albionfan37
Well-known member
Boy was my absolute favourite book also liked whizzer and chips
No he didn't - Robert Arthur wrote them and attributed them to Hitchcock to get more sales - like Tom Clancy in his later years and after his death. Had a few of these myself.Alfred Hitchcock wrote a series of books about amateur detectives (boys version of Nancy Drew I suppose), the 3 investigators I think, Jupiter Jones was the main character.
No he didn't - Robert Arthur wrote them and attributed them to Hitchcock to get more sales - like Tom Clancy in his later years and after his death. Had a few of these myself.
Was a big fan of Enid Blyton books - especially the Adventure series, Famous Five and Five Find Outers. And didn't turn out to be a racist either. When it is pointed out how many bad guys were "swarthy" or gypsies then you see it in hindsight but thought nothing of it then.
Also 101 Dalmations and Stig of The Dump. Also a complete rip off of Anne Frank called Storm Warning by Mara Kay.
Phantom Tollbooth by Norton Juster. A must buy if your kids are about eight. Still love the book even now.
The Narnia books and Swallows and Amazons books. I wonder if anyone would even be allowed to write books like Swallows and Amazons anymore, with all the perilous activities the children used to indulge in, with no adult supervision, safety equipment or risk assessment forms completed. The Safeguarding Nazis would go nuts.
Just William. I did my best to imitate him. I made many a girl say, " I'll scweem and scweem til i'm sick." We also had Dick Barton and Biggles on the light programme. The Beano, Dandy and The Eagle for reading material of sorts. I'm disappointed that the Mekon hasn't turned up in my lifetime.
Razzle.
Swallows and Amazons series for me too. And now I live and work in the Lake District! The thing with Ransome's books though is yes, the children did all that without supervision and the other points you make - but they were all 'within bounds' as such, and therefore so much more believable (the Lakes and Broads ones anyway) than the famous five, Narnia, and so on. The theme through the stories is that parental supervision and safety were always there just below the surface (a short boat row away) - so it was sort of a 'safe excitement'. A bit like Via Ferratas where you are clipped on, or Bungee Jumping - it feels dangerous, but in reality, you're pretty near as safe as houses. With early Ransome you could actually envisage the bare bones happening with children's imaginations blowing it up into exciting bits.
And I always liked Roland Pertwee's early books (Rough Water, The Islanders) for similar reason, along with Philip Turner's The Grange at High Force.