The Book, Cat, & Cat Book Lovers Almanac

of historical trivia regarding books, cats, and other animals. Actually this blog has evolved so that it is described better as a blog about cats in history and culture. And we take as a theme the advice of Aldous Huxley: If you want to be a writer, get some cats. Don't forget to see the archived articles linked at the bottom of the page.

December 21, 2015

December 21, 2006

Philippa Pearce (January 22, 1920 to December 21, 2006) was a British children's author widely applauded for her writing skill and psychological subtlety. 

The Encyclopedia Britannica sketches her accomplishments:

Philippa Pearce... was best known for her Carnegie Medal-winning novel Tom’s Midnight Garden (1958), a mystical tale of friendship and growing up in which 10-year-old Tom befriends Hatty, a girl from the past whom he meets in a magical garden that appears at night only when the grandfather clock strikes 13...

Her obituary in The Independent adds more detail:

....[Pearce herself was] the fourth child of the local flour miller and corn merchant, she was brought up in the Mill House, a handsome early 19th-century dwelling set in the upper reaches of the River Cam near the village of Great Shelford. This home stood next to the mill itself... Although there was never much cash there was ample space, providing opportunity for canoeing, fishing, swimming and skating.

Starting school at the age of eight because of illness, Philippa eventually won a scholarship to read English and History at Girton College in nearby Cambridge - the third child in her family to get a scholarship to university and the firs
t generation to do so.

After getting her degree, she was employed as a civil servant before becoming a scriptwriter and producer for BBC Radio Schools Broadcasting for 13 years, until 1958. She followed this by a stint as children's editor at Oxford University Press and then, 1960-67, André Deutsch. But during a long period in hospital in the summer of 1951 recovering from tuberculosis, she spent hours re-creating every moment of a favourite canoe trip taken many years ago on the river next to her childhood home. These memories led to her first novel, The Minnow on the Say (1955).

Illustrated by Edward Ardizzone, this outwardly conventional story
[is about]... two boys finding lost treasure just in time for one of them to save the family home ...... As she wrote in an article for The Horn Book Magazine in 1962, "There is very much unpleasantness in childhood that we adults forget - and much that some simply dare not remember. For, let's face it, a good deal of childhood is strong stuff for adults and totally unsuitable for children."
Her next book, Tom's Midnight Garden (1958), was an instant success that soon took on classic status. Inspired by the fact that her father had decided to sell Mill House after retiring, Pearce wrote a story based on the walled garden that she, her father and grandfather had all once enjoyed as children. She also drew on J.W. Dunne's celebrated 1927 study An Experiment with Time, and its central notion that different periods of time are able to co-exist and blend together.
...

Describing the work as a whole, the respected critic John Rowe Townsend states in his 1965 book Written for Children: "I have no reservations about it. If I were asked to name a single masterpiece of English children's literature since [the Second World War] . . . it would be this outstandingly beautiful and absorbing book."

Winner of the 1959 Carnegie Medal, for which her previous novel was runner-up, this book was illustrated by Susan Einzig, using family photographs and drawings. It has since been televised three times, turned into a play and made into a film in 1999.

But the years that followed were not easy. Pearce's next book, A Dog So Small, was rejected by the redoubtable Mabel George at Oxford University Press for being too depressing. ....

In the same year, in her early forties, Pearce married Martin Christie, a fruit grower who died two years later, never having recovered fully from his time as a Japanese war prisoner. He lived to see the birth of his daughter, Sally, later to become an accomplished children's author herself.

The strain of bringing up a child single-handed while also working took its toll on Pearce's writing...There were still some notable if minor successes. In The Children of the House (1968) she expertly re-drafted the poignant childhood memoirs of Major Sir Brian Fairfax-Lucy, who had been brought up in the stately home of Charlecote in conditions of severe emotional and physical neglect. The result made for an outstanding story, re-issued as The Children of Charlecote (1989).

The Elm Street Lot (1969) and What the Neighbours Did (1972) were both lively collections of short stories, some of which had already been aired on television. Concentrating on children's everyday experiences as seen through their own eyes, these tales were often very funny while never in the least condescending.

Pearce finally returned to her literary prize-winning ways with The Battle of Bubble and Squeak (1978). This account of a family's up-and-down adventures with a couple of gerbils was based on actual events at home with Sally's own pets of the same ilk, who, too, used to gnaw holes in the curtains and run foul of the family cat. The fictional gerbils also served to help bridge a growing gap between a young boy and his mother. This funny and affectionate story won the Whitbread Children's Book Award for that year.

By now moved back from London to a small cottage built by her grandfather opposite the Mill House she had immortalised in fiction, Pearce and her daughter shared space with a goat, pony, cat, dog and hens.

Her next novel, The Way to Sattin Shore (1985), was a psychological study of a child investigating her father's mysterious death. Set in Suffolk rather than in her beloved Cambridgeshire, this troubled story seemed out of character. But years later, in The Little Gentleman (2004), she returned to more familiar grounds with an affectionate tale about a talking mole whom she imagined residing beneath an old dredged-up log actually visible from her window. Long-lived, he is responsible for the death of King William III in 1702 in a riding accident caused by an inopportunely placed molehill.

An amiable fantasy involving a lonely little girl finding new strength in her friendship with the 300-year-old mole, this was Pearce's first full-length novel for over two decades.

Appointed OBE in 1997 for her services to children's literature, Philippa Pearce stayed on in her country cottage, looking after her large vegetable garden and with Sally and her two sons living next door. A popular figure at conferences, regularly charming her audiences with her wit, wisdom and inherent kindness, she continued to make guest appearances only weeks before her death following a severe stroke.....

Nobody mentioned Mrs. Cockle's Cat (1961) in an obituary. But we like it, just looking at this picture from it.


The obituary of Philippa Pearce punlished in the Guardian contains more interestnig detail about this chldren's author.

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