSCN2490

The thief doesn’t realise, either, and ends up being chased by a pair of post boxes with legs.

DSCN2491

The book has some good points like the ending, and the three bears story but also has weaker elements like Noddy’s lost key. It’s not one of the best in the series for me, but it’s not a bad read.

 

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May Monday

We’re well into May now, and here we seem to have had nothing but showers! It hasn’t stopped me getting out too much though, but at times I was wishing for a sou’wester and galoshes!

Coming up this week:

WednesdayThose of you who follow us on Twitter may have seen our interactions with Susie Day, author of Pea’s Book of Holidays which I reviewed at length on Friday. For those of you who aren’t tweeting yet, here’s what she said:

Susie Day tweets usI always get so excited when properly famous people speak to us!

And with all that out of the way, I’ll end on a few photos from when it hasn’t been pouring with rain.

 

 

 

 

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The Twinniest Twins: Guy and Harry Lawdler from Five on a Secret Trail

Five on a Secret Trail

Five on a Secret Trail

We’re back to the twins of Enid Blyton, and this week I’m going to look into one of the iconic sets of twins that she wrote about. Another feature of the Famous Five stories, Harry and Guy Lawdler probably represent a more traditional brother/brother relationship (I am assuming and basing this on my stereotypical knowledge because I neither have a brother or am a boy!)

Over this series of posts we have looked at the Philpot twins, or the Harries as they’re more commonly known and seen how they strived to be as ‘two peas in a pod’ as possible, and then looked at Connie and Ruth Batten from the Malory Towers books and how the relationship between them was bordering on dangerous. Now with only two pairs of twins left to look at, Harry and Guy present us with a new side of things. The only boy/boy twins I have come across in my (admittedly-narrow) readings of Blyton, their relationship is far from perfect.

For those of you who have ever read Five on a Secret Trail will know that we’re introduced to the Lawdlers in a very strange way, because for the first two thirds to three quarters of the book we are lead to believe that Guy is the only one.

The twins are not seen together at all until the mystery really is hotting up and in many a way Guy is the most well known of the two because he seems friendlier and the Five take to him much easier than Harry. However, the problem with Harry is that he neither introduces himself, for his mistake and then gets too readily annoyed when first the girls and then the boys mistake him for his brother Guy.

This makes the fact plain that the twins are completely identical and there is nothing (at least nothing that is mentioned) to indicate that they have anything to tell them apart. The Harries , apart from being non-fraternal twins are described as being totally alike, apart from the scar on the back of Harry’s hand which helps the five identify them. The Lawdlers are not mentioned to have anything like this until right at the end of the book when Guy has a sprained ankle which is strapped up tightly and George makes this point by saying, “I don’t know how I shall be able to tell one from t’other when Guy’s bad foot is better.” (pg 170, Five on a Secret Trail, 2000).

Having got that all sorted, and the fact that the twins are very much identical down to a ‘t’, now its time to look at the dynamic they have with each other, and with the Five during the adventure.

Anyone who has read Five on a Secret Trail will know how the drama of the twins plays out, but the fact that the twins do pretend that the other doesn’t exist seems to me (the only child) to be a factor of a relationship with a sibling.

Harry explains why they pretended the other doesn’t exist when the Five discover him after Guy’s disappearance. Harry says, “…we each pretended that the other didn’t even exist…we’re like that. We love each other the best in the world, and we hate each other worst – when we quarrel. We’re simply horrible then!”
From the outside perspective this seems very similar to lot of sibling relationships I’ve witnessed, especially when I was growing up about the way they antagonise each other to the point where they would refuse to speak to each other. Something similar happens to Ruth and Connie in  The Upper Fourth at Malory Towers where Ruth starts to despise her sister and Darrell remarks that, “It’s because you’re twins, I expect, Connie should have been your elder sister, then it wouldn’t have mattered! You could have loved each other like ordinary sisters do…” I think I have seen it written down somewhere that being a twin means that there is a different kind of sibling bond, like your bond is stronger or different in some way.

Also, its interesting to note that this kind of behaviour where the twins are falling out just isn’t considered in Blyton’s world. There is this overlying feeling that all families are supposed to get on, and the siblings aren’t supposed to argue. I mean even within the Famous Five, Julian and Dick’s spats are brushed under the rug fairly quickly. In the Secret Seven there is a bit more discord between Jack and Susie which is considered abnormal, this theme seems to suggest that the characters who don’t get on with their siblings have an underlying problem.

In the case of the Lawdlers there doesn’t seem to be much, apart from their tempers. The boys are always seemingly left along quite a lot as their father is a famous archaeologist, so perhaps the boys are lacking the parental intervention to make them “nice” and “normal” like the perfect family unit Blyton tries to create for her readers. If I were a student of psychology I might liken that to having her own family unit broken apart when she was a young girl, but I digress and literature doesn’t always follow true life.

Anyway, the Lawdlers have a big bust up, which results in them not being in the same place at the same time as they pretend the other doesn’t exist. Naturally this makes it hard for the Five, and makes their treatment of Harry as the ‘crazy’ one rather unfair. I get the feeling, although it is never stated, that Harry maybe the younger twin, because Guy seems a lot more in control and less sulky. Of course the interaction with the Five might make him seem more mature, because he is benefiting from their friendship.

It’s hard to really get a firm hold on the Lawdler twins because they spend so little time in the book together. When Guy is kidnapped Harry becomes so distraught at the loss of his twin that he would move the world to get him back, which shows how deeply he really cares for his brother. This is demonstrated clearly when Harry and the Five find Guy in the secret passage. Harry throws himself at his dazed brother, hugs him tightly and starts trying to make amends.

…Before he could say a word more, Harry was beside him, his arms around him, his voice choking.

‘Guy! Oh Guy! I’ve been a beast. I wouldn’t be friends! What happened to you? Are you really all right? Oh Guy, we are friends again, aren’t we?’

In the end the twins end up talking and being friends again, at least I suppose they do because they don’t pay a major part in the rest of the book.

As it stands the Lawdlers are probably the most underestimated twins in the Famous Five, possibly the whole Blyton franchise. The Harries have their notoriety because of their unlikeliness of being identical, Isabel and Pat O’Sullivan have the joy of being the main characters in the St Clare’s series and Ruth and Connie have quite a big story line with a possibly worrying outcome. Guy and Harry seem to get overlooked because of their disinterest in each other, and that they don’t even really act like twins for most of the book, more like brothers and even then like strangers.

At the end of the day the Lawdlers feel more like real people because of their flaws, and feel more like proper siblings. I mean, even Julian, Dick and Anne can’t even manage to be totally perfect all the time, so that means that everyone else is allowed a little normality now and again, right?

Read about more Twinniest Twins here.

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If You Like Blyton – Pea’s Book of Holidays by Susie Day

I was rather conflicted about this book before I even opened it. I got it way back in December and had stuck it on the blog schedule for May (after I had gotten through the annual and other new Blytons I had.) Although I read a fair bit of children’s fiction I picked this one out because the plot revolves around Enid Blyton.

Book of Holidays BlurbIt looked interesting, two children trying to have their own Blyton style adventure. It’s the fourth book in the Pea series but I decided to give it a go anyway, telling myself I was doing it for the sake of the blog.

And then I stumbled upon this. And therein lies the conflict. Do I want to read a book by a person who believes that It takes going back to reread as an adult to feel the weight of it. It’s not only the obvious things: Noddy’s infamous carjacking golliwogs; the multitude of ‘swarthy’, poor, poorly-spoken types her investigators can just tell, somehow, are up to no good; simpering Anne, so useless compared to George who is – phew! – ‘as good as a boy’ – and of course, the predictable prose, the repetitive plots. There’s a core of judgemental selfish nastiness running through them that sours the fun; a fundamental mistrust of anything other than four posh white people.

The author even asks if she should be promoting Blyton to her readers. She then goes on to praise Blyton because no other writer understands reading age and how to mediate her work across different age groups so well. There are also backhanded compliments about the simple writing and memorable rubbish.

She admits herself she is conflicted and sees her book as an opportunity to confront the problems in [Blyton’s] work, and to analyse how we deal with feeling ambivalent or critical about something we also love.

That I can relate to. I’m not blind to Blyton’s flaws – the biggest one being the era she was raised in and the attitudes she sometimes parrots. Don’t we all do that, though? She’s a product of her time just like we are a product of ours. That doesn’t make her a bad person or her work ‘nasty’ or ‘selfish’. I think a lot of people forget that. They perhaps don’t read any other works from that era, so Blyton may appear a Hitler like figure of hate or intolerance. Of course she isn’t, though. She was writing at a time between, during and after major world wars. Suspicion of foreigners was rampant. Class divides were much, much more clearly defined than they are now. People didn’t move up and down the social ladder as easily as we do today. She wrote about what she knew and how she knew it to be. And within that she created loyal, friendly, kind characters who so many of us love.

Anyway, I’ve rambled enough I think and I haven’t even started talking about the actual book. (I do summarise much of the plot in this review so if you may not want to continue if you don’t like that sort of thing.)


It starts with Clover (the eldest) leaving for her summer theatre camp. Pea (the middle child) and Tinkerbell (the youngest) are to be going off camping for the summer, with Tinkerbell’s dad Clem, while Bree (their mother) works on writing her new book. I wondered from the outset about their unusual names and later it is explained that Pea is actually short for Prudence and Tinkerbell was named by her older siblings.

This book manages to tick a lot of inclusive boxes along the way, perhaps in part to counteract the mostly white middle class cast of Blyton’s stories. We’ve got a single, working mum with three kids to three different dads. Tinkerbell is of mixed race (British Jamaican) and the next door family is made up of two mums and boy-girl twins. Later in the story the girls makes friends with two boys; one of whom has a physical disability, and they also have divorced parents. The boys only get to spend time with their father four times a year, like Clem only sees Tinkerbell and the other girls a limited amount.

I’m happy to see lesbian parents, non-nuclear families, disabled boys and mix raced children in books, even if I don’t relate to all of these under-represented characters. At the start though, I did worry that there may have been a few too many issues thrown into one book without space to really examine each of them. Some of the issues surrounding these topics are explored later in the book though. For example, Ryan (one of the boys they befriend) tells Pea that Tinkerbell can’t be your sister, presumably because of their different looks. This is something that Pea seems to be used to (I guess it has come up in earlier books) and she deals with it calmly. She and Tinkerbell also have a conversation with their mum, about Ryan’s weak arm and limp, uncertain about whether or not they should talk about it or pretend not to notice it. On her advice they do ask him questions about it, finding out about his condition and the effects it has on his life. The notion of children blaming themselves for their parents (or even step parents) divorce or break up also gets brought up in a touching chat between Pea and Ryan.

The realism is making me think of Jacqueline Wilson a little, in style and content. I’ve read a lot of criticism of Wilson’s work lately on the Society Forums. Mostly that her work is too ‘gritty’ or ‘dark’. While I love Blyton’s light, happy stories I don’t see a problem with realism in books. Kids benefit greatly from escapist reading, but also from being able to connect to children who have a home life like theirs. The Suitcase Kid is a great example – about a girl whose parents split up and each settle with a new partner and step children. All she wants is to go back home with both parents, instead she has to learn to live back and forth with two new families. It’s gritty (at a child’s level) it’s real, it can be dark and upsetting. But it’s a great book too. I think there’s room in the world for both (and many other) types of story for children. I think it’s harmful to say children shouldn’t read about divorces or single mums or same sex couples. Pea taking on a more grown-up role also makes me think of The Mum-Minder where a girl’s mum (a childminder) comes down with the flu. The daughter then has to help watch the children, do the cooking and cleaning and so on. There are enough differences to keep it all fresh, though, and I don’t think the styles are similar enough to be a  criticism at all.

Pea, it would seem, agrees with me. While she and Ryan are chatting about their respective parents having split up she thinks it would have been nice if those things had happened in a Blyton story. But then again, she thinks, sometimes it’s nice to have that escapism into a happy world where that doesn’t happen.


Moving on. Their plans are then thrown into chaos as Clem comes down with pneumonia and can’t take the girls on holiday. Is that a nod to the Blytonian plot device of plans being changed due to illness? (Think Five Are Together Again, The Sea of Adventure, Five Get into a Fix and Holiday House for starters.)

That leaves Mum to work out what she’s to do with the two girls, and at the end of chapter three she drops the bombshell that she hasn’t written a word of her new book yet. Pea’s brilliant plan is for them to go down to Corfe for inspiration and to inhale the ‘fumes’ that made Blyton such a prolific writer. (Pea also sort of thinks her mum is a lazy writer when you compare her output to Blyton’s, and if Blyton hadn’t used up so many ideas then maybe there would be more left for her mum!)

Pea and Tinkerbell are then left mostly to their own devices to explore and look for that all important mystery or adventure. They can’t get into the castle as – horror – they have to pay for tickets and there are loads of people milling about, so they just explore. Ginger-beer is bought and not enjoyed at all (I’m with the girls there, can’t stand the stuff which is so disappointing!) and before long they’ve run into Ryan and his brother Troy.

Ryan and Troy are a bit odd (and not just because they have never heard of Enid Blyton). They’re ghost hunters, complete with walkie talkies and their own website. They’re called PIE (Paranormal Investigations Edinburgh) and take it all rather seriously. Pea and Tinkerbell don’t believe in ghosts so unfortunately have to discount Ryan and Troy as candidates for their reinvention of the Famous Five. Nobody else seems likely either as they’re either too young, too nasty or don’t speak any English.

Fate seems determined to bring the two sets of siblings together, however, and they do start talking. The boys are hunting for the Grey Lady (not of Harry Potter fame, it is pointed out) who is supposed to headlessly haunt the village. They have a video on their iPad of a head floating in a window of the castle and Pea is amazed as it’s clearly the ghost of Enid Blyton!

It all goes a little Scooby Doo like then, (if the Scoobies took their mum along) and the girls solve the mystery, showing that it was nothing paranormal at all. I won’t give away what it was, but I will admit I didn’t work it out myself. Not at any point. Even though I had all the clues from the girls’ visit to the “Enid Blyton Shop”.

The Enid Blyton Shop is obviously The Ginger Pop Shop owned by Viv Endecott, and the description of it seem spot-on. Viv is a big believer in golliwogs and the book mentions that there are lots of them in the shop. This makes Pea uncomfortable as she’s been taught that gollies are offensive representations of black people, and she wishes that Blyton hadn’t written about them. Tinkerbell, however, admires the dolls and quite wants one for herself. Pea wonders, then, if Tinkerbell likes them, does it make gollies OK?

You can see there, how Day is using Pea to explore her own concerns about enjoying Blyton’s work. It’s very cleverly done and the idea is revisited a couple of times as Pea thinks about things from different angles. Pea is perhaps a tiny bit too aware and intelligent for her age in her wonderings sometimes, that would be my only criticism.

The real kick-start for Pea’s worries is Dr Skidelsky, one of the mums from next door. She says Blyton’s books are terrible, all the same and badly written. But she’s also had opposition from Miss Pond, the school librarian, who has tried to discourage her from borrowing the Malory Towers books.

There was a big poster in Miss Pond’s library which said LOVE READING! Pea did. But were there special rules about which bits of reading she was allowed to love?

I think there is a lot of snobbery about books and we’re perhaps all guilty of it. I know I turn my nose up at things like the Rainbow Magic books by Daisy Meadows. But maybe I shouldn’t? Maybe I’m as bad as the people who are mean about Pea’s mum’s mermaid books.

It’s like Tinkerbell and Dr Skidelsky are actually the two conflicting sides of Susie Day’s thoughts about Enid Blyton. Tinkerbell loves her and her books, pure and simple. Dr Skidelsky despises them for a list of reasons. Pea is stuck in the middle, trying to find where she fits in. She knows neither side is necessarily wrong but she needs to form her own opinions amongst her own conflicted views.


Anyway, the busting of another ghost story cements the girls’ friendship with the boys and their father Max agrees to let the girls tag along with them while Bree writes. So there’s more parental involvement in the book than in a Blyton, typically. Their mum’s preoccupation with writing and Max’s frequent and sudden naps keep them out of the way for the most part, though.

I feel there’s a bit of a similarity to the Adventure Island books by Helen Moss, actually. Both are Blyton-ish but set in modern times with adults around. Again, though, the similarities aren’t overwhelming.

One thing that I’ve loved about the book is the number of little references to Blyton that are woven through it. I always get excited to see her mentioned in books or on TV. I took pictures with my phone every time I saw something I wanted to come back to in the book (saves laborious note taking or damaging the book with dog ears) and by half-way through I had at least 50 pictures.

There are things like heather beds to camp on (otherwise it’s cheating), lots of references to which book(s) the girls are reading or have read, ropes tied around waists (at least in theory), notions of disappearing off with a travelling circus or into an old ruined cottage. They visit what might be the Enid Blyton Society website, or perhaps Enid Blyton.net, to do their research. (I do love to think of Pea leaving a message or either of those sites message boards, as if I may see it some day if I look hard enough.) There’s the aforementioned disliked gingerbeer, Wuffly (their dog) is rechristened Timmy though he doesn’t seem to understand his new name. They also name themselves the Thrilling Three, reminding me of Susie and her friends forming their club in opposition to the Secret Seven. (There’s also The Troublesome Three from 1955)

The girls try so hard to find a mystery, looking for faces at windows, footprints, coded notes, secret dens, even going as far as to advertise with a poster. Pea finally invents a mystery (something the FFOs have done more than once) though it doesn’t turn out very well.


We then go back to the Scooby plot line as the boys bring round a film of a ghost walking through the village and it isn’t Blyton this time. They set up camp to watch for her and Pea spots Clover – who’s supposed to be at theatre camp. There has been a background plot of conversations between Clover and Pea (by phone and letter) where Clover says she’s having a fantastic time at camp but clearly isn’t. So the next bit of excitement is trying to conceal Clover in the tent in the garden. She’s not a good camper but their mum is so busy writing she doesn’t notice anything.

The obvious solution is for all three girls plus the two boys to camp out by the castle secretly. That’ll a) keep Clover away from Mum and b) allow them to look for the Grey Lady. Clover’s not so keen at first but Tinkerbell so tactfully persuades her with you’ve already weed on a bush once, so doing it again won’t matter.

With some dishonesty (The Famous Five would never stand for it!), using Clover’s talent for voice acting, they arrange their camping plans.

The camping is all great fun until it gets pitch black and the Grey Lady appears again. Tinkerbell and Clover are terrified so it’s up to Troy, Pea and Ryan to get closer. It all goes very pear-shaped however. Troy slides down the hill on a sledge and crashes, leaving Pea and Ryan to go after him. In her attempt to find help Pea manages to fall down rather badly herself, then bumps right into the Grey Lady and the perpetrator of the hoax. She doesn’t get a chance to do anything about it though as up on the hill the tent has caught fire.

The fire service come to the rescue and Max and Bree round up their kids; Tinkerbell’s got a broken arm but nobody else is hurt too badly. Troy’s broken his glasses, leaving him using them like a monocle. Pea seems worst off in a way as she knows she’s in big trouble. She’s told lots of lies to her mum. About Clover. About camping. She’s supposed to have been the ‘Anne’ of the situation and it’s all her fault that everything went wrong.

Things do get resolved, though. Mum is surprised to hear how much responsibility Pea’s taken upon herself and tells Pea that she should have been enjoying her holiday instead. In the end they return to London (the idea of Blyton fumes suddenly seeming a bit silly) and get back to their more normal lives. I think that’s a bit of a shame as I would have liked to have seen them all having more fun in Corfe but perhaps they’d all had a bit too much of that.


Phew, a lot happens, doesn’t it! There’s plenty I haven’t mentioned though and so I hope I haven’t spoiled the story for anyone.

I found lots of things to laugh or smile at, such as the lines below;

“Are you sure they’re famous? What do they do?” asked Troy.

“Eating, mainly,” said Pea.

“And catching villains,”… Tinkerbell added casually.

I have thoroughly enjoyed reading this book. It genuinely kept me turning the pages, wanting to find out what happened next. There is enough explanations about characters and events so that you can follow everything if you haven’t read the first three books (though if you’re like me you’ll spend some time wondering about things before that information crops up).

I think Pea sums up my feelings about this book in one of her letters to Blyton;

I hope I’m allowed to like things when not all of them are perfect.

I disagree with some of Day’s comments made outside of the book, but it hasn’t spoiled my enjoyment of the book itself.

I’ll have to get the other books at some point and give them a read as well as I think I’d enjoy them even though they’re nothing to do with Blyton. I apologise for the length of this post, by the way. 3,000 words on a book that’s a little more than 300 pages. I have even more thoughts than I’ve written down, actually but I had to draw the line somewhere. I think this book will stay with me and I’ll have to revisit it again some day.

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May Bank Holiday Monday

Happy May Bank Holiday! You probably are aware by now that the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, HRH Prince William and Catherine Middleton have a new addition to their family. The new princess was born on the 2nd May 2015.  The as yet nameless princess who is fourth in line to the throne. I’m sure you’ll join us in our congratulations to the Duke and Duchess on their new bundle of joy!

This week we should be back to normal, with Fiona posting on Friday and me on Sunday. Fiona will be reviewing something called Pea’s Holidays, which personally I have never heard of! So that should be a good read.

I am going to stick to my commitment of bringing you the next in the twins series, with a look at Guy and Harry Lawdler from Five on a Secret Trail so you’ve got all week to re-read the book to reacquaint yourself with the twins.

Our Wednesday post will be a reblog from Novelicious  about literary loves.

So with all that planned out for you, I’ll leave you with a picture of the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge and their new princess.  If you want to see some of my pictures from this last week, head over to our sister blog Two Points of View this week to see some pictures.

The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge with the newborn Princess on the 2nd May 2015 taken from the Daily Mail Website

The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge with the newborn princess on the 2nd May 2015 taken from the Daily Mail Website

 

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Five Get Into Trouble: An exciting dramatised adventure

Five Get Into Trouble is the second CD in the set, Five Fall Into Adventure being the first. I had a half-moment of hesitation before putting Trouble on, as I like to read/listen in order but I’ve been promising Trouble for weeks and that won out.

Trouble/Adventure Audio


The first minute of this recording takes us through the first three chapters of the book at double quick speed. We rush through the Five persuading George’s parents to let them go off on a cycling holiday – they have a glorious first day – they cycle off to a lake for a dip – they camp – and then wake up the next morning before we slow down and get some actual acting.

Presumably that’s the point – to get to the Five meeting Richard without wasting any time. It’s a shame though, as we don’t get to enjoy any of the relaxed fun holiday they have at first.

Anyway, Richard Kent arrives with his declaration that they are in fact tresspassing (something Julian comments on in the book the day before). Richard has an odd accent. It may be the same actor who voiced Jock in Five Go Off to Camp, as there’s a hint of Scottishness about it still. He gets to do a variety of acting throughout the audio as he goes from cocky and bold to frightened and tearful. It’s perhaps over done at times but given that we can’t see his fear then the sound has to do twice as much.

Timmy unfortunately has reverted back to his old, terrible sounding self. If you haven’t heard these recordings it’s hard to describe what he sounds like. Mostly like a person trying to sound like a dog, and not doing very well at it.

This story has a smaller cast to it, I think, than some others. There are no shop keepers or bus conductors or the like popping up for a line or two. (We don’t even get Aunt Fanny or Uncle Quentin!) We do hear from Aggie, Hunchy, Perton and Rookie at Owl’s Dene though, as well as the owls themselves. Then there’s the policemen at the end, and Mrs Kent too. However, in the book it’s Mr Kent that speaks (and rather less kindly than his wife does on the audio!)

Hunchy really loses the ability to speak when Julian puts him in his place, and produces a lot of strange noises (stranger even than Mr Penruthlan without his teeth).

Aggie says something I picked up on about how there’s no phone, no electricity or running water at Owl’s Dene;Just secrets and comings and goings and threats. That’s very much like what Robbie Coltrane says in Five Go Mad in DorsetStrange comings and goings in this village. Secrets and signs and threats (as the ice cream woman) and then No telephone. No eelecticity. No gas. No water laid on. Just secrets, and signs and THREATS as the gypsy.

In the book I can’t see Aggie saying anything like this. Julian however says This is a bad house – a house full of secrets, of queer comings and goings. 

Strange how both versions play up those phrasings. It doesn’t make sense though for Aggie to mention the water and electricity as it’s plain Owl’s Dene has both. At the very least there is electricity to open the gates and water (possibly pumped) into the sinks.

At any rate it sticks mostly close to the story; with some scenes skipped or shortened to allow it to fit into a one hour CD as is always the case. The book itself is somewhere in the middle of the series favourite wise for me, so listening to the audio was fine. I still recommend them to anyone.

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Adventures with George and Timmy 3: A Curious Treasure

Adventures with George and Timmy containing the first three Just George stories.

Adventures with George and Timmy containing the first three Just George stories.

So this is the second review of a full story from the Adventures of George and Timmy. This one was called A Curious Treasure and all starts with George begging her father to let her keep her newly found puppy Timothy.

She is allowed to keep the puppy on the proviso that Timmy doesn’t chew any more pairs of her father’s slippers. With this all agreed George is asked to clear out some of her old toys for the local jumble sale.

While she’s in the attic sorting out her toys she discovers a box of dolls she was given by her aunt, the mother of Julian, Dick and Anne. George thinks that her aunt assumed she would want dolls because Anne would be one of those “girlie girls”. Needless to say the dolls are headed to the jumble sale. George checks the attic for a box to put all the toys in, and when she finds an appropriate one discovers an article about detectives searching Kirrin for bones. The rest of the article is missing so George throws it away. George gets excited because she thinks that the detectives are policemen and the bones are human.

The next part of the book is about how George and Timmy go to the beach to have a picnic and Timmy starts digging up the sand at somewhere called Needle Point- which I’m sure never made it into the original books. Timmy then finds something in the sand. George goes over and finds that its a large bone!

Immediately she believes it goes with the article she read in the attic and that they’ve found a human bone. She takes it home and asks both parents if they should call the police, but that won’t need to happen. It turns out to be a dinosaur bone.

That’s right, dinosaurs have come to Kirrin!

Quentin calls in a doctor friend of his, who is a palaeontologist. Doctor Ward comes to stay at Kirrin Cottage with the Kirrins and brings his obnoxious, overweight son, Jack. George takes a dislike to him because Timmy likes him, and to start off she’s very stand offish.

Over the course of the book Jack becomes a better person and George begins to like him more when he starts getting over his cowardly inclinations. However Jack is the reason the secret of the dinosaur bones comes under threat when he mouths off to someone in the village. Its almost a parody of when Tinker boasts about his father’s work shop and secret papers to the circus people in Five are Together Again (which I should really re-read!) and then sets off a chain of events that culminate in the big adventure.

Now this adventure with the bones trying to be stolen from the beach is not as thrilling as what happens in Five Are Together Again. I don’t get the same thrill from reading A Curious Treasure as I do from a proper Famous Five book. Yes its nice to have a bit more time with George and Timmy, but I just feel there could have been so much more and George seems so very young. Younger than she does in the very first Famous Five book. I suppose part of my problem with connecting to these books is that I am too old for them; they are meant for the five to seven, possibly eight age group readers who are looking to start reading the Famous Five with their parents, but, there is still a problem.

This problem is simply that I’m not enthused by the writing as I am with Blyton’s original works. Yes the style and the language is there, but there is a lack of that involvement, that magic, that spark that when you pick up a Famous Five, young or old, you get. I’m not drawn into these adventures by Sue Welford and I’m sorry to say that because Sue has done a wonderful interview on the blog for us in the past.

I don’t think I would go back and re-read these stories like I re-read the Famous Fives, but I would certainly think its worth a go if I had a young one in my life I could read it to. Maybe their enthusiasm for the stories and the joy they got from them would help me enjoy them more.

Anyway, the adventure in the book really happens so quickly and so close to the end of the book that it feels rushed. There feels like there was a lot of faffing about in the beginning and now there’s not enough space to fit the ‘exciting’ bit in.

I think that A Curious Treasure flowed better than the first one Timmy, The Fearless Puppy. Sue Welford seemed to have found her rhythm by book two but I just can’t rate the series very highly. What do you think? Please let me know!

Adventures with George and Timmy part 4

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Five Go Down to the Sea reviewed by Chris

In my review of Five Go Adventuring Again I listed it as one of top three Famous Fives and I am now going to review the other two, starting with Five Go Down to the Sea which is the twelfth in the series. For other reviews see Keith Robinson’s on Enidblyton.net and Terry Gustafson’s on the Enid Blyton Society. It is actually some years since I have read it and to my delight I found that what I have is the 1953 first edition (albeit the 1954 second impression) published by Hodder & Stoughton, complete with a slightly battered dustjacket by the excellent Eileen Soper, exactly as illustrated here.

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The book begins with another surprise for me. I have always had the idea that Kirrin was in Cornwall, but that is not so. In fact, on checking, I see that Blytonites have discussed the issue of Kirrin’s location at length. At all events, the Five begin this adventure by departing from Kirrin to Cornwall, involving a long and well-described train journey. There is no convoluted build-up of family illnesses or school break ups; we just get on with the hols, which are to be spent at Tremannon Farm.

Arriving at Tremannon village, the Five’s lack of Cornish credentials are apparent, since when they stop at the village shop for lemonade the shopkeeper describes them as “Furriners”. Ju rejects this label on the dubious basis that his “mother had a great-aunt who lived in Cornwall”. The scene set, we arrive at the farm to be greeted by Mrs Penruthlan with possibly the finest high tea in the entire Blyton oeuvre:

“A huge ham gleaming as pink as Timmy’s tongue; a salad fit for … several kings, it was so enormous … Lettuce. Tomatoes. Onions. Radishes. Mustard-and-cress. Carrot grated up …”

There are also, in one of the few approximations to the popular parody, “lashings of hard-boiled eggs”. Add “an enormous tureen of new potatoes, all gleaming with melted butter, scattered with parsley … a big bottle of home-made salad cream … cream cheese … fruit cake … drop scones … cherry tart … cream,” and we have  a quite extraordinary spread. Mrs Penruthlan is welcoming, but Mr Pentruthlan is more forbidding. A huge man “as dark as a sunburnt Spaniard”, which might make us wonder if he could be a baddy, he speaks in monosyllables or phrases so obscure that only his wife can understand them (later it emerges that this is only when he omits his false teeth; otherwise he can speak quite normally).

On this first day, we learn several important things. First, the impending visit of the Barnies, a travelling circus whose name derives from the fact that they perform in farm barns, including Tremannon. Second, we meet Yan – really, we are told, Jan, so why not spell it that way? A typical Blyton outsider character, of the sort I dislike, he is a dirty ragamuffin who can barely speak English and he lives with his grandfather (sometimes, inexplicably, described as his great-grandfather) who is a shepherd. This shepherd’s father was, apparently, a Wrecker: someone who used false lights to lure ships to be wrecked on the coast so that they could be stripped of their cargo.

The Five settle in, doing standard holiday things, and declaring themselves determined not to have an adventure (we readers are not convinced), which are marred only by Yan (if we must spell his name so) who is a constant pest but who also mentions a “Wreckers’ Way” which is a secret path from the coast. We get to Sunday, and the children go to church. This is unusual because so far as I know religion rarely features in the Famous Five. In the afternoon, after another fine meal, they go to meet Yan’s grandfather (or great-grandfather).

This is a classic FF encounter with an old man, giving a strong sense of history and acquired wisdom. He tells them how the wreckers used to show a light from what is now a ruined tower and adds that recently he has seen a light there again whenever there is a dark and stormy night. However, he refuses to tell them where to find the Wreckers’ Way. As they go back to the farm, they see the Barnies arrive in a convoy of wagons. They are a jolly bunch except for their leader – later identified only as “the Guv’nor” – and confirm that they will put on a show at Tremannon.

That night – wouldn’t you know it? – is dark and stormy and Dick and Julian go to see if there is a light showing in the wreckers’ tower. On their way they are attacked by a mysterious man, and instead of going to look for the light they follow him. He goes back to the farm and they realise it is Mr Penruthlan. It’s clear that an adventure has started and this is confirmed the next day when Yan tells them that the light had been showing in the tower the previous night. Now the Barnies arrive to set up their show and the children learn that part of the act is a two-man pantomime horse called Clopper. Moreover they learn that the “grim-faced” Guv’nor insists that the horse’s head must always be guarded.

The next night is stormy again, and the boys again go to look for the light and this time they see it (George and Anne don’t get much to do in this book). Could there be wreckers at work again? It’s a horrible possibility. Returning to the farm, they see that there is a light in the barn and find that Mr Penruthlan is going through the pockets of the Barnies’ costumes. The boys are shocked and Julian announces, in an odd turn of phrase, that Penruthlan has “got a kink”.

There follows an interlude in the adventure as the Barnies give their show, which everyone finds hilarious, especially when Clopper does his act, rendering Mr Penruthlan beside himself with mirth. The show is followed by one of the most splendid feasts ever, attended by the villagers and all the Barnies except the Guv’nor, who eats alone in the barn. Dick and Julian are sent with his food and they find that he has left a note saying he will be gone for an hour. Fascinated by Clopper, they try on the outfit but the Guv’nor returns so they run off, still in the horse costume which they can’t remove because the zips are stuck, with him in chase. Mr Penruthlan sees them and thinks that a stray horse has appeared. But when he realises that it is Clopper he helps the boys out of the costume and they return it to the barn, where the Guv’nor is waiting, furious.

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I have described this scene, which has no real significance for the plot, because it is really one of the most ridiculous in any Famous Five book. Why would the Guv’nor leave Clopper unguarded when earlier it had been stressed that he would never allow this to happen? Why, when he gave chase, would he not be able to capture two boys in a clumsy pantomime horse and just tamely return to the barn to fume? And why would Mr Penruthlan, who had just minutes earlier seen a pantomime horse performing and is an experienced farmer to boot, not realise from the outset that this was, er, not a real horse? All very unconvincing.

Never mind. The adventure gets going again the next day when the Five go to the Wreckers’ tower, very forcefully refusing Yan’s pleas to accompany them. The tower, which rises from a half-ruined house, proves to be a fantastic place to explore. These are really good scenes, of a classic Famous Five sort. There is a spiralling stone stairway and at the top a crumbling parapet with quite magnificent view of sea and countryside. As they take it in, they reconstruct the modus operandi of the old wreckers. Pay attention at the back, because it is crucial to what happens next. They surmise that there must have been a path from the tower to the coast, so that the wreckers could reach the ship they had bamboozled onto the rocks with their light, but that they would also have used the light to signal to their accomplices in the village to join them for the spoils. Thus there must be two paths, one from the tower to the coast, and one from the village to the coast. For some reason they decide that it is the latter path which is the Wreckers’ Way, and decide to try to find the former path, the one from the tower.

But they are on their guard, because they have found fresh paraffin splashes, showing that someone is still using the tower (which shouldn’t be such a surprise, as they have already seen the light). Who? Mr Penruthlan, surely (after all, he has a kink)? But, no, Julian for another unexplained reason asserts that he must be the watcher at the other end of the Wrecker’s Way. This is all very convoluted and doesn’t make much sense but who cares when there is a secret passage to be found? And find it they do, with Timmy’s help: he shifts to being bloodhound as they put him on the paraffin trail.

The underground passage leads them to a door, behind which there is a cave. But as they explore it they are locked in by an unseen man. Luckily, as so often, they have plenty of food in their knapsacks (another inexplicable event: earlier they complain how heavy their food packs are, so surely they would have taken them off when exploring the passage). Some hours later, the much-despised Yan saves the day (again the standard use of an outsider by Blyton). He had followed them, releases them, and takes them from the coast but this time using the Wreckers’ Way (I hope you are keeping up) which turns out to emerge in a shed at Tremannon Farm. On the way, down at the coast, they hear a motorboat and also see a big man. It is dark, but they are sure that it is Mr Penruthlan, up to no good. And they have by now also guessed that since there are no shipwrecks any more the no good he is up to is smuggling.

Back at the farm, Mrs Penruthlan is relieved to see them but when they tell her the whole story she is furious at the accusations against her husband and attacks Julian, boxing his ears. Anyone who has ever wanted to give Ju a good slap will relish this scene. Things are a bit awkward until Mr Penruthlan turns up and reveals that, far from being a baddy, he is “working with the police” – whatever that means – to catch the smugglers. Rather surprisingly for a Blyton, the contraband turns out to be illegal drugs. Now events move very quickly as it emerges that the Guv’nor, unbeknown to the rest of the Barnies, is the leader of the smugglers and Dick guesses that the booty is hidden in Clopper’s head (and that’s not a sentence you’ll often see written). The Guv’nor is locked in a shed and the police are sent for. With another fine meal the adventure is over.

On re-reading, there are several things I don’t like about Five Go Down to the Sea. There are far too many inconsistencies or gaps in the plot, and too many loose ends. The scene when the boys take Clopper is particularly irritating but, also, why would the light only be shone on dark and stormy nights? That makes sense if the crime is wrecking, but surely for landing smuggled goods this would be the last kind of weather they would choose? Why did Mr Penruthlan not tell his wife he was working with the police and wouldn’t she notice that he kept going out all night long? And what happens to the rest of the smugglers apart from the Guv’nor? Do they go free? I hope not but we aren’t told.

On the plus side, and in contrast to Five Go Adventuring Again when it is obvious from the outset that Mr Roland is the villain, Blyton creates a fantastic about turn with Mr Penruthlan emerging as a hero. There are great evocations of the countryside, a fine farm, a classic search for a secret passage and some absolutely iconic meals. So on those grounds I think it just about remains in my top three and the clincher is Julian’s hopelessly, or perhaps shamelessly, lame attempt to claim Cornish heritage.

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