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A Vicarage Family: A Biography of Myself

Page 24

by Noel Streatfeild


  ‘Get your things on, dear. I will send a note to your parents.’

  So with Spot, John and Victoria went for long walks over the downs; and though distant thuds sounded from the guns across the Channel, the air was fresh and clear, and after the exercise even John was able to enjoy a meal at a cottage table.

  They never again spoke of conditions at the front. Instead, they lived entirely in the past. It was always: ‘Do you remember?’

  The day his leave finished John refused to be seen off at the station. He had to catch an early train to link up with the troop train at Victoria.

  ‘I don’t want to be seen off. Just all come to the door. I’d like that.’

  So, as his taxi drove away, they were all there. The family, Annie, Hester and Spot. Perhaps he carried that picture to France.

  Five weeks later the telegram came. Victoria knew something was wrong when she came in from sawing logs and saw Annie, her apron over her head, sobbing behind the kitchen door.

  Her father called her into his study. ‘I don’t know how to tell you, Vicky darling. You are so young to face sorrow.’

  Victoria gently stroked her father’s hand.

  ‘It’s John. He’s been killed.’

  ‘Yes, Vicky.’

  She stared unseeingly out of the window towards the front gate.

  ‘I’ll be all right, Daddy. I think I knew it was going to happen. Grand-Nanny once said growing up came suddenly. I grew up all in one minute, the day John came on leave.’

  1895 Born Mary Noel Streatfeild, 24 December, in Sussex

  1902 Goes to school at Hastings and St Leonard’s Ladies’ College

  1911 The Streatfeild family move to Eastbourne, and Noel goes to Laleham School

  1913 Noel leaves school and enrols at the Eastbourne School of Domestic Economy

  1915 Noel works as a volunteer in the kitchen of a hospital for wounded soldiers near Eastbourne Vicarage during the First World War and in 1916 moves to London to work in a munitions factory

  1919 At the end of the war, Noel wins a place at the Academy of Dramatic Art (now called RADA) in London

  1926 Begins a correspondence course for writing, and has a short story published in a magazine

  1931 Her first novel, The Whicharts, is published by J. M. Dent, and she is asked to write a children’s story about the theatre

  1936 Ballet Shoes, illustrated by her sister Ruth Gervis, is published by J. M. Dent, and it becomes an immediate bestseller

  1936 Ballet Shoes is runner up for the first ever Carnegie Medal, awarded annually to a writer of an outstanding book for children

  1937 Tennis Shoes is published. Noel travels with Bertram Mills Circus to research Circus Shoes

  1938 The Circus is Coming is published, also as Circus Shoes

  1939 Noel wins the Carnegie Medal for Circus Shoes

  1940–45  Joins the Women’s Voluntary Services during the Second World War and continues to write

  1944 Curtain Up is published, also as Theatre Shoes

  1946 Party Frock is published, also as Party Shoes

  1948 Ballet Shoes is listed by the Library Association as one of a number of ‘books which should always be in print’

  1949 The Painted Garden is published, abridged and published in the US as Movie Shoes

  1951 White Boots is published, also as Skating Shoes

  1954 The Bell Family is published, also as Family Shoes

  1957 Wintle’s Wonders is published, also as Dancing Shoes

  1963 A Vicarage Family, the first of her autobiographical works, is published

  1962 Apple Bough is published, also as Travelling Shoes

  1975 Ballet Shoes is adapted into a television series

  1983 Noel Streatfeild is awarded an OBE

  1986 Noel dies 11 September, aged 90

  1991 Ballet Shoes wins the Library of Congress Children’s Books of the Year award

  2007 Ballet Shoes is adapted into a film starring Emma Watson, Yasmin Paige and Lucy Boynton as the sisters

  Interesting Facts

  During the 1950s Noel Streatfeild was consistently listed among the top ten children’s authors.

  When Noel was twenty-four she became an actress and spent about ten years in the theatre.

  Where Did the Story Come From?

  A Vicarage Family is a fictionalized autobiographical account of Noel Streatfeild’s childhood. Vicky is the character who represents her real-life character in the story. Noel decided not to use real names as she felt she could not judge the true thoughts and feelings of her family. But all of the events are based on truth as she remembered it, with the only large deviation from her memory being that her cousin, named John in the story, did not actually live with the family but instead sometimes visited over the holidays.

  Guess Who?

  A She was a small, sandy dyspeptic woman, always neatly dressed in a high-necked blouse and full navy skirt except on Sundays when she wore a frogged coat and skirt with, during the winter, a fur tippet.

  B … the chaos she must have caused in her form with every girl deliberately being rude to the mistresses.

  C … looking ridiculously small in a too-large school overcoat bought to last …

  D Ageless, unchanging, understanding, she was security on two legs.

  E He towered above her for he was now over six feet tall.

  ANSWERS:

  A) Miss Herbert

  B) Vicky

  C) Dick

  D) Grand-Nanny

  E) John

  Words Glorious Words!

  Lots of words have several different meanings – here are a few you’ll find in this Puffin book. Use a dictionary or look them up online to find other definitions.

  anthracite a type of coal that burns with little flame and smoke

  grave looking serious or solemn

  rendered to provide a service or help

  quandary a state of confusion or uncertainty in a difficult situation

  lugubrious looking sad and upset

  dashing looking attractive, stylish and full of confidence

  rumpus a noisy event, often an argument or fight

  Quiz

  Thinking caps on – Let’s see how much you can remember! Answers are on the next page. (No peeking!)

  1 Why can’t Vicky wear her Sunday Dress to Joyce’s party?

  a) The elbows are worn out

  b) The sleeves don’t match the dress

  c) The collar has been ripped

  d) It is far too long for her

  2 What were Grand-Nanny’s Golden Sovereigns?

  a) Special cakes

  b) Pretty golden flowers

  c) Presents for the children

  d) Strong beef tea

  3 What disease does Isobel have?

  a) Measles

  b) Tuberculosis

  c) Asthma

  d) Eczema

  4 What did Vicky win in the Potato Race?

  a) A dressing case

  b) A medal

  c) A hair ribbon

  d) A bag of potatoes

  5 What was the new cook in Eastbourne called?

  a) Annie

  b) Esther

  c) Pauline

  d) Violet

  ANSWERS:

  1) b

  2) d

  3) c

  4) a

  5) a

  Beatlemania begins, with the Beatles gaining number-one hits in the UK and USA.

  US president John F. Kennedy is assassinated by Lee Harvey Oswald. Conspiracy theories regarding this event still abound today.

  The Great Train Robbery takes place in Buckinghamshire, England.

  Martin Luther King, Jr – the civil rights leader who led non-violent protests to fights for the rights of all people – delivers his famous ‘I have a dream’ speech.

  Make and Do

  Try bread and butter with hundreds and thousands!

  YOU WILL NEED:

  ❋ Sliced bread<
br />
  ❋ Toaster

  ❋ Butter or margarine

  ❋ Knife

  ❋ Hundred and thousands

  1 Put a slice of bread into the toaster.

  2 When the toast is ready, take it out and put it on a plate.

  3 Spread the butter on to the toast and watch it melt.

  4 Sprinkle hundreds and thousands on top.

  5 Enjoy!

  Did You Know?

  Noel Streatfeild had not intended to become a children’s writer. Even though her first published work – a short story about a magician – was in a children’s magazine, and she had written plays for children, she saw herself primarily as a novelist for adults.

  Noel once told a fellow writer, Rumer Godden, ‘What I always want in a book is a family.’

  Eastbourne was a fashionable resort in Edwardian times because seawater was supposed to help cure disease.

  In 1903, Eastbourne launched its very own motor bus company – making it the first of its kind in the world. These are the buses on which the Strangeways travelled.

  Puffin Writing Tip

  Watch the news and stay tuned to the latest happenings in the world – you never know what might inspire your next idea!

  From the Archive

  A letter from Noel Streatfeild to Puffin concerning her name spelling, 5 August 1949

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  First published in Great Britain by Collins 1963

  Published in Jane Nissen Books 2011

  Reissued in this edition 2016

  Copyright © Noel Streatfeild, 1963

  The moral right of the author has been asserted

  Cover illustration by Becca Stadtlander

  ISBN: 978–0–141–36955–6

 

 

 


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