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A Fine Defence Of Enid Blyton

Former children's Laureate, Anne Fine, takes a look at the enduring appeal of children's writer Enid Blyton. From 2008.

Despite enjoying the stories in her childhood, as an adult, writer Anne Fine ignored the work of Enid Blyton.

This was partly because of the drip-drip of disapproval that's accompanied her books for many decades. But, going back to her battered old Blytons, she realised exactly why she had found the books so captivating - they are remarkably good reads - real page turners.

Anne Fine does not deny that Blyton is the creator of creaking plots, cardboard characters who often used non pc language.

An author of jolly adventures, in which the most enormous amounts of food and drink are consumed by children who never put on weight. And yet her books have outsold all other children's authors.

In 2008, Blyton was voted the UK's best-loved writer. Her work has been translated into 40 different languages and she's sold over 500 million books worldwide.

Featuring extracts from a rare interview with Blyton's only surviving daughter, Imogen Smallwood

With contributions from:

* Enid Blyton's biographer, Barbara Stoney
* Leading Blyton scholar, Dr David Rudd [Professor of Children's literature at Bolton University]

Plus archive recordings of Enid herself, her elder daughter Gillian Baverstock and her brother Hanley who explains how the siblings comforted each other during parental rows.

Reader Miriam Margolyes

Producer: Helen Lee

First broadcast on 麻豆社 Radio 4 in November 2008.

14 days left to listen

30 minutes

Last on

Sat 2 Nov 2024 00:30

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