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William's Happy Days (Just William #12)

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Book Details

Title:William's Happy Days (Just William #12)
Author:
Lamburn, Richmal Crompton  Writing under the pseudonym: Crompton, Richmal   
(3 of 10 for author by title)
William--In Trouble (Just William #8)
William and the Tramp (Just William #28)
Published:   1930
Publisher:George Newnes, Limited
Tags:fiction, humour, juvenile, short stories
Description:

William Brown is naturally suspicious of grown-ups bearing gifts. They always want him to do something, like run silly errands. It’s bribery, pure and simple, and William is not a boy to be bribed. Unless it involves money, food, a pet or a precious heirloom in which case William will do anything. [Suggest a different description.]

Downloads:523
Pages:186 Info

Author Bio for Lamburn, Richmal Crompton

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Richmal Crompton Lamburn (November 15, 1890--January 11, 1969) of Bury, Lancashire, England was initially trained as a schoolmistress but later became a popular English writer, best known for her Just William series of books, humorous short stories, and to a lesser extent adult fiction books.

Crompton's fiction centers around family and social life, dwelling on the constraints that they place on individuals while also nurturing them. This is best seen in her depiction of children as puzzled onlookers of society's ways. Nevertheless, the children, particularly William and his Outlaws, almost always emerge triumphant.

From 1922 to 1969, she produced 38 William titles, which were subsequently adapted into four films, and one radio and two television series. The character of William, described by Mary Cadogan as "anarchic, disheveled, obstructionist, opinionated and unbookish to the point of Philistinism," was the direct opposite of his creator. The first William stories, written for an adult audience, were Lamburn's best; the later efforts, produced exclusively for children, lost some of their wit and charm. The series was never popular in the United States, because, in the opinion of Margaret Masson, America had its own version of William in the character of Penrod Schofield, created by Booth Tarkington. But Lamburn had a different take, believing that American children developed "straight from the cradle to adolescence," thus bypassing the prepubescent period of 11-year-old William.

Lamburn also produced some 40 other titles, many of them love stories which she turned out at the rate of one a year, but none had the appeal of the William books.

—Source: encyclopedia.com

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