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LucyGransnet (GNHQ) Thu 03-Jul-14 13:01:12

Me and my granny (book giveaway)

Being the granddaughter of a successful author isn't always easy, as Ottilie Kark knows. Through her grandmother, Nina, Ottilie enjoyed a privileged look into the world of publishing, and saw the on-screen creation of Nina's most famous book - Carrie's War.

Ottillie Kark

Me and my granny

Posted on: Thu 03-Jul-14 13:01:12

(257 comments )

Lead photo

Nina and Ottilie on a family holiday.

My granny, Nina Bawden, and I were not always close. When I was six years old I lived with my grandparents in their Islington home while my mother was on tour as a stage manager in Australia and Japan for six months. As I was so close to my mother, being abandoned and left to live with my grandparents made me a very angry little girl.

My granddad would spoil me rotten but my granny was strict and made me brush my teeth and hair. After one big row I stormed upstairs, stomping on each step as I went. I got to my room, which was the very top room, slammed the door and wrote in the biggest writing I could ever do, "Granny is a pig!". I stuck it on my bedroom door and slammed the door extra hard.

A few moments later, granny came up and stood outside my room laughing. I said in a very cross little voice, "What you laughing at?". She then pointed out that the sign I had written actually said "Granny is a pag". Not pig! We laughed a lot about this small mistake and from that moment on we became closer and we started writing a book together called "Granny the Pag". I was very lucky to be so close to my granny in her later years. We only lived twenty minutes away and I would see her nearly every weekend and talk to her every day.

Growing up with an author as a granny you get the privilege, but also the embarrassment, of having them asked to come into your school to talk to your classmates.


Growing up with an author as a granny you get the privilege, but also the embarrassment, of having them asked to come into your school to talk to your classmates. Everyone used to find it exciting that I was related to someone famous, but I would find it embarrassing when she would tell stories about me in assembly... Though looking back on this, it was rather cool! It meant that I was lucky enough to be part of book launches, press nights and, very excitingly, I was able to see the filming of Carrie’s War.

When my mother was growing up she went with my grandparents to see the filming of the 1974 television series and then in 2004 me, my granny and her evacuation friend Jean went to see the filming of the latest version. It was wonderful to be able to see the process and to feel part of this really amazing story has not only lasted for generations, but is also part of my own family history. For Jean and granny to revisit one of the places they were evacuated to, is something I am so pleased to have shared with them.

From Charlotte’s Web to Goodnight Mister Tom, Watership Down to Tarka the Otter, we have a full set of Puffin's 20 beautiful A Puffin Book children's stories to give away, as well as five individual books, all with newly designed covers and previously unseen extras. To enter into the draw, just let us know your favourite childhood books below. Giveaway will end on the 15 July at 5.30pm.

By Ottillie Kark

Twitter: @PuffinBooks

philatel Sat 05-Jul-14 21:23:20

My favourite books were - The Tailor of Gloucester by Beatrix Potter, Ballet Shoes by Noel Streatfeild and anything by Arthur Ransome and Enid Blyton. I was [and still am] an avid reader and would read anything I could lay my hands on. When I was a child, books were very expensive [full price only - not the reductions one can find these days] and my birthday and Christmas lists were for books - I didn't want anything else! My poor Mother spent a lot of time taking me to the library every few days so I could have a fresh supply of books to read.

sylwright Sat 05-Jul-14 21:13:08

My favourite books were The Famous Five by Enid Blyton and also The Water Babies.

clairew137 Sat 05-Jul-14 21:04:33

Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, The Faraway Tree, The Secret Seven.

J52 Sat 05-Jul-14 16:47:55

Anne of Green Gables by L M Montgomery was my favourite, read at the age of 11. Like Anne, I did not have a happy childhood, but I related to her ability to put a happy face on situations. I also loved the sequels when everything worked out.x

baggie28 Sat 05-Jul-14 13:48:24

Mine was Milly Molly Mandy,loved those books and also a book I read over and over was called The little match girl.

greenfinger5 Sat 05-Jul-14 13:37:11

The Faraway Tree - Enid Blyton.

supergabs Sat 05-Jul-14 11:03:25

I loved all the Enid Blyton books but my favourites had to be The Magic Faraway Tree, The Magic Wishing Chair and The Adventures of Pip.

bethanie21 Sat 05-Jul-14 10:11:48

My favourite has always been 'the wishing chair' by Enid Blyton. Such a magical story!

Isis1981uk Sat 05-Jul-14 09:04:13

When I was little I loved Matilda & George's Marvellous Medicine by Roald Dahl , when I was a little older I loved Carrie's War by Nina Bawdon & Back Home by Michelle Magorian. And all the Mallory Towers series by Enid Blyton.

Grannyknot Sat 05-Jul-14 08:16:57

durhamjen Roald Dahl wrote and published children's books from the early 1940s ...

Grannyknot Sat 05-Jul-14 08:14:10

grannylin gosh - you could have been me, or vice versa. Nancy Drew and Little Women, I also loved Jo. I introduced my daughter to Little Women as well and when the 1994 movie came out, we went together to see it and both started blubbing when the opening credits rolled! smile

Like Lorelei I loved encyclopedic books - and would also save all my pocket money and send away for those large illustrated Reader's Digest books on wildlife or "Creatures of the Deep" etc. Used to drive my mother nuts because we would be pestered for ever after with the unsolicited copies of their digest publications of 4 novels in one book. confused smile

I love these threads that remind me of things I'd forgotten about - in this case Heidi and her grandpa. As someone else said, magical.

maggie1234 Sat 05-Jul-14 05:14:48

I loved my copy of Alice in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll. The story was so imaginative and the illustrations by John Tenniel were so weird yet necessary to the story.

Lorelei Sat 05-Jul-14 02:53:29

I was an early reader, and had blitzed my way through most of the Enid Blyton books before starting school, and the rest in my early school years. Without understanding much of what I read, I loved the stories of Dickens and in adulthood remembered fondly those evenings by the fire reading Dickens by candlelight during power cuts - as a kid I felt transported to another time and place and reading was wonderful escapism from an otherwise uneventful life. I loved a lot of the classics too: Black Beauty, Heidi, The Secret Garden, Treasure Island etc. The other books that kept me amused (and out of trouble according to my mum) and fired my imagination on all sorts of subjects, was a large bookcase filled with a set of Encyclopedia Britannica - like having everything in the world just there to be learned! My daughter inherited my love of books but her early favourite reads were The Chronicles of Narnia and even though I'd read the books to her several times she still read them regularly after becoming an independent reader - they were her 'go-to' books and she treasured her boxed set.

durhamjen Sat 05-Jul-14 00:18:01

Some of you must be very young. When did Roald Dahl write children's books? I can remember reading them to my children, but not reading them myself when I was a child, and I used to read anything I could get my hands on.

Bun123 Fri 04-Jul-14 22:22:16

I loved the Heidi books, and I remember a book about a theatre underground, with fairies and elves and underground caverns, I think the entrance was by some tree roots, its all a bit vague and I have never been able to find it again. Sadly.

shirlz51 Fri 04-Jul-14 21:33:30

loved all roald dahl books.had everyone either read to me or read myself as older

payens Fri 04-Jul-14 20:55:10

Rupert the bear

glassortwo Fri 04-Jul-14 20:52:48

Oh this thread has reminded me of so many favourites.

jessiecat my DD got me the set again from Amazon, they have been well thumbed, as mine were lost along the way and I have re read them to the DGC and lived it all againsmile

susieb755 Fri 04-Jul-14 20:48:23

My two, which I re read regularly , are Toms Midnight garden, and the Little White Horse

Deedaa Fri 04-Jul-14 20:46:28

I loved all Arthur Ransome's books and Monica Edwards' books and The secret Garden was a big favourite.

mrshumphreyjr Fri 04-Jul-14 20:43:05

Enid Blyton were my favourite especially The Famous Five

jinglbellsfrocks Fri 04-Jul-14 20:03:47

I nearly didn't read this OP because my two are really out of little kids' books now. But then I saw, "My granny, Nina Bawden,"

Wow!

nutunit Fri 04-Jul-14 19:55:32

I loved all Enid Blyton books & Rupert Bear.

grannysmith953 Fri 04-Jul-14 19:36:03

I read constantly, and many books have stayed in my heart, but how to choose a favourite? Winnie the Pooh perhaps?

pamjoy Fri 04-Jul-14 19:18:56

Famous Five - Enid Blyton