Enid Mary Blyton (August 11, 1897–November 28, 1968) was a British children's author. She is noted particularly for numerous series of books based on recurring characters and designed for different age groups. She has become one of the most popular children's authors of all time, with her books selling more than 400 million copies worldwide. She has remained popular among many generations of children; many of her classics have never been out of print, and more than 300 of her books are still in print today.
Her most widely known character is believed to be Noddy. More than 200 million copies of the 24 Noddy books have been sold worldwide and the Noddy-related merchandising items are worth £50 million. Other particularly popular series include the Famous Five and Secret Seven books.
Her work involves mainly children's adventure stories, and some fantasy, occasionally involving magic. Her books were and still are enormously popular in Britain, India, New Zealand and Australia and remain so to this day. They have been translated into nearly 90 languages, including Dutch, Finnish, French, German, Hebrew, Japanese, Malay, Spanish, and Swedish. Translated versions became and have remained extremely popular in many parts of Europe and Asia.
Her first book, Child Whispers, a collection of poems, was published in 1922.
On 28 August 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. Eventually they moved to a house called "Green Hedges" in Beaconsfield. They had two children: Gillian Mary Baverstock (b. 15 July 1931) and Imogen Mary Smallwood (b. 27 October 1935). By 1939 her marriage to Pollock was in difficulties, and in 1941 she met Kenneth Fraser Darrell Waters (1892–1967), 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.
Afflicted by presenile dementia, 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, and was cremated at Golders Green.
Best known of her works are (in alphabetical order):
She wrote hundreds of other books for young and older children. She also filled a large number of magazine pages, particularly the long-running Sunny Stories which were immensly populur among younger children. An estimate puts her total book publication at around 700 titles, not including decades of magazine writing. It is said at one point she produced 10,000 words a day.
Blyton also wrote many books on fantasy, nature, non-fiction and many other categories.
Such prolific output led many to believe that some of her work was ghost-written. No ghost writers 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, but were mainly story books made up from re-cycled work.
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.
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. The second type is the boarding school story; the plots of these are usually less extraordinary than the first type, with more emphasis on the day-to-day life at a boarding school. This is the world of the midnight feast, the practical joke, and the social interaction of the various types of character that can be found at school. Examples of this type are the Malory Towers stories, the St Clare's series, and the Naughtiest Girl books.
The third type is the fantastical. Children are typically transported into a magical world in which they meet fairies, goblins, elves, or other fantastical creatures. Examples of this type are the Wishing-Chair books and the Magic Faraway Tree.
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 U.S. in the 1930s.
Much play has been made of naive language permitting double entendre (especially the opportunity for the reader to imagine sexual connotations), clearly not intended by the author. Examples cited include Noddy "jumping into bed" with Big Ears, another character, and the inclusion in the "Magic Faraway Tree" series of characters called Dick and Fanny (changed to "Rick" and "Frannie" in modern reprints). This is probably journalistic froth. This whole area is subject to urban myths and the carefree retelling in newspapers of anecdotes as factual (recycling the old press cuttings, in fact) making it somewhat difficult to discern the truth.
A more 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. There is no evidence that her books' popularity ever suffered. She was defended by populist journalists, and others; left-of-centre newspapers ran articles condemning her work, with a piece in 1966 in The Guardian claiming that Blyton wrote more insidiously dangerous right-wing literature than that published by British fascist groups.
Modern reprints of some books have had changes made (such as the replacement of golliwogs with teddy bears). This is the publishers' reaction to contemporary attitudes on racial stereotypes, and probably enforced by market conditions and pressure groups. It 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 a single case of a story, The Little Black Doll, which could be interpreted as a racist message (the doll wanted to be pink) and which was turned on its head in a reprint.
On Flanders and Swann's album At the Drop of Another Hat, Michael Flanders introduces his partner Donald Swann, in part, as "the Enid Blyton of English light music".
Pop group The Enid took their name from her.
Many of the hardcover editions of her books bore a facsimile of her signature.
Her nephew is the Doctor Who composer Carey Blyton.
The books spurred a never before seen craze amongst children in India in the 1970-1990 period for story books, which is known as Bookworm Period.
Some of the stories were said to have been insipred by the Cottingley Fairies incidents.
1897 births | 1968 deaths | Londoners | English children's writers | Enid Blyton | Mystery writers | Women writers
Enid Blyton | Enid Blytonová | Enid Blyton | Enid Blyton | Enid Blyton | Enid Blyton | Enid Blyton | אניד בלייטון | Enid Blyton | イーニッド・ブライトン | Enid Blyton | Enid Blyton | Enid Blyton | எனிட் பிளைட்டன் | Enid Blyton | 伊妮·布來敦
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