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图书馆 | 资料类型 | 排架号 | 子计数 | 书架位置 | 状态 | 图书预约 |
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正在检索... Branch | Juvenile Book | J B KINGS, D | 1 | Juvenile Biography | 正在检索... 未知 | 正在检索... 不可借阅 |
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摘要
摘要
A candid and very funny memoir from beloved children's book author Dick King-Smith. Before he was a children's book author, Dick King-Smith was a soldier, a farmer, a salesman, a factory worker, and a teacher. But he was always a devoted family man who loved the countryside he lived in and the animals he kept. In this insightful memoir, Dick King-Smith recounts the joys and failures of his life with equal humor and candor. And he remembers a delightful cast of animal characters--from Anna, the dachshund who turned out to be just stubborn, not deaf, to the 600-pound pig Monty, who liked to be scratched on top of his head, to Wilhelmina, a pet badger who was fond of love bites. As readers delight in recognizing the inspiration behind many of Dick King-Smith's books, they'll also see how a collection of experiences made a man a writer. From the Hardcover edition.
评论 (5)
《学校图书馆杂志》(School Library Journal)书评
Gr 6 Up-With candor, humor, and warmth, King-Smith relates the various experiences that led him to become, late in his life, a children's author. Although he flashes back to various points in his early years, the book focuses on his adult life, beginning with his desire to farm at age 18. He relates his inexperienced (and humorous) attempts at farming at Woodlands Farm after serving in World War II, the birth of his children, and the various jobs he held to support his family. In 1976, he began his first book, and the rest, shall we say, is history. Throughout his recollections, he includes vignettes of the various animal "friends" that made up a large part of his and his family's lives, and gives a picture of pre- and post-World War II England and its accompanying social history. Because the focus is on King-Smith's adult life, teachers and librarians will most likely be this book's most ardent readers, although older students needing an interesting autobiography might pick it up. A good choice for any library interested in collecting material that supports the study of children's literature and children's authors.-Jennifer Ralston, Harford County Public Library, Belcamp, MD (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
出版社周刊评论
"I wasn't a particularly good soldier or farmer or salesman or factory worker or teacher, but at last I've found something I can do reasonably well," concludes this warm and witty memoir by the author of Babe: The Gallant Pig and more than 100 other children's books. But how he arrived at his career as author makes for delectable fodder in this humorous and conversational volume, peppered with accomplished pen-and-inks by Horse (Little Rabbit Lost). King-Smith recounts an eventful life that spanned the greater part of the 20th century and is still going strong into the 21st. He traces his meandering career path recalling many comic moments during his years spent farming with his wife, Myrle (he confesses somewhat sheepishly, "For Myrle and me, life at Woodlands Farm was really an extension of our childhood pet keeping"). The pages brim with eccentric characters worthy of a P.G. Wodehouse novel (e.g., "Mr. Hamper was distinguishable from his larger pigs by virtue of wearing clothes and standing on his hind legs"). Children will particularly enjoy hearing of the many animals he has known, from the chameleons he collected on a WWII troop ship en route to Tripoli, to the hamsters he inadvertently bred (they escaped) at a manor-house-cum-agricultural-college, to the scores of cows, pigs, poultry, dogs and more that he raised. For kids from one to 92, these pages reveal a gifted writer with an affection for animals and a simple country life, a passion for his work, and sheer goodness of heart. Ages 10-up. (Oct.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
《儿童读物杂志》(Horn Book)书评
(Middle School, High School, Adult) In an autobiography that will appeal most to adults intrigued with the real-life origins of his popular animal fantasies, King-Smith centers on his decades as a Wiltshire farmer. A privileged upbringing (his family owned a paper mill) wasn't much preparation for the role, but enduring enthusiasm for all things animal enabled him to become knowledgeable about his charges, though he is candid about his failure to acquire an equivalent business sense. When the antiquated mill that had actually been supporting his farm finally closed down, he was forced to find other means of support, as a teacher and, eventually, as we know, a writer. What will appeal most to young people are King-Smith's humorous tales of the creatures for which he had so much affection, though they may be startled by the animals' frequently abrupt demises-the summary disposal of a runt (ah, Wilbur!) unless it survived just long enough to become a suckling pig; or an amorous drake, discovered ""flat on his back...that rasping hiss was silenced, and the mighty emblem of his drakehood lay flaccid and still forever upon the dirty feathers of his stomach."" After all, ""if you grow up on a farm, you look upon conception, birth, and indeed death with an experienced and level eye."" Hand this clear-eyed dose of reality to Herriot enthusiasts, would-be vets, and anyone interested in farming as it was practiced a generation ago. (c) Copyright 2010. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted. All rights reserved.
Kirkus评论
A memoir from a beloved chronicler of the barnyard reveals a vast experience with his subject matter, and a huge capacity for self-deprecation. Lovers of King-Smith's (Funny Frank, 2001, etc.) vividly realized animal characters will enjoy meeting his many real-life animals, from Kicker, a cow so named because she, "like a professional footballer, practiced the art for her own sake"; through Anna, a dachshund who "must have had a very long bladder because, in wet weather, which she abhorred, she would lie doggo for twenty-four hours"; to Snowballs, a Muscovy duck who "was the grand seigneur of a large harem of females . . . and his mission in life was a simple one, namely to pass on his genes." No proper memoir of farming life can get very far away from the earthiness of animal husbandry, and this one fairly revels in the specifics of the maintenance and procreation of its various creatures. In structure, it skips about, seemingly randomly, from youth to courtship and marriage to reminiscences of his grandparents while all the while returning over and over to the heart of the matter-the farm. The vignettes of farm life are frequently hilarious, the evocations of the post-war period are nostalgic but not sentimental, and the author's descriptions of his marriage are truly touching. The overall effect of this offering is to make the reader feel as if she has just had a long, rambling chat with an enormously affable older gentleman-which is just about exactly what the author is. With a primary focus on adult concerns-work, finances, marital and parental relations-this may prove a disappointment to children hoping to read stories of a real-life Babe, but for readers of all ages who may find fascinating a portrait of a way of life that has gone by, it is a real gem. (Autobiography. 10+)
《书目》(Booklist)书评
Gr. 8^-12. In this entertaining memoir, British author King-Smith ruminates about his life, focusing mostly on the years between 1947 and 1967, which he spent as a farmer. Chapters jump from topic to topic in no particular chronology as he remembers his happy albeit less than successful run as caretaker for various farm animals, which he freely admits were more pets than a business. As always, he employs a deft turn of phrase and plenty of humor (a sick cow emits "rivers of dung rich enough to grow Jack's beanstalk") to keep readers chuckling. Some readers, especially those unfamiliar with animal husbandry, may have trouble understanding many of King-Smith's colloquialisms, but those who persevere will be rewarded with insight into what inspired Fox Busters (1978) and about the landlord who surely served as a model for the farmer in Three Terrible Trins (1994). King-Smith devotes the last two chapters to more recent pursuits: primary-school teacher, author, and television host. Teachers who use the book might prefer that younger students skip the chapter on pub-crawling and country parties. A delight for mature readers who know the author's works. --Kay Weisman