Blyton, Enid

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{{Infobox Writer <!-- for more information see [[:Template:Infobox Writer/doc]] —>
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| name = Enid Blyton
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{{epname|Blyton, Enid}}
| deathdate = {{death date and age|1968|11|28|1897|08|11}}
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[[Category:Image wanted]]
| occupation = [[Novelist]]
 
| genre = [[Adventure]], [[Mystery]], [[Fantasy]]
 
| movement =
 
| debut= ''[[Child Whispers]]''
 
| influences =
 
| influenced =
 
| website = http://www.enidblytonsociety.co.uk
 
}}
 
  
'''Enid Mary Blyton''' ([[August 11]] [[1897]] &ndash; [[November 28]] [[1968]]) was a popular and prolific [[United Kingdom|British]] [[List of children's literature authors|children's writer]]. She was one of the most successful children's storytellers of the twentieth century.
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'''Enid Mary Blyton''' (August 11, 1897 - November 28, 1968) was a popular and prolific [[United Kingdom|British]] [[Writing|author]] of children's books. Blyton is noted for numerous series of books based on recurring characters and designed for different age groups. She produced more than 800 books that have enjoyed popular success in many parts of the world and have sold over 400 million copies.  
  
She is noted for numerous series of books based on recurring characters and designed for different age groups. Her books have enjoyed popular success in many parts of the world, and have sold over 400 million copies. By one measure, Blyton is the sixth most popular author worldwide: over 3400 translations of her books are available in 2007 according to [[UNESCO]]'s [[Index Translationum]];<ref>
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She is probably best known for several book series, including those featuring ''Noddy,'' the ''Famous Five,'' and the ''Secret Seven''. Though often criticized for their stereotyped characters, simple writing style, and didactic [[Morality|moralism]], her books were widely translated and have remained internationally popular long after her death. Her success stemmed from her penchant for stories where children ride out their own adventures with minimal adult help.  
{{cite web
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{{toc}}
| title = Index Translationum Statistics
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In spite of her widespread popularity, Blyton has not held a stable place within the literary canon; stereotypical portrayals of [[race]], [[gender]], and [[social class|class]] in her books have at times compelled [[Library|libraries]] to withdraw some titles from circulation. However, as the literary discourse on children's literature continues to grow, Blyton's [[culture|cultural]] significance and social relevance as an author continues to be of importance.
| work = [[Index Translationum]]
 
| publisher = [[UNESCO]]
 
| url = http://databases.unesco.org/xtrans/stat/xTransStat.a?VL1=A&top=50&lg=0
 
| accessdate = 2007-07-12
 
}} This index contains all the titles in all the translated languages. The top five are: [[Walt Disney]] books, [[Agatha Christie]], [[Jules Verne]], [[Lenin]], [[Shakespeare]], and the next five: [[Enid Blyton]], [[Barbara Cartland]], [[Danielle Steel]], [[Hans Christian Andersen]], and [[Stephen King]].</ref> she is behind [[Lenin]] and almost equal to [[Shakespeare]].
 
One of her most widely known characters is [[Noddy]], intended for beginning readers.
 
However, her main forte is the young readers' novels, where children ride out their own adventures with minimal adult help. In this genre, particularly popular series include the [[The Famous Five (series)|Famous Five]] (consisting of 21 novels, 1942 &ndash; 1963, based on four children and their dog), the [[Five Find-Outers and Dog]], (15 novels, 1943-1961, where five children regularly outwit the local police) as well as the [[The Secret Seven|Secret Seven]] (15 novels, 1949 &ndash; 1963, a society of seven children who solve various mysteries).
 
 
 
Her work involves children's adventure stories, and fantasy, sometimes involving magic. Her books were and still are enormously popular in Britain, [[Malta]], [[India]], [[Pakistan]], [[New Zealand]], [[Singapore]], and [[Australia]], and as translations, in former [[Yugoslavia]], [[Japan]], and across most of the globe. Her work has been translated into nearly 90 languages.
 
  
 
==Personal life==
 
==Personal life==
Blyton was born on [[11 August]] [[1897]] at 354 [[Lordship Lane (Dulwich)|Lordship Lane]], [[East Dulwich]], [[London]], the eldest child of Thomas Carey Blyton (1870 &ndash; 1920), a salesman of cutlery, and his wife, Theresa Mary, née Harrison (1874 &ndash; 1950). There were two younger brothers, Hanly (b. 1899), and Carey (b. 1902), who were born after the family had moved to the nearby suburb of [[Beckenham]]. From 1907 to 1915, Blyton was educated at [[St. Christopher's School]] in Beckenham, where she excelled at her endeavours, leaving as [[head girl]]. She enjoyed physical activities along with the academic work, but not maths.
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Blyton was born on August 11, 1897, at 354 [[Lordship Lane (Dulwich)|Lordship Lane]], [[East Dulwich]], [[London]], the eldest child of Thomas Carey Blyton (1870-1920), a salesman of [[cutlery]], and Theresa Mary (1874 &ndash; 1950). Blyton had two younger brothers, Hanly (b. 1899), and Carey (b. 1902), who were born after the family had moved to the nearby suburb of [[Beckenham]]. From 1907 to 1915, Blyton was educated at [[St. Christopher's School]] in Beckenham, where she excelled. Her teenage ambition to become a writer was discouraged when several hundred pieces were rejected by publishers.
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[[Image:EnidBlytonHouse.JPG|thumb|200px|Enid Blyton's House in Bourne End, Buckinghamshire, UK]]
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Blyton was a talented [[Piano|pianist]], and her [[parent]]s had hopes that she might play professionally. Instead, Blyton gave up her [[Music|musical]] studies to teach. She taught for five years at [[Bickley]], [[Surbiton]], and [[Chessington]], and wrote in her spare time. Her first book, ''[[Child Whispers]],'' a collection of [[Poetry|poems]], was published in 1922.
  
Blyton was a talented pianist, but gave up her musical studies when she trained as a teacher. She taught for five years at [[Bickley]], [[Surbiton]] and [[Chessington]], writing in her spare time. Her first book, ''[[Child Whispers]]'', a collection of poems, was published in 1922.
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On August 28, 1924, Blyton married Major Hugh Alexander Pollock (DSO) (1888-1971), editor of the book department in the publishing firm of [[George Newnes]], which published two of her books that year. The couple moved to [[Buckinghamshire]]. By 1938, they moved to a house in [[Beaconsfield]], famously named ''Green Hedges'' by Blyton's readers following a competition in ''Sunny Stories''. The Pollocks had two children—[[Gillian Baverstock|Gillian Mary Baverstock]] (July 15, 1931-June 24, 2007) and [[Imogen Mary Smallwood]] (b. October 27, 1935).  
  
On [[28 August]] [[1924]] Blyton married Major Hugh Alexander Pollock DSO (1888 &ndash; 1971), editor of the book department in the publishing firm of [[George Newnes]], which published two of her books that year. The couple moved to [[Buckinghamshire]]. Eventually they moved to a house in [[Beaconsfield]], named '''Green Hedges''' by Blyton's readers following a competition in 'Sunny Stories'. They had two children: [[Gillian Baverstock|Gillian Mary Baverstock]] ([[15 July]] [[1931]] &ndash; [[24 June]] [[2007]]) and [[Imogen Mary Smallwood]] (born [[27 October]] [[1935]]).  
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In the mid-1930s, Blyton had an experience of a spiritual crisis, but she decided against converting to [[Roman Catholicism]] from the [[Church of England]] because she had felt it was ''too constricting.'' Although she rarely attended [[church]] services, she saw that her two daughters were [[Baptism|baptized]] into the [[Anglican]] faith and went to the local Sunday School.
  
In the mid-1930s Blyton had an experience of a spiritual crisis, but she decided against converting to [[Roman Catholicism]] from the [[Church of England]] because she had felt it was "too constricting".
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In 1942, Blyton and Pollock [[divorce]]d; the following year, Blyton met Kenneth Fraser Darrell Waters (1892-1967), a [[London]] [[surgeon]], with whom she had been friends. They married October 20, 1943, and she subsequently changed the surname of her two daughters to Darrell Waters. Pollock remarried and had little contact with his daughters thereafter. Blyton's second [[marriage]] found her happy with her role as a devoted doctor's wife and mother of her two daughters.
Although she rarely attended church services, she saw that her two daughters were baptised into the [[Anglican]] faith and went to the local Sunday School.
 
  
By 1939 her marriage to Pollock was in difficulties, and in 1941 she met Kenneth Fraser Darrell Waters (1892 &ndash; 1967), a London surgeon, with whom she began a friendship which quickly developed into something deeper. After each had divorced, they married at the City of Westminster register office on [[20 October]] [[1943]], and she subsequently changed the surname of her two daughters to Darrell Waters. Pollock remarried and had little contact with his daughters thereafter. Blyton's second marriage was very happy and, as far as her public was concerned, she moved smoothly into her role as a devoted doctor's wife, living with him and her two daughters at Green Hedges.
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In 1957, Blyton was diagnosed with a [[Digestion|digestive]] problem; to keep her from overworking, Blyton's husband led her to believe she was ill from a heart condition. Blyton's husband himself died in 1967. During the following months, she became increasingly ill. Afflicted by [[Alzheimer's disease]], Blyton was moved into a nursing home three months before her death; she died at the Greenways Nursing Home [[Hampstead]], London, on November 28, 1968, aged 71, and was cremated at [[Golders Green]].
  
Blyton's husband died in 1967. During the following months, she became increasingly ill. Afflicted by [[Alzheimer's disease]], Blyton was moved into a nursing home three months before her death; she died at the Greenways Nursing Home, 11 Fellows Road, [[Hampstead]], London, on [[28 November]] [[1968]], aged 71 and was cremated at [[Golders Green]].
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==Literary career==
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Blyton wrote hundreds of books for young and older children: [[Novel]]s, story collections, and some non-fiction. An estimate puts her total book publication at around 800 titles, in addition to decades of [[magazine]] writing. It is said that at one point in her career, she regularly produced 10,000 words a day.
  
Blyton's literary output was of an estimated 800 books over roughly 40 years. [[Chorion (company)|Chorion]] Limited of London now owns and handles the intellectual properties and character brands of Blyton's ''Noddy'' and the ''Famous Five''.
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The early 1920s saw her career take off, with the publication of ''[[Child Whispers]]'' (1922) and ''[[Real Fairies: Poems]]'' (1923). By 1925, Blyton was writing an average of four to five thousand words daily, not only for her books for children, but also for educational journals and the ''[[Morning Post]],'' a [[London]] newspaper. Among her magazine efforts was her work for the popular ''Sunny Stories for Little Folks,'' which she also edited from 1926 to 1952.  
  
==Most popular works==
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The publication of ''Adventures of the Wishing Chair'' in 1937 ,and its subsequent popularity cemented the style of fantasy that Blyton employed in her works during this period. The fantasy was simplistic and humorous, markedly different from the complex and more accomplished work of [[J.R.R. Tolkien]], her contemporary whose own novel, ''[[The Hobbit]],'' was published the same year.  
{{Main|List of books by Enid Blyton|Enid Blyton's single novels}}
 
[[Image:The Magic Faraway Tree.jpg|thumb|100px|right]]
 
* [[The Adventure Series|The Adventure series]]
 
* [[The Barney Mystery Series|The Barney Mystery series]]
 
* [[The Circus Series|The Circus series]]
 
* [[The Famous Five (characters)|The Famous Five series ]]
 
* [[The Magic Faraway Tree series]]
 
* [[Malory Towers|The Malory Towers series]]
 
* The [[Mary Mouse]] series
 
* [[The Mistletoe Farm series]]
 
* [[The Five Find-Outers|The Mystery series]] (also known as the Five Find-Outers)
 
* [[The Naughtiest Girl series]]
 
* The [[Noddy]] books
 
* The [[Amelia Jane]] short stories
 
* [[The Secret Seven|The Secret Seven series]]
 
* [[St. Clare's series|The St. Clare's series]]
 
* [[The Wishing-Chair series]]
 
* The Willow Farm Series
 
  
==Other works==
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Also notable was ''The Secret Island,'' published the following year. Like ''Adventures of the Wishing Chair,'' the book was released after first appearing in ''Sunny Stories''. ''The Secret Island'' belonged to another genre that Blyton dominated—that of the adventure story. Sequels followed, with ''The Secret of Spiggy Holes'' in 1940, and ''The Secret Mountain'' published in 1941.
Blyton wrote hundreds of other books for young and older children: novels, story collections and some non-fiction. She also filled a large number of magazine pages, particularly the long-running ''Sunny Stories'' which were immensely popular among younger children.
 
  
An estimate puts her total book publication at around 800 titles, not including decades of magazine writing. It is said that at one point in her career she regularly produced 10,000 words a day.
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During [[World War II]], most other writers were dormant, as restrictions on [[paper]] limited the literary output, but the popularity of Blyton’s work meant that she could continue to be published. For a few titles she began using the [[pseudonym]], Mary Pollock, combining her middle name and her first married name. Even without the Blyton stamp, these works were just as successful. Her wartime contributions also included [[Patriotism|patriotic]] advice in her magazine columns. Even in her 1941 book, ''The Adventurous Four,'' Blyton employed strong patriotic themes and featured the uncovering of a [[Germany|German]] [[submarine]] base.  
  
Such prolific output led many to believe that some of her work was ghost-written. Yet, no [[ghost writer]]s have come forward. She used a [[pseudonym]] '''Mary Pollock''' for a few titles (middle name plus first married name). The last volumes in her most famous series were published in 1963. Many books still appeared after that, but were mainly story books made up from re-cycled work.
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Blyton also made contributions to the girl’s school story genre, with ''The Naughtiest Girl in the School'' (1940) and its sequels. The second book of the series, ''The Twins at St. Clare’s'' (1941) was even serialized as a [[Japan]]ese animated cartoon on television in 1991.  
  
Blyton also wrote numerous books on nature and Biblical themes. Her story ''[[The Land of Far-Beyond]]'' is a Christian parable along the lines of [[John Bunyan]]'s ''[[Pilgrim's Progress]]'', with modern children as the central characters. She also produced retellings of [[Old Testament]] and [[New Testament]] stories.
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Blyton’s most famous series, ''The Famous Five,'' was introduced in 1942. The Five was made up of a familiar team of boys and girls. They included Julian, the rather condescending leader; Dick, often the one in Julian’s shadow; the tomboy George, whose real name was Georgina; Anne, George’s opposite—the stereotypically weak, inferior girl; and Timmy the [[dog]].  
  
Enid Blyton was a prolific author of short stories. These were first published, for the most part, in ''Sunny Stories'', an Enid Blyton magazine, or other children's papers.
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By the late 1940s, Blyton was at the height of her dominance of popular fiction, continuing to produce book after book for more than twenty publishers in Britain. In 1949, she was commissioned by [[David White]] of the ''Sampson Low'' publishing house to write stories to be used with the artwork of Harmsen Van der Beek. This venture led to one of her most successful series, the ''Noddy'' books, which despite their popularity are the most critically derided of Blyton’s books. Critics have found fault with Noddy, who, as the title character, has few redeeming qualities. ''Noddy language'' has become a term used to describe banal idiocy. Blyton’s tendency to project attitudes that have since been labeled as [[racism|racist]] is also apparent in the Noddy books, in which ''black'' and ''bad'' are equated.
  
Not only biblical themes but also she used to explore the forests when she was a little girl and wrote of her dreams in a notebook kept by her bedside.
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Indeed Blyton's books are very much of their time, particularly those written in the 1950s. They present Britain's [[Social class|class system]]&mdash;that is to say, ''rough'' versus ''decent''.<ref>Druce, p. 222.</ref> Many of Blyton's children's books similarly popularized negative stereotypes regarding [[gender]], [[race]], and class.
  
==Subject matter==
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==Religious perspective==
Blyton's books often referenced the fantasies of pre-pubescent children. Children are free to play and explore without adult interference, more clearly than in most authors before or since. Adult characters are usually either authority figures (such as policemen, teachers, or parents) or adversaries to be conquered by the children. Children are self-sufficient, spending days away from home. This theme is taken to its extreme in two books: ''Five Run Away Together'' and ''The Secret Island'': a group of children run away from unpleasant guardians to live on an island together, making a home and fending for themselves until their parents return.
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Between 1948 and 1960, Blyton produced more than 40 different religious story books including ''The Enid Blyton Bible Stories,'' which included a series of 14 books on the [[New Testament]] and 14 on the [[Old Testament]].<ref>Enid Blyton Society, [http://www.enidblytonsociety.co.uk/author/education-books.php?ch=4 Religious Books.] Retrieved June 22, 2008.</ref>
  
Blyton's books are generally split into three types. One involves ordinary children in extraordinary situations; having adventures, solving crimes, or otherwise finding themselves in unusual circumstances. Examples include the ''Famous Five'' and ''Secret Seven'', and the ''Adventure'' series.
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Her book, ''The Land of Far-Beyond'' is loosely modeled on [[John Bunyan]]'s ''The Pilgrim's Progress'' (1678). It is an [[allegory]] that revolves around a journey that is spiritual as well as physical.
  
The second and more conventional type is the [[boarding school story]]; the plots of these have more emphasis on the day-to-day life at school. This is the world of the midnight feast, the practical joke, and the social interaction of the various types of character. Examples of this type are the ''Malory Towers'' stories, the ''St Clare's'' series, and the ''Naughtiest Girl'' books.
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In the book a boy named Peter and his two sisters, Anna and Patience, travel from the ''City of Turmoil'' to the ''City of Happiness'' in the Land of Far-Beyond. With them are two other children, Lily and John, and five adults—Mr. Scornful, Mr. Fearful, Dick Cowardly, Gracie Grumble, and Sarah Simple. They have been warned to keep to the narrow path but they are beset by troubles and temptations on the way, causing them to stray from the path and into danger. Although Peter and his sisters finally make it to the City of Happiness, their companions do not. The book contains [[Bible|Biblical]] references and before they are permitted to enter the Land of Far-Beyond, Peter and the others have to decide which is the greatest of [[Faith]], [[Hope]], or [[Love]].<ref>Anita Bensoussane, [http://www.enidblytonsociety.co.uk/author/book-details.php?id=358 The Land of Far-Beyond.] Retrieved June 22, 2008.</ref>
  
The third type is the fantastical. Children are typically transported into a magical world in which they meet [[fairies]], [[goblins]], [[elves]], or other fantasy creatures. Examples of this type are the ''Wishing-Chair'' books and the ''Magic Faraway Tree''. Alternatively in many of her short stories, toys are shown to come alive when humans are not around.
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In 1953, Blyton wrote two [[prayer]]s for the coronation of Queen [[Elizabeth II]]. She sent them to [[Buckingham Palace]], and in her accompanying letter explained that: "Her Majesty The Queen has asked us all to pray for her on that day, and has told us simply and sincerely, what to pray for. Now, the children want to pray for her too, and I have been pressed to write for them a special Children's Prayer for The Queen on Coronation day--a prayer that all children here & overseas may say."<ref>Royal.gov.uk, [http://www.royal.gov.uk/output/page2344.asp Crowning Glory: A Prayer for Children.] Retrieved June 20, 2008.</ref>
  
==Controversies and revisions==
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==Legacy==
Blyton's status as a bestselling author is in spite of disapproval of her works from various perspectives, which has led to altered reprints of the books and  withdrawals or “bans” from libraries.
 
  
=="Blyton bans": truth and myths==
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Enid Blyton wrote nearly 800 books over a 40-year career, many of them quite slim, as well as close to 5,000 short stories. She sold 200 million books in her lifetime, with few translations until the 1960s and 1970s, and has sold some 400 million altogether. About half of her titles are still in print, and they still sell 11 million copies a year, including a million for the ''Famous Five'' series and three million ''Noddy'' books.<ref>Nicolette Jones, [http://www.telegraph.co.uk/arts/main.jhtml?xml=/arts/2007/06/30/nosplit/boblyton130.xml Why Blyton was another breed.] Retrieved June 20, 2008.</ref>
It was frequently reported (in the 1950s and also from the 1980s onwards) that various children's libraries removed some of Blyton's works from the shelves. The history of such "Blyton bans" is confused. Some librarians certainly at times felt that Blyton's restricted use of language, a conscious product of her teaching background, militated against appreciation of more literary qualities. There was some precedent, in the treatment of [[L. Frank Baum]]'s ''Oz'' books (and the many sequels, by others) by librarians in the [[United States]] in the 1930s.
 
  
A careful account of anti-Blyton attacks is given in Chapter 4 of [[Robert Druce]]'s ''This Day Our Daily Fictions''. The ''British Journal of Education'' in 1955 carried a piece by [[Janice Dohn]], an American children's librarian, considering Blyton's writing together with authors of [[formula fiction]], and making negative comments about Blyton's devices and tone. A 1958 article in ''Encounter'' by [[Colin Welch]], directed against the Noddy character, was reprinted in a [[New Zealand]] librarians' periodical. This gave rise to the first rumour of a New Zealand "library ban" on Blyton's books, a recurrent press [[canard]]. Policy on buying and stocking Blyton's books by British public libraries drew attention in newspaper reports from the early 1960s to the end of the 1970s, as local decisions were made by a London borough, Birmingham, Nottingham and other central libraries.
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By one measure, Blyton is the sixth most popular author worldwide: over 3400 translations of her books were available in 2007 according to [[UNESCO]]'s [[Index Translationum]];<ref>Unesco, [http://databases.unesco.org/xtrans/stat/xTransStat.a?VL1=A&top=50&lg=0 Index Translationum Statistic.] Retrieved July 12, 2007.</ref> she is behind Agatha Christie and almost equal to Shakespeare.  
  
There is no evidence that her books' popularity ever suffered. She was defended by populist journalists, and others. Her response is said to be that she was not interested in the views of critics aged over 12.<ref>[http://lbarker.orcon.net.nz/blyton.html The Mystery of Enid Blyton<!-- Bot generated title —>]</ref>
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''The Enchanted Wood,'' a story from her ''Faraway Tree'' series, has been recorded by the actress [[Kate Winslet]]. Winslet was captivated by Blyton's stories at an early age, and during a pregnancy she approached the company who own the rights to the Enid Blyton material and asked them if they would be interested in having her record these stories on tape.
  
==Dated attitudes and altered reprints==
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The ''Famous Five'' 1978 television series was produced by Southern Television for the ITV network in the UK, in 26 episodes of thirty minutes. [[Comic book]]s, [[computer]] games, [[movie]]s, and [[TV]] [[cartoon]]s have all been produced based on Blyton's works.
[[Image:The Three Golliwogs.jpg|thumb|100px|right|Cover of ''The Three Golliwogs'', in which the golliwogs are the heroes.]]
 
  
The books are very much of their time, particularly the 1950s titles. They present Britain's [[class system]] &mdash; that is to say, "rough" versus "decent".<ref>Druce p. 222: ''The system of middle-class values (and of automatic value-judgements entailed by such a system) which Blyton presents is simple enough.'' p.225: ''In Blyton, an indifference to dirt, grease, foul smells and untidiness is a defining characteristic of the working class.''</ref> Many of Blyton's children's books similarly popularized negative stereotypes regarding gender, race, and class.
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''Enid Blyton Day'' was first held in 1995, by the Enid Blyton Society and brings together more than one hundred people each summer for a day of all things Blyton. The day includes talks by noted speakers, displays of Blyton memorabilia, and representatives from some of the country's leading dealers of children's books.  
  
Modern reprints of some books have had changes made, such as the replacement of golliwogs with teddy bears or goblins. This response from the publishers to contemporary attitudes on racial stereotypes has itself drawn criticism from those adults who view it as tampering with an important piece of the history of children's literature. The Druce book brings up the case of a story, The Little Black Doll, (the doll wanted to be pink) and which was turned on its head in a reprint. Also removed in deference to modern ethical attitudes are many casual references to slaves and to corporal punishment. Although the books are often stauchly defended by modern conservatives {{Fact|date=March 2008}}, Blyton had come under criticism in this area during her working lifetime; a story of hers was rejected in 1960 with the publisher’s criticisms including that “There is a faint but unattractive touch of old-fashioned xenophobia in the author's attitude to the thieves; they are 'foreign'...and this seems to be regarded as sufficient to explain their criminality.”<ref>http://www.smh.com.au/news/books/when-blyton-fell-out-of-the-good-books/2005/11/21/1132421603094.html</ref>
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Her work has been translated into nearly 90 languages. Her books were and still are enormously popular in Britain, [[Malta]], [[India]], [[Pakistan]], [[New Zealand]], [[Singapore]], and [[Australia]], and as translations, in former [[Yugoslavia]], [[Japan]], and across most of the globe.
  
An element of sexism is noted in some of her books, such as in [http://books.guardian.co.uk/departments/childrenandteens/story/0,,1672558,00.html this Guardian article], which suggested the Famous Five depicts a power struggle between Julian, Dick and George(ina), with the female characters either acting like boys or being heavily put-upon. It has been suggested that a new edition of the book will "address" these issues through alterations.<ref>[http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=392400&in_page_id=1770 Row faster, George! The PC meddlers are chasing us! | the Daily Mail<!-- Bot generated title —>]</ref>. In the Secret Seven books, the girls are deliberately excluded from tasks such as investigating the villains’ hideouts — in ''Go Ahead, Secret Seven'', it is directly stated "'Certainly not,' said Peter, sounding very grown-up all of a sudden. 'This is a man's job, exploring that coal-hole'".<ref>Blyton, Enid; ''Go Ahead, Secret Seven''; Knight Books;(1953)</ref> In the Famous Five this is less often the case, but in ''Five On a Hike Together'', Julian gives similar orders to George – “You may look like a boy and behave like a boy, but you're a girl all the same. And like it or not, girls have got to be taken care of”.<ref>http://www.enidblyton.net/famous-five/five-on-a-hike-together.html</ref> Both of these involve situations that would in reality be dangerous for any child, and where clear [[gender roles]] are set out with boys in charge and girls protected, possibly sending out a message for more realistic scenarios.
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Blyton has encountered criticism for her reductive, simplistic plots as much as for her now taboo portrayal of gender and racial stereotypes, and publishers have aimed to give some of Blyton a modern makeover with reprints of some of her works. Modern reprints of some books have had changes made to alter those details that could be viewed as offensive. This response from the publishers has itself drawn criticism from those adults who view it as tampering with an important piece of the history of children's literature.
  
==Statistics==
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==Selected bibliography==
* Blyton's books have sold more than 400 million copies[http://www.chorion.co.uk/chorion/brand/blyton/]
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* ''[[The Adventure Series|The Adventure series]]
* Her books still continue to sell more than 8 to 10 million copies worldwide
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* [[The Barney Mystery Series|The Barney Mystery series]]
* More than a million Famous Five books are sold worldwide each year
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* [[The Circus Series|The Circus series]]
* Her books have been translated into more than 90 different languages
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* [[The Famous Five (characters)|The Famous Five series ]]
* ''[[The Magic Faraway Tree]]'' was voted no. 66 in the BBC's [[Big Read]].
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* [[The Magic Faraway Tree series]]
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* [[Malory Towers|The Malory Towers series]]
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* The [[Mary Mouse]] series
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* [[The Mistletoe Farm series]]
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* [[The Five Find-Outers|The Mystery series]] (also known as the Five Find-Outers)
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* [[The Naughtiest Girl series]]
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* The [[Noddy]] books
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* The [[Amelia Jane]] short stories
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* [[The Secret Seven|The Secret Seven series]]
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* [[St. Clare's series|The St. Clare's series]]
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* [[The Wishing-Chair series]]
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* The Willow Farm Series''
  
==Trivia==
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==Notes==
{{Trivia|date=June 2007}}
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<references/>
* In a survey of adults between the ages of 25 and 54, conducted by [[Cartoon Network (UK)|Cartoon Network]] in England in 2004, ''The Famous Five'' was named as the top children's book. ''[[The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe]]'', by [[C. S. Lewis]], came second, ahead of [[Robert Louis Stevenson]]'s ''[[Treasure Island]]''. Tolkien's ''[[The Hobbit]]'' and ''[[The Lord of the Rings]]'' tied with a second Blyton title — ''The Secret Seven'' in fourth place.
 
* An oblique critique of a Blyton work is found in [[Jasper Fforde]]'s novel ''[[The Well of Lost Plots]]'' (2003). The heroine, Thursday Next, should change the ending of ''Shadow the Sheepdog'' by entering the novel's world. Thursday is surprised at the one-dimensionality of the characters. They have limited vocabulary, intelligence and emotional scope, and are confined to designated paths. Even stranger is that the characters attack Thursday simply because they are hungry for feeling and emotion. She finally escapes after showing the characters how to feel guilt, enmity, hate, anger and so on, missing from Blyton's world according to Fforde.
 
* Her nephew was the ''[[Doctor Who]]'' composer [[Carey Blyton]].
 
* The name of an important female character in her Malory Towers series (Darrell Rivers) was inspired by the name of her second husband, Kenneth Darrel Waters.
 
* ''Letters from Bobs'', one of Blyton's early works, sold more than 10,000 copies in just one week.
 
 
 
==See also==
 
* [[Enid Blyton Society]]
 
* [[Enid Blyton's illustrators]]
 
* [[Gillian Baverstock]]
 
* [[Imogen Pollock]]
 
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
<references/>
+
*Blyton, Enid. ''The Story of My Life.'' HarperCollins Publishers, 1986. ISBN 0246127953.
 +
*Druce, Robert. ''This Day Our Daily Fictions: An Inquiry into the Multi-Million Bestseller Status of Enid Blyton and Ian Fleming.'' Amsterdam: Rodopi, 1992. ISBN 9051834012.
 +
*Greenfield, George. ''Enid Blyton.'' Thrupp, Stroud, Gloucestershire: Sutton Pub, 1998. ISBN 0750916338.
 +
*Hunt, Peter. ''Dictionary of Literary Biography''. The Gale Group, 1996.
 +
*Mullan, Bob. ''The Enid Blyton Story.'' London: Boxtree, 1987. ISBN 1852832010.
 +
*Ray, Sheila G. ''The Blyton Phenomenon: The Controversy Surrounding the World's Most Successful Children's Writer.'' London: Deutsch, 1983. ISBN 0233974415.
 +
*Stoney, Barbara. ''Enid Blyton: A Biography.'' London: Hodder and Stoughton, 1974. ISBN 0340165146.
 +
*Willey, Mason. ''Enid Blyton: A Bibliography of First Editions and Other Collectible Books: With Cross-Referenced Publishers, Illustrators and Themes.'' Mansfield: M. Willey, 1993. ISBN 0952128403.
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
*[http://www.golliwogg.co.uk/racism.htm "Golliwogg.co.uk"] An independent guide to Golliwogs - "Golliwogs & Racism"
+
All links retrieved February 13, 2024.
  
==Sources==
+
*[http://www.enidblytonsociety.co.uk/ The Enid Blyton Society] ''Enidblytonsociety.co.uk.''
[[Image:Biography.jpeg|thumb|100px|right|Enid Blyton Biography]]
+
*Canning, Laura. 2006. [http://www.enidblyton.net/others/those-dreadful-children.html Those Dreadful Children] ''Enidblyton.net.''
* Enid Blyton (1952) ''The Story of My Life''
+
*[http://www.golliwogg.co.uk/racism.htm Golliwogs & Racism] ''Golliwogg.co.uk.''
* Barbara Stoney (1974) ''Enid Blyton'', 1992 ''The Enid Blyton Biography'', Hodder, London ISBN 0-340-58348-7 (paperback) ISBN 0-340-16514-6
+
*Sandhya. 2008. [http://www.sepiamutiny.com/sepia/archives/005105.html From George to Jyoti: The Famous Five Get a Disneyfied Makeover] ''Sepiamutiny.com.''
* Mason Willey (1993) ''Enid Blyton: A Bibliography of First Editions and Other Collectible Books'' ISBN 0-9521284-0-3
+
*Edwards, Michael. 1999. [http://www.foxall.com.au/users/mje/PutEmRit.htm  Enid Blyton: The Put-Em-Rights (1946)] ''Foxall.com.au.''  
* S. G. Ray (1982) ''The Blyton Phenomenon''
 
* Bob Mullan (1987) ''The Enid Blyton Story''
 
* George Greenfield (1998) ''Enid Blyton''
 
* Robert Druce (1992) ''This Day Our Daily Fictions: An Enquiry into the Multi-Million Bestseller Status of Enid Blyton and Ian Fleming''
 
  
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{{Enid Blyton}}
 
{{Enid Blyton}}
 
{{Persondata
 
|NAME= Blyton, Enid
 
|ALTERNATIVE NAMES=Blyton, Enid Mary
 
|SHORT DESCRIPTION= English children's [[novelist]]
 
|DATE OF BIRTH= {{birth date|1897|8|11|mf=y}}
 
|PLACE OF BIRTH=[[East Dulwich]], [[London]]
 
|DATE OF DEATH= {{death date|1968|11|28|mf=y}}
 
|PLACE OF DEATH=[[Hampstead]], [[London]]}}
 
{{DEFAULTSORT:Blyton, Enid}}
 
  
  
 
[[Category:Art, music, literature, sports and leisure]]
 
[[Category:Art, music, literature, sports and leisure]]
 
[[Category:Writers and poets]]
 
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{{Credit|207345918}}
 
{{Credit|207345918}}

Latest revision as of 18:54, 13 February 2024


Enid Mary Blyton (August 11, 1897 - November 28, 1968) was a popular and prolific British author of children's books. Blyton is noted for numerous series of books based on recurring characters and designed for different age groups. She produced more than 800 books that have enjoyed popular success in many parts of the world and have sold over 400 million copies.

She is probably best known for several book series, including those featuring Noddy, the Famous Five, and the Secret Seven. Though often criticized for their stereotyped characters, simple writing style, and didactic moralism, her books were widely translated and have remained internationally popular long after her death. Her success stemmed from her penchant for stories where children ride out their own adventures with minimal adult help.

In spite of her widespread popularity, Blyton has not held a stable place within the literary canon; stereotypical portrayals of race, gender, and class in her books have at times compelled libraries to withdraw some titles from circulation. However, as the literary discourse on children's literature continues to grow, Blyton's cultural significance and social relevance as an author continues to be of importance.

Personal life

Blyton was born on August 11, 1897, at 354 Lordship Lane, East Dulwich, London, the eldest child of Thomas Carey Blyton (1870-1920), a salesman of cutlery, and Theresa Mary (1874 – 1950). Blyton had two younger brothers, Hanly (b. 1899), and Carey (b. 1902), who were born after the family had moved to the nearby suburb of Beckenham. From 1907 to 1915, Blyton was educated at St. Christopher's School in Beckenham, where she excelled. Her teenage ambition to become a writer was discouraged when several hundred pieces were rejected by publishers.

Enid Blyton's House in Bourne End, Buckinghamshire, UK

Blyton was a talented pianist, and her parents had hopes that she might play professionally. Instead, Blyton gave up her musical studies to teach. She taught for five years at Bickley, Surbiton, and Chessington, and wrote in her spare time. Her first book, Child Whispers, a collection of poems, was published in 1922.

On August 28, 1924, Blyton married Major Hugh Alexander Pollock (DSO) (1888-1971), editor of the book department in the publishing firm of George Newnes, which published two of her books that year. The couple moved to Buckinghamshire. By 1938, they moved to a house in Beaconsfield, famously named Green Hedges by Blyton's readers following a competition in Sunny Stories. The Pollocks had two children—Gillian Mary Baverstock (July 15, 1931-June 24, 2007) and Imogen Mary Smallwood (b. October 27, 1935).

In the mid-1930s, Blyton had an experience of a spiritual crisis, but she decided against converting to Roman Catholicism from the Church of England because she had felt it was too constricting. Although she rarely attended church services, she saw that her two daughters were baptized into the Anglican faith and went to the local Sunday School.

In 1942, Blyton and Pollock divorced; the following year, Blyton met Kenneth Fraser Darrell Waters (1892-1967), a London surgeon, with whom she had been friends. They married October 20, 1943, and she subsequently changed the surname of her two daughters to Darrell Waters. Pollock remarried and had little contact with his daughters thereafter. Blyton's second marriage found her happy with her role as a devoted doctor's wife and mother of her two daughters.

In 1957, Blyton was diagnosed with a digestive problem; to keep her from overworking, Blyton's husband led her to believe she was ill from a heart condition. Blyton's husband himself died in 1967. During the following months, she became increasingly ill. Afflicted by Alzheimer's disease, Blyton was moved into a nursing home three months before her death; she died at the Greenways Nursing Home Hampstead, London, on November 28, 1968, aged 71, and was cremated at Golders Green.

Literary career

Blyton wrote hundreds of books for young and older children: Novels, story collections, and some non-fiction. An estimate puts her total book publication at around 800 titles, in addition to decades of magazine writing. It is said that at one point in her career, she regularly produced 10,000 words a day.

The early 1920s saw her career take off, with the publication of Child Whispers (1922) and Real Fairies: Poems (1923). By 1925, Blyton was writing an average of four to five thousand words daily, not only for her books for children, but also for educational journals and the Morning Post, a London newspaper. Among her magazine efforts was her work for the popular Sunny Stories for Little Folks, which she also edited from 1926 to 1952.

The publication of Adventures of the Wishing Chair in 1937 ,and its subsequent popularity cemented the style of fantasy that Blyton employed in her works during this period. The fantasy was simplistic and humorous, markedly different from the complex and more accomplished work of J.R.R. Tolkien, her contemporary whose own novel, The Hobbit, was published the same year.

Also notable was The Secret Island, published the following year. Like Adventures of the Wishing Chair, the book was released after first appearing in Sunny Stories. The Secret Island belonged to another genre that Blyton dominated—that of the adventure story. Sequels followed, with The Secret of Spiggy Holes in 1940, and The Secret Mountain published in 1941.

During World War II, most other writers were dormant, as restrictions on paper limited the literary output, but the popularity of Blyton’s work meant that she could continue to be published. For a few titles she began using the pseudonym, Mary Pollock, combining her middle name and her first married name. Even without the Blyton stamp, these works were just as successful. Her wartime contributions also included patriotic advice in her magazine columns. Even in her 1941 book, The Adventurous Four, Blyton employed strong patriotic themes and featured the uncovering of a German submarine base.

Blyton also made contributions to the girl’s school story genre, with The Naughtiest Girl in the School (1940) and its sequels. The second book of the series, The Twins at St. Clare’s (1941) was even serialized as a Japanese animated cartoon on television in 1991.

Blyton’s most famous series, The Famous Five, was introduced in 1942. The Five was made up of a familiar team of boys and girls. They included Julian, the rather condescending leader; Dick, often the one in Julian’s shadow; the tomboy George, whose real name was Georgina; Anne, George’s opposite—the stereotypically weak, inferior girl; and Timmy the dog.

By the late 1940s, Blyton was at the height of her dominance of popular fiction, continuing to produce book after book for more than twenty publishers in Britain. In 1949, she was commissioned by David White of the Sampson Low publishing house to write stories to be used with the artwork of Harmsen Van der Beek. This venture led to one of her most successful series, the Noddy books, which despite their popularity are the most critically derided of Blyton’s books. Critics have found fault with Noddy, who, as the title character, has few redeeming qualities. Noddy language has become a term used to describe banal idiocy. Blyton’s tendency to project attitudes that have since been labeled as racist is also apparent in the Noddy books, in which black and bad are equated.

Indeed Blyton's books are very much of their time, particularly those written in the 1950s. They present Britain's class system—that is to say, rough versus decent.[1] Many of Blyton's children's books similarly popularized negative stereotypes regarding gender, race, and class.

Religious perspective

Between 1948 and 1960, Blyton produced more than 40 different religious story books including The Enid Blyton Bible Stories, which included a series of 14 books on the New Testament and 14 on the Old Testament.[2]

Her book, The Land of Far-Beyond is loosely modeled on John Bunyan's The Pilgrim's Progress (1678). It is an allegory that revolves around a journey that is spiritual as well as physical.

In the book a boy named Peter and his two sisters, Anna and Patience, travel from the City of Turmoil to the City of Happiness in the Land of Far-Beyond. With them are two other children, Lily and John, and five adults—Mr. Scornful, Mr. Fearful, Dick Cowardly, Gracie Grumble, and Sarah Simple. They have been warned to keep to the narrow path but they are beset by troubles and temptations on the way, causing them to stray from the path and into danger. Although Peter and his sisters finally make it to the City of Happiness, their companions do not. The book contains Biblical references and before they are permitted to enter the Land of Far-Beyond, Peter and the others have to decide which is the greatest of Faith, Hope, or Love.[3]

In 1953, Blyton wrote two prayers for the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II. She sent them to Buckingham Palace, and in her accompanying letter explained that: "Her Majesty The Queen has asked us all to pray for her on that day, and has told us simply and sincerely, what to pray for. Now, the children want to pray for her too, and I have been pressed to write for them a special Children's Prayer for The Queen on Coronation day—a prayer that all children here & overseas may say."[4]

Legacy

Enid Blyton wrote nearly 800 books over a 40-year career, many of them quite slim, as well as close to 5,000 short stories. She sold 200 million books in her lifetime, with few translations until the 1960s and 1970s, and has sold some 400 million altogether. About half of her titles are still in print, and they still sell 11 million copies a year, including a million for the Famous Five series and three million Noddy books.[5]

By one measure, Blyton is the sixth most popular author worldwide: over 3400 translations of her books were available in 2007 according to UNESCO's Index Translationum;[6] she is behind Agatha Christie and almost equal to Shakespeare.

The Enchanted Wood, a story from her Faraway Tree series, has been recorded by the actress Kate Winslet. Winslet was captivated by Blyton's stories at an early age, and during a pregnancy she approached the company who own the rights to the Enid Blyton material and asked them if they would be interested in having her record these stories on tape.

The Famous Five 1978 television series was produced by Southern Television for the ITV network in the UK, in 26 episodes of thirty minutes. Comic books, computer games, movies, and TV cartoons have all been produced based on Blyton's works.

Enid Blyton Day was first held in 1995, by the Enid Blyton Society and brings together more than one hundred people each summer for a day of all things Blyton. The day includes talks by noted speakers, displays of Blyton memorabilia, and representatives from some of the country's leading dealers of children's books.

Her work has been translated into nearly 90 languages. Her books were and still are enormously popular in Britain, Malta, India, Pakistan, New Zealand, Singapore, and Australia, and as translations, in former Yugoslavia, Japan, and across most of the globe.

Blyton has encountered criticism for her reductive, simplistic plots as much as for her now taboo portrayal of gender and racial stereotypes, and publishers have aimed to give some of Blyton a modern makeover with reprints of some of her works. Modern reprints of some books have had changes made to alter those details that could be viewed as offensive. This response from the publishers has itself drawn criticism from those adults who view it as tampering with an important piece of the history of children's literature.

Selected bibliography

  • The Adventure series
  • The Barney Mystery series
  • The Circus series
  • The Famous Five series
  • The Magic Faraway Tree series
  • The Malory Towers series
  • The Mary Mouse series
  • The Mistletoe Farm series
  • The Mystery series (also known as the Five Find-Outers)
  • The Naughtiest Girl series
  • The Noddy books
  • The Amelia Jane short stories
  • The Secret Seven series
  • The St. Clare's series
  • The Wishing-Chair series
  • The Willow Farm Series

Notes

  1. Druce, p. 222.
  2. Enid Blyton Society, Religious Books. Retrieved June 22, 2008.
  3. Anita Bensoussane, The Land of Far-Beyond. Retrieved June 22, 2008.
  4. Royal.gov.uk, Crowning Glory: A Prayer for Children. Retrieved June 20, 2008.
  5. Nicolette Jones, Why Blyton was another breed. Retrieved June 20, 2008.
  6. Unesco, Index Translationum Statistic. Retrieved July 12, 2007.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Blyton, Enid. The Story of My Life. HarperCollins Publishers, 1986. ISBN 0246127953.
  • Druce, Robert. This Day Our Daily Fictions: An Inquiry into the Multi-Million Bestseller Status of Enid Blyton and Ian Fleming. Amsterdam: Rodopi, 1992. ISBN 9051834012.
  • Greenfield, George. Enid Blyton. Thrupp, Stroud, Gloucestershire: Sutton Pub, 1998. ISBN 0750916338.
  • Hunt, Peter. Dictionary of Literary Biography. The Gale Group, 1996.
  • Mullan, Bob. The Enid Blyton Story. London: Boxtree, 1987. ISBN 1852832010.
  • Ray, Sheila G. The Blyton Phenomenon: The Controversy Surrounding the World's Most Successful Children's Writer. London: Deutsch, 1983. ISBN 0233974415.
  • Stoney, Barbara. Enid Blyton: A Biography. London: Hodder and Stoughton, 1974. ISBN 0340165146.
  • Willey, Mason. Enid Blyton: A Bibliography of First Editions and Other Collectible Books: With Cross-Referenced Publishers, Illustrators and Themes. Mansfield: M. Willey, 1993. ISBN 0952128403.

External links

All links retrieved February 13, 2024.


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