Enid Blyton | Page 2 | Sunday Observer

Enid Blyton

5 May, 2019

Enid Blyton also known as Mary Pollock was the most successful children’s writer of her generation. A prolific writer, she wrote over 400 books during her lifetime. She is in the top 10 all-time bestseller lists – her books having sold over 600 million copies

Shy in her relations with the public, Enid Blyton revealed little of her private life. She was born in the late 1890s and was brought up in Buckingham. Her father hoped she might become a concert pianist, but despite her talent for music, she decided to be a children’s writer.

She took Froebel training and became a governess to a family of boys in Surrey and this experience encouraged her to set up a school for boys.

In her spare time, she began writing a variety of children’s stories. These ranged from natural botany books, biblical stories, a simplified version of The Pilgrim’s Progress, to the Famous Five series and the ubiquitous Noddy and Big Ears stories.

In 1924, she married her first husband – H.A.Pollock with whom she had two daughters. She married her second husband Kenneth Waters in 1943.

Her first stories were published by George Newness and her fame grew through the popularity of her stories in the children’s magazine ‘Sunny Stories.’

Her books were controversial among literary critics and librarians. Her writings were often not seen as ‘great literature’ Some found the likes of Big Ears and Noddy just too childish (poor Noddy would frequently burst into tears at any sign of trouble in Toytown). For a considerable period, certain libraries would refuse to stock Enid Blyton’s books – despite strong demand from children themselves.

The books reflected Blyton’s perspective on morality and right behaviour. She said her books reflected her way of looking at the world.

“Most of you could write down perfectly correctly all the things that I believe in and stand for – you have found them in my books, and a writer’s books are always a faithful reflection of himself”

Courtesy: Internet

Comments