Re: The Sea of Adventure
Posted: 26 Jan 2017, 20:40
John Pickup wrote:I've now got this image of puffins queuing up at the natural bowl in the cliff with facecloths and towels.
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John Pickup wrote:I've now got this image of puffins queuing up at the natural bowl in the cliff with facecloths and towels.
That's the magic of Blyton!Rob Houghton wrote:I agree - and as I've often mentioned previously, the children also drink 'pure clean water' out of a natural 'bowl' in the cliff...with puffins flying over it, dropping dead fish into it, maybe washing/swimming in it, not to mention their droppings!
I'm currently ploughing through my falling apart, sans dust jacket, but still thankfully readable Macmillan version of The Sea of Adventure from 1951, and I think Stuart Tresilian's illustrations are amazingly good!Anita Bensoussane wrote:Ooh - it's a sumptuous book, Sarah! The whole series is glorious in Macmillan but The Sea of Adventure contains some of my absolute favourite illustrations. I adore Huffin and Puffin and the soaring gulls, and the drawing of Horace Tipperlong is a delight. For most Blyton series I've stuck with my paperbacks but I just had to collect the Adventure series in the Macmillan hardbacks to get all Stuart Tresilian's incredible artwork. They're wonderfully chunky books too - amazing quality, especially considering that the first few titles were published during and just after the war.
This picture always reminded me of the late, great actor Michael Sheard, and I could just have imagined him playing such an explosive, hapless character!Courtenay wrote:How could such a noble and distinguished character ever be underrated??