A cascading cornucopia of cool comics, crazy cartoons, & classic collectables - plus other completely captivating & occasionally controversial contents. With nostalgic notions, sentimental sighings, wistful wonderings, remorseful ruminations, melancholy musings, rueful reflections, poignant ponderings, & yearnings for yesteryear. (And a few profound perplexities, puzzling paradoxes, & a bevy of big, beautiful, bedazzling, buxom Babes to round it all off.)
Monday, 3 February 2020
SOUVENIR FACSIMILE OF THE MAGNET FIRST ISSUE...
4 comments:
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I say you chaps..................
ReplyDeleteBunter for me was the BBC TV show starring Gerald Champion.
Back in the 1950's I spent a few weeks in a Butlin's Holiday Camp. I have a memory of receiving a book in the post from Butlins one Christmas which was a Bunter Book with Billy Butlin in the story. It was the only Bunter story I ever read and the fact I no longer have the book indicates I had no interest in it. That may be what you remember Kid?
I did just read BIGGLES GOES TO SCHOOL which has the same Edwardian setting of a Public School for Boys which I would recommend over Bunter.
Can't remember if I ever saw any of the Gerald Campion series, T47, but I remember Jimmy Clitheroe, which I imagine may have been similar. I suspect the book you mention is the very story I read, but I'm wondering where I got it from - a jumble sale perhaps, or from a friend? It was the only one I ever read too, back in the very early '70s I think. I seem to recall Bunter running into Butlin while they were both out for a walk in the woods (separately), but I couldn't be certain after all this time. Maybe I'll track another copy down one day just to see what it was like.
ReplyDeleteI only recall reading the adventures of the adult Biggles, but I remember reading the Jennings books. Sort of abandoned Jennings shortly after I discovered the William books by Richmal Crompton, but for a short while I read both of them concurrently.
BIGGLES GOES TO SCHOOL was published in 1951 well after the charactor was established through WW1, WW2 and into the Air Police.
ReplyDeleteTHE BOY BIGGLES was published even later in 1968, one of the last Biggles books and the stories are set in India before he was sent to School in England!
They both are good reads, setting up the personality of Biggles, but frankly the only reason I have read them is because I ran out of adult Biggles stories to read.
I thought that would be the case. Much like Superman, the adult came first, then it was decided to look at what he'd have been like as a lad - hence Superboy. (Even though it had previously been shown he'd started his superhero career as an adult.)
ReplyDeleteI re-read a Biggles book not that long ago (2 or three years) and quite enjoyed it.