Showing posts with label Paddington. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paddington. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 7, 2022

Postscript to Queen's Jubilee


On Monday we put out our display of books that celebrate Queen Elizabeth and this afternoon as we were about to leave I had a quick look at the display ...not much left. We had scrummaged around and added things that I had long forgotten about and they too had gone. Quite a few of the students had watched the concert and seen the Queen having tea with Paddington, so they were keen to borrow Paddington books! When they had gone others went too.

Books we added:

Paddington at the Palace  by Michael Bond and R.W.Alley

Horrid Henry Meets the Queen by Francesca Simon and Tony Ross

                                                                                           
Me, the Queen and Christopher  by Giles Andreae and Tony Ross

Don't Chew the Royal Shoe!  by Kate Leake

Judy Moody and the Right Royal Tea Party by Megan McDonald and Peter Reynolds

In this quarto-sized  book of beautiful dog photos  there is a photo of a corgi wearing a crown and it was such a good centrepiece for the display. Wish I'd taken a photo of it before all the books disappeared.

• Eyes on Dogs  by Maggie Fischer

Then we just added any book that featured London, Buckingham Palace, London buses, taxis, beefeaters and guards and there were so many. Nearly every series visits London...Maisy, Charlie and Lola, Topsy and Tim, Katie, Madeleine...






Wednesday, January 12, 2011

13th January Michael Bond (1926) Rubber Ducky Day






Michael Bond is the English author who gave children Paddington Bear. The first story A Bear Called Paddington was published in 1958 when Bond was a cameraman with the BBC. The idea for the story started with a bear that Bond had bought his wife because it looked lonely on a shelf in a London shop. Paddington became very popular and a merchandising phenomenon. Paddington is easily recognisable no matter who illustrates him, and there have been many, and whether he has a red, blue or or even yellow hat. The toys and books seem to go through phases. They are either in big demand or sitting idle. Maybe it depends upon whether he is on television at the time and whether or not new editions have just been released.

However in my library, Michael Bond is better known for his series about a guinea pig called Olga than for a bear called Paddington. More readers become addicted to these books. Once a child, usually a girl, reads The Tales of Olga da Polga she usually comes back wanting another book about Olga and then she works her way through all six of these, and then often moves on to Betty G. Birney's series about Humphrey.

Rubber Ducky Day seems like an unusual day to be marking, but when you read about all the uses rubber duckies have assumed since they were invented it is little wonder that they have a day of their own. Sesame Street character, Ernie has a rubber ducky that is immortalised in song. Charities have races where they are purchased, let loose and then observed over a distance to see which one wins. This idea probably comes from an incident that occurred in the Pacific Ocean during a storm on January 10th, 1992. A cargo ship transporting them for a Chinese company lost 29000 rubber ducky toys overboard. Months later these ducks began to turn up all over the place. Some even made it to Australia. Eve Bunting used this event as the impetus for her book Ducky, illustrated by David Wisniewski and then Eric Carle also used it as the impetus for his book 10 Little Rubber Ducks. Obviously rubber ducks should have a high profile!

during a Pacific storm on January 10, 1992, over 29,000 rubber ducky bath toys from a Chinese company were during a Pacific storm on January 10, 1992, over 29,000 rubber ducky bath toys from a Chinese company were washed off of a cargo ship.washed off of a cargo ship.during a Pacific storm on January 10, 1992, over 29,000 rubber ducky bath toys from a Chinese company were washed off of a cargo ship.