It's high time I got back
round to highlighting some of the authors added to my main
list in my most recent update. In this post and the next, I'll focus
on 24 "new" authors who published at least some children's fiction.
Almost always when I get to
note that a previously unidentified author is now identified, it's because
brilliant researcher John Herrington has been able to connect the dots. So it
was a satisfying small victory when a while back I stumbled across the real
identity of children's author ROSAMOND
BERTRAM, author of six girls' career novels, most focused on journalism.
Those titles include Ann Thorne, Reporter
(1939), Mary Truelove, Detective
(1940), Ann Thorne Comes to America
(1941), Philippa Drives On (1947), Scoop for Ann Thorne (1949), and Front Page Ann Thorne (1951).
At the time, I was
researching journalist and romance writer ELISABETH
MARGETSON, who published nearly three dozen romances for Ward Lock, including
such titles as Poor Pagan (1936), Gay Career (1939), Serenade to a Stranger (1940), Six
in Sunshine (1942), Quartette in a
Flat (1947), Last Night's Kisses
(1953), and Another Kind of Beauty
(1960). When I found Margetson's entry on the 1939 England & Wales
Register, her full name was given, lo and behold, as Rosamond Elisabeth Bertram
Margetson, and her career was journalist. Add to that the dates during which both
sets of books were published match up, and it seems pretty certain (though
admittedly not absolutely proven) that Margetson and Bertram are one and the
same.
There is considerable
complexity and some tragedy involving Margetson's three marriages. There are
indications, unearthed by John Herrington, that her first husband may have
faked his own death and relocated to Australia, the discovery of which, only
after she had remarried, caused her second marriage to fail. Wow! It was then
not until many year's later, after her first husband finally did die, that she
was able to marry once more, legally. Sadly, however, on her death record a bit
more than a decade later, she is shown once again as a widow. On the 1939
Register, her birthdate is given as 22 Aug 1900, and information provided to Author's and Writer's for its 1935
edition says she was born in Ireland, but John discovered she was in fact born
in 1898 around Birmingham. We are assuming the 22 Aug date is correct even if
she shaved a couple of years off her age.
As luck would have it, John
emailed me in just the past week or two with information about another author
who was previously unidentified. EILEEN MEYLER
was the author of a dozen or so children's titles, including some historical
tales and a series of holiday stories featuring the Elwood family at their
summer cottage in Dorset. The former include The Gloriet Tower (1956), set in a medieval castle, The Story of Elswyth (1959), set in
Saxon England, and Apple Harvest
(1970), which involves Monmouth's rebellion. The later stories include Adventure in Purbeck (1955), Adventure on Ponies (1959), Adventure Next Door (1960), and Adventure at Tremayne (1963).
We failed to identify her when researching my update, but John recently discovered she was Eileen Sylvia Meyler Shean (27 Dec 1900 - 5 Dec 1983). She had been a school principal who successfully turned her hand to writing. Thanks to John for that additional information, which will (eventually) get corrected in the main list!
Happily, after this post went live, Barbara of the Call Me Madam / Life Must Be Filled Up blog shared these three charming Meyler covers -- thank you Barbara! |
We failed to identify her when researching my update, but John recently discovered she was Eileen Sylvia Meyler Shean (27 Dec 1900 - 5 Dec 1983). She had been a school principal who successfully turned her hand to writing. Thanks to John for that additional information, which will (eventually) get corrected in the main list!
Scans courtesy of FG! |
Several highly intriguing
children's authors have come my way courtesy of my Fairy Godmother. There will
be three more of these (complete with the lovely dustjackets FG scanned for me)
in the next post, but for now I'm only mentioning ANNE BARRETT, who sounds like a potential treasure to me. She was
the author of seven children's titles in all. Her debut, Caterpillar Hill (1950), seems to have fantasy and time travel
elements. Stolen Summer (1951) is the
story of a girl and her widowed mother spending a summer in Dorset, while The Dark Island (1952) is about children
on holiday in Ireland. The Journey of
Johnny Rew (1954), also set in Dorset, is about a boy orphaned in the Blitz
searching for his parents' origins. Songberd's
Grove (1957), a runner up for the Carnegie Medal, is about two children
fighting a neighborhood bully in London—the Guardian reviewer said the
climactic scene was "as wild and ingenius as any Ealing comedy." Her
other books were Sheila Burton: Dental
Assistant (1956) and Midway
(1967). Barrett's daughter came across some fascinating recollections her
mother wrote about life in the A.T.S. in wartime Weymouth and shared them here.
I was also intrigued enough
by KATHLEEN MACKENZIE to promptly
order the first of a trio of books—The
Starke Sisters (1963), Charlotte
(1964), and Kelford Dig (1966)—which
deal with girls being raised by their very Edwardian grandmother. Of course, I
haven't got round to reading The Starke
Sisters yet, but someday, "as God is my witness" and so on.
Mackenzie wrote around two dozen children's books in all. Among the others are
a number of pony stories, including a series featuring the Pentire children,
beginning with The Four Pentires and
Jimmy (1947), as well as individual stories including Minda (1953), Jumping Jan
(1955), Nancy and the Carrs (1958), Prize Pony (1959), and The Pageant (1964) (see here
for further details). Mackenzie appears on the 1939 England & Wales
Register as an actress, which may explain the subject of her single biography, The Great Sarah: The Life of Mrs Siddons
(1968).
CATHERINE ANTHONY CLARK was born and raised in England, though she and her
rancher husband immigrated to British Columbia when she was in her twenties. She
was a newspaper columnist and the author of seven children's titles with
fantasy and folkloric themes, the first of which, The Golden Pine Cone (1950), appeared when she was in her late
fifties. Her other titles are The Sun
Horse (1951), The One-Winged Dragon
(1955), The Silver Man (1959), The Diamond Feather, or the Door in the
Mountain (1962), The Man with Yellow
Eyes (1963), and The Hunter and the
Medicine Man (1966).
Dora Fowler Martin |
I already mentioned Stella
Martin Currey among my "potential TBR" author posts in recent weeks.
Now we come to Stella's aunt, DORA
FOWLER MARTIN, who was also, therefore, the sister of J. P. Martin, known
for the Uncle series of children's
books. Dora was the author of three novels for adults—The Unseen Audience (1934), Wander
Year (1935), and The Long Procession
(1936)—about which I know next to nothing, and also two children's books, Two Young Adventurers (1938) and Caravan Days (1940).
The four children's titles by
WENDY COOPER sound like they could
be fun. The Laughing Lady (1957),
which deals with the disappearance of a famous painting, Alibi Children (1958), The
Cat Strikes at Night (1959), and Disappearing
Diamonds (1960) were, fairly obviously, mystery and adventure stories. The
first two at least seem to have been novelizations of BBC television
productions. Cooper was also a journalist and a writer for television and
radio. She contributed articles to numerous major periodicals, and published
several books about women and science.
Fans of animal stories should
have HELEN GRIFFITHS on their radar.
She was the author of more than 20 children's titles, including titles like Horse in the Clouds (1957), Wild and Free (1958), Africano (1961), The Greyhound (1964), Stallion
of the Sands (1968), Russian Blue
(1973), The Kershaw Dogs (1978), and Hari's Pigeon (1982). More detail about
her horse stories can be found here. Griffiths
grew up in the U.K. but married a Spaniard and thereafter lived in Spain, so
later titles appeared under the name Helen Santos. Her connection with Spain
apparently informed her one adult novel, The
Dark Swallows (1966), about an ill-fated romance during the Spanish Civil
War. Two more of her children's titles, The
Last Summer (1979) and Dancing Horses
(1981), are also set immediately before and during the civil war, and focus (believe
it or not) on a bull-fighting horse and her colt.
And on the topic of animal
stories, there's CECILIA KNOWLES,
whose five children's titles are often focused on animals. These include Hua Ma, the Flower Pony (1947), Torry, the Roe Deer (1950), We Went to Live in Scotland (1954), Kelpie, a Scottish Sheepdog (1958), and Hippo, a Welsh Cob (1960).
FREDA COLLINS
was a playwright, lecturer, and children's author. Most of her plays and
stories were religious in theme, but she also published a series of books about
Brownies, including The Brownies at No. 9
(1936), The Pack That Ran Itself
(1956), The Woodland Pack (1957), The Brownie Year (1957), The Good Turn Hunters (1963), and The Patchwork Pack (1968). On the 1939
England & Wales Register, she is identified as an air raid warden.
And rounding out this post
are two authors of only two books each. ELSIE
BLEY's are Tell Us a Tale (1950),
illustrated by Grace Lodge, and The
Secret of the Headland (1955), a holiday adventure featuring two children
at the seaside with an aunt and her friend who were in the French Resistance.
How much is made of the latter plot element is unknown, but it could be
interesting.
And I know very little about
the unidentified BARBARA GILSON's Beyond the Dragon Door (1934) and Queen of the Andes (1935), beyond that
they appear to be girls' adventure stories.
Hmmm, you don't say what you thought of Ann Thorne in America and I am very curious.
ReplyDeleteI did very much like Caterpillar Hall although thought I would have liked it best as a child. I do own Songberd's Grove but am not sure I have read it.
Maybe I will move it higher on the TBR.
https://perfectretort.blogspot.com/2012/04/caterpillar-hall-review.html
I haven't read any Helen Griffiths but how I love illustrator Victor Ambrus! How did he have time to illustrate so many books? I don't think she was much published in the US. The only one I remember seeing was The Greyhound and I never got around to pursuing, despite the appealing cover.
Oh heavens, you don't think I've read all of these?! These are just authors I've added to my main list. But now I'm curious why you would be particularly curious what I thought of the Ann Thorne book?
DeleteAs always, some lovely cover art and interesting/entertaining stories. Thank you Scot.
ReplyDeleteThis children's book post seems like a good time to ask for help identifying a British children's book that I read in my youth. I have no idea of the author or title, or if the author is female or male. I don't even remember details of the main plot. What I remember are a couple of details of English life that fascinated me as being so different from my life in the American Midwest. I probably read the book sometime between 1964 and 1972 or so, but it might have been published long before that, as I was never one to disregard a book because it was "old".
It was about a group (club or ??) of children living in an urban area in England. Some adults were up to no good and the children resolved to discover what was happening. To shadow/spy on the adults they used a number of ploys, two of which really stick in my mind. One was the "penny for the Guy" ploy, they went around with a guy dummy asking for donations, even though it was the wrong time of year, feeling comfortable that the adults would just think, silly/greedy kids it isn't close to early November. At one point they even dressed one of their number up as the "guy" and left him sitting in a strategic spot to watch well into the night, ignored by the adults.
The other was one kid got into the "boot" of a car belonging to the bad adults and left a trail for his friends to follow, using a "tin of tooth powder" which had a unique colour. It was old fashioned and the kids had bought up all that they could find in the chemist shops to have in stock.
I loved those bits of "local color". Any ideas? I figure readers interested in the books Scot describes here might well have read and remembered my forgotten treasure.
Jerri
Every time someone describes a book they're looking for, I think it sounds familiar, but actually I have no idea. Good luck tracking it down!
DeleteThanks so much for showing us these incredibly evocative covers. I remember being gripped by Helen Griffith's The Wild Heart when I was a child - I had that edition. As for the query about the two English children's adventure books, I don't suppose they are Enid Blytons are they? She wrote whole series about groups of children who solve mysteries and outwit villains - The Secret Seven, The Five Find-outers, The Famous Five etc, and I can remember the children doing these kind of things! Can you remember the illustrations - I find these stay in one's head right through life...
ReplyDeleteThey were two events in a single book. I don't have any memory of illustrations, wait, I think I can see the "guy" (disguised child) in a wagon. But I may well be remembering an illustration of some other "guy" in a wagon. It could be Enid Blyton, although the few of those I have found to read as an adult seem to have rural or small town settings and I feel pretty certain this was a city, perhaps even London. Thanks for the suggestion.
DeleteJerri
Thanks Tanya!
DeleteAs always, loving the cover art, especially the Ann Thorne titles! I spent all that time in the Children's Literature Department at the Los Angeles Public Library, but most of these authors are new to me.
ReplyDeleteTom
Tom
Thanks Tom!
DeleteScott, I suspect (though I've never researched it properly) that 'Barbara Gilson' was actually the highly prolific Major Charles Gilson, who specialised in boys' adventure stories. BG's two girls' books are very similar to CG's both in style and in plot devices.
ReplyDeleteFrom a quick Google search it looks like you're right Sue! I'll confirm it more thoroughly and then remove her from the list. Thanks!
DeleteDear Scott, I want to read them all!!! Especially the Brownie stories.
ReplyDeleteThanks Dixie!
DeleteWhile playing on the Amazon website I came across one of your FM titles that's due to published in August. Can you cheer us all up through this strange time we are in and do one of your Grand Reveals of the other titles? Please.
ReplyDeleteSue, can you email me and let me know which title you found? Unfortunately, due to the current situation, our plans for August have been evolving a bit, and I'd like to make sure the book you saw really is going to be released! Hopefully, an announcement can follow soon.
DeleteGolly, Scott, such riches! And some of that cover art...especially those of the Helen Jeffies books. Funny how some artists can just evoke an atmosphere of the story. And others are, well, nice.
ReplyDeleteOkay, I was looking at Ann Thorne, Reporter, as she covered the society beat (of course...) I assume she's the one in green, not sophisticated redhead. Especially since she's holding her iPhone in her hand.
Ha! I love it. I hadn't noticed the iPhone. :-)
Delete