Date- 2013-08-06
Margaret Mahy is internationally recognised as one of the all-time
best writers for young readers, her books having been translated
into all the major languages of the world. Twice winner of the
prestigious Carnegie Medal, she also won the Esther Glen Award five
times and the Observer Teenage Fiction Award once. Born in a
country town in New Zealand, the oldest of a family of five, with
over twenty cousins in the surrounding neighbourhood, Margaret Mahy
grew up with a strong sense of being part of a close family. She
died in 2012.
In 1936, the year Margaret Mahy was born, only four books for
children were published in New Zealand. Mahy was influential in
changing the landscape of children's literature in her homeland -
one of the most prolific of authors, she penned over 100 titles.
Her output includes poetry, picture books, works for older
children, teenage novels, television scripts and stories for
magazines and newspapers.
Mahy grew up in a close family with five brothers and sisters. Her
always vivid imagination made life at school interesting rather
than easy. After seeing The Jungle Book, she announced to her
astonished seven-year-old classmates that she could talk to animals
- 'I had to resort to talking a certain gibberish and eating leaves
and drinking out of puddles to prove how close I was to the Animal
Kingdom.' She started writing as a young child and admitted to
being something of a show-off - 'I can remember carrying my
notebooks around in an effort to introduce them into the
conversation.'
She began writing children's books in earnest at the age of
eighteen, whilst training to be a children's librarian. Her big
break came fifteen years later - in 1968 - when an American
publisher came across the text of A Lion in the Meadow and bought
it, along with all the other work Mahy had produced over the years.
Eight books hit the presses simultaneously. She became a full-time
writer in 1980 and wrote The Haunting. With this novel, Margaret
won the Carnegie Medal (she was the first writer outside the UK to
do so). She triumphed again two years later with The Changeover. In
1986, she won the IBBY Honour Book Award. In February 1993,
Margaret was awarded New Zealand's highest honour, The Order of New
Zealand. She also held an Honorary Doctorate of Letters awarded to
her by the University of Canterbury, New Zealand.
Margaret was a frequent visitor to schools and libraries and was a
much-loved and energetic performer.
Margaret passed away on 23 July, 2012.
K-Gr 3-The widow Daisy Gimble is glad that she has a gimpy cat, as his three-leggedness prevents him from wandering, and she approves of staying put. Tom, however, wants nothing more than to see the wide world. Respectable Daisy can't help but dread the visits of her drifter brother, Danny, who always wears a ``revolting, molting Russian hat'' on top of his bald head. One day he comes for tea, and when he leaves, he mistakes her sleeping cat for his hat. Tom finally gets to see the world, Danny finds that a cat is warmer and better company than a hat, and Daisy is satisfied as can be with her inanimate pet. Readers will laugh at the woman's proper and peevish opinion of the way Tom comes ``running, all hobbledy-bobbledy'' every time she opens the fridge, and will relish the inevitable conclusion. Allen's large, humorous, full-color illustrations, with their clever compositions and expressive, crescent-mouthed faces, pick up the jokes in the story perfectly. Once again Mahy reveals her empathy for slightly loopy, fun-loving underdogs.-Vanessa Elder, School Library Journal
The award-winning author of The Changeover and The Tricksters scores another triumph with this mirthful escapade. As he dozes curled up in his habitual ball, a three-legged cat named Tom dreams of traveling to faraway lands. But to his owner, Mrs. Gimble, a widow who prides herself on her respectability, wanderlust is a dangerous thing. It's bad enough that Tom follows her ``all hobbledy-bobbledy'' around the house--no need for him to take after her brother Danny, a no-goodnik drifter. Mahy's prose is droll and dextrous, filled with winning wordplay; indeed, Danny's ``revolting, molting Russian hat'' plays a pivotal role in the plot. When Danny comes to visit, cat and hat are accidentally switched--to the eventual great satisfaction of all parties. Allen's ( The Great White Man-Eating Shark ) large-scale, cartoony illustrations serve up a deliciously bizarre, out-of-kilter world peopled by flat, pop-eyed characters. Especially canny are the images of the stubble-faced Danny doffing his offending topper to reveal a bald pate, and later donning cat instead of hat as he sets out to see the world. Ages 3-8. (May)
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