Monica Edwards
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Monica Edwards in 1966.
Back cover of Badgers of Punchbowl Farm
Born Monica le Doux Newton
(1912-11-08)November 8, 1912
Belper, Derbyshire, United Kingdom
Died January 18, 1998(1998-01-18) (aged 85)
Surrey
Resting place Ashes scattered in Vanhurst Copse, Thursley, Surrey, United Kingdom
Occupation Author, naturalist and farmer
Language English
Nationality British
Education Wakefield Girls High School (September 1920 - July 1921)
St Brandon's School, Bristol (January 1928 - April 1928)
Period 1947-1976
Genres Young-adult fiction
Natural history non-fiction
Notable work(s) Wish for a Pony (1947)
Storm Ahead (1953)
No Going Back (1960)
The Badgers of Punchbowl Farm (1966)
Spouse(s) William ("Bill") Ferdinand Edwards

Signature File:ME signature.jpg

www.monicaedwards.co.uk

Monica Edwards (née Monica le Doux Newton; November 8, 1912 – January 18, 1998) was an English children's writer of the mid-twentieth century best known for her Romney Marsh and Punchbowl Farm series of children's novels.

Contents

Early life [link]

She was the third of four children born to the Reverend Harry and Beryl Newton. She was born in Belper, Derbyshire on November 8, 1912 but the family moved to Wakefield, Yorkshire in 1919. As well as being a vicar, Harry Newton was a diocesan exorcist and often took his children with him when performing exorcisms.[1] In 1927 the family moved to Rye Harbour in Romney Marsh, Sussex where Harry Newton remained as vicar until 1936. The young Monica Newton received a fragmentary formal education: she is known to have attended Wakefield Girls High School between September 1920 and July 1921[2] and when the family were living at Rye Harbour she was sent to St Brandon's School, Bristol where she remained for just three months in 1928 before returning to Sussex.[3] She received no further formal education.

[edit] The Mary Stanford disaster

In November 1928 Edwards witnessed the capsizing of the supposedly unsinkable Mary Stanford Lifeboat in Rye Bay with the loss of all aboard.

The unprecedented mass funeral, which was attended by representatives of King George V, the Government and the Armed Services, was conducted by her father, the Reverend Harry Newton.[4]

Edwards knew all seventeen crew-members personally but was especially close to Charlie Southerden. In a letter to a school friend in January 1930 she described Charlie, who was six years older than she was, as her "boy friend" although the relationship was not public knowledge because of the difference in their age and social class.[5] Much later she wrote a fictional account of the lifeboat disaster in Storm Ahead, published in 1953.

Marriage [link]

Monica Newton married William "Bill" Edwards in November 1933 (two days after her twenty-first birthday) in the face of opposition from both families. Bill was an athletic and charismatic man ten years older than her and a lorry-driver by profession.[6] After living in a variety of places, including Udimore in Sussex; Croft in Leicestershire and Send, near Woking in Surrey, they eventually bought Pitlands Farm (in Thursley, Surrey) at auction in 1947 and renamed it Punch Bowl Farm.

The Punch Bowl Farm series [link]

Between 1947 and 1968 Bill and Monica Edwards gradually built up the near-derelict farm into a thriving dairy concern stocked exclusively with pedigree Jersey cattle. During this time she wrote ten Punchbowl Farm novels with the farm and its surroundings as their setting. Although the real name of the farm was Punch Bowl Farm, the fictional name was contracted to Punchbowl (as was the herd name of the Jersey cattle at the real farm) and Thursley's name was changed to Highnoons for the books. The characters of this series of books were the Thornton family - principally the children Andrea, Dion, Lindsey and Peter. The first book in the series (No Mistaking Corker) was written before the purchase of the farm.

The complete list of Punchbowl Farm novels is:

The Edwards family's farm life was brought to a close in August 1968 when Bill had a near-fatal tractor accident. The couple eventually sold the farm and built a retirement bungalow for themselves in one of the farm's fields.

Romney Marsh series [link]

Beginning with Wish for a Pony in 1947, Edwards altogether wrote fifteen titles in the Romney Marsh series of novels. These were set in the village of Rye Harbour which was renamed Westling. The Romney Marsh towns of Rye and Winchelsea were also renamed Dunsford and Winklesea respectively. The stories feature many real-life characters (with changed names) which the author remembered from her childhood there, such as the ferryman Jim Decks[7] and the villainous Hookey Galley. The principal characters in the novels are Tamzin Grey, Rissa Birnie, Meryon Fairbrass and Roger Lambert. Tamzin's father, the Reverend Richard Grey, was based on Edwards' father, the Reverend Harry Newton.[8]

The complete list of Romney Marsh novels is:

Publishers [link]

When she wrote Wish for a Pony Edwards did not realise that finding an agent would be a necessary step to having the story published. Instead she simply sent it to Collins (now HarperCollins), who accepted it for publication.[9] She quickly came to dislike the book:

Monica Edwards wanted to alter much of Wish for a Pony soon after it was published but Collins told her they would only publish her next story (No Mistaking Corker) if Wish for a Pony remained as it was.[10]

All the books in the two series were published by Collins, but abridged versions of some of the titles in both series were published as Armada paperbacks. The non-series book Under The Rose was also published by Collins.

Edwards' chief illustrator was Geoffrey Whittam, although the first four books (Wish for a Pony, No Mistaking Corker, The Summer of the Great Secret and The Midnight Horse) had illustrations by Anne Bullen; Joan Wanklyn illustrated Spirit of Punchbowl Farm, The Wanderer and Punchbowl Harvest, and Charles Tunnicliffe illustrated Punchbowl Midnight.

In the 1980s John Goodchild published new versions of some of the earlier titles. These versions were updated by the author to make them less rooted in the 1950s. However, Goodchild died before Storm Ahead was published and the project was abandoned.

Edwards’ two children, Shelley and Sean, have recently agreed to the republishing of their mother's entire output, starting at the point where John Goodchild stopped in the 1980s, with Storm Ahead (published July 2005). The appointed publisher is a small concern specialising in the nostalgia republishing of (mainly girls') books, Girls Gone By Publishers. This distinguishes them from the reprints of the 1980s, which were still notionally aimed at children; the reprints are essentially aimed at nostalgic adults. So far Girls Gone By Publishers have republished all the Romney Marsh titles from Storm Ahead to A Wind Is Blowing and have now started publishing the Punchbowl titles.

Shelley and Sean have also approved the writing of their mother's biography by Brian Parks. It was published by Girls Gone By Publishers in February 2010. Brian Parks' Companion to the Romney Marsh series of books[11] was published in July 2006.

Non-series fiction [link]

  • Killer Dog (1959 - novelisation of Monica Edwards' script for the Children's Film Foundation film The Dawn Killer[12][13] made in 1958)
  • Under The Rose (1968)

Career fiction [link]

(Both titles published by Bodley Head)

  • Joan Goes Farming (1954)
  • Rennie Goes Riding (1956)

Non-fiction [link]

(All titles published by Michael Joseph)

  • The Unsought Farm (1954)
  • The Cats of Punchbowl Farm (1964)
  • The Badgers of Punchbowl Farm (1966)
  • The Valley and the Farm (1971)
  • Badger Valley (1976)

Short stories [link]

  • The Irresponsible Rescue (Collins - 1948)
  • Serena Bathover's Horses (Collins - 1948)
  • A Sort of Miracle (Collins - 1952)
  • The Horse That Came From the Sea (Collins - 1953)
  • Such a pony was Gipsy (Collins - 1953)
  • Sure Magic (Max Parrish - 1955)
  • The Champions (Chambers - 1955)
  • The Telegram (Collins - 1955)
  • Bird in the Hand (Collins - 1959)
  • The Great Horse (Naldrett Press - 1960)
  • Caesar's Fire (Collins - 1963)

Later life [link]

Monica Edwards' last new title (Badger Valley) was published in 1976. She spent the next twenty years in travelling, reading and studying natural history. Bill Edwards died in October 1990 and Monica in January 1998.

Reference books [link]

External links [link]

References [link]

  1. ^ Parks, Brian. 2010. Monica Edwards - the Authorised Biography Girls Gone By Publishers pp. 21-22
  2. ^ Parks, Brian. 2010. Monica Edwards - the Authorised Biography Girls Gone By Publishers p. 21
  3. ^ Parks, Brian. 2010. Monica Edwards - the Authorised Biography Girls Gone By Publishers p. 30
  4. ^ Parks, Brian. 2006. The Monica Edwards Romney Marsh Companion Girls Gone By Publishers. p. 11
  5. ^ Parks, Brian. 2010. Monica Edwards - the Authorised Biography Girls Gone By Publishers p. 33
  6. ^ Parks, Brian. 2010. Monica Edwards - the Authorised Biography Girls Gone By Publishers p. 45
  7. ^ Parks, Brian. 2006. The Monica Edwards Romney Marsh Companion Girls Gone By Publishers. pp. 84-91
  8. ^ Edwards, Monica. 2005. Storm Ahead Girls Gone By Publishers 2005. p. 9 (Preface to re-published edition by Shelley Edwards)
  9. ^ Parks, Brian. 2010. Monica Edwards - the Authorised Biography Girls Gone By Publishers p. 69
  10. ^ Parks, Brian. 2010. Monica Edwards - the Authorised Biography Girls Gone By Publishers p. 71
  11. ^ Parks, Brian. 2006. The Monica Edwards Romney Marsh Companion
  12. ^ Dawn Killer at IMDB
  13. ^ Dawn Killer at Children's Film and Television Foundation (Fifth entry on this page)

https://wn.com/Monica_Edwards

The Wild One

The Wild One is a 1953 American film directed by László Benedek and produced by Stanley Kramer. It is most noted for the character of Johnny Strabler (Marlon Brando), whose persona became a cultural icon of the 1950s. The Wild One is considered to be the original outlaw biker film, and the first to examine American outlaw motorcycle gang violence.

The film's screenplay was based on Frank Rooney's short story "The Cyclists' Raid", published in the January 1951 Harper's Magazine and anthologized in The Best American Short Stories 1952. Rooney's story was inspired by sensationalistic media coverage of an American Motorcyclist Association motorcycle rally that got out of hand on the Fourth of July weekend in 1947 in Hollister, California. The overcrowding, drinking and street stunting were given national attention in the July 21, 1947 issue of Life Magazine, with a staged photograph of a wild drunken man on a motorcycle. The events, conflated with the newspaper and magazine reports, Rooney's short story, and the film The Wild One are part of the legend of the Hollister riot.

Wild One

Wild One or Wild Ones may refer to:

In film

  • The Wild One, a 1953 film starring Marlon Brando
  • The Wild Ones (film), a 1989 Hong Kong film directed by David Lam and Francis Sung
  • In literature

  • Wild Ones (manga), a 2004 manga by Kiyo Fujiwara
  • The Wild One (novel), a 1967 children's novel by Monica Edwards
  • In music

    Albums

  • Wild One (The Guess Who album), 1972
  • Wild One: The Very Best of Thin Lizzy, an album by Thin Lizzy
  • Wild One, by Rooney released November 2009
  • The Wild One, an album by Sugarplum Fairy
  • Wild Ones (Flo Rida album), a 2012 album by Flo Rida
  • Wild Ones (Kip Moore album), a 2015 album by Kip Moore
  • The Wild Ones (album), a 1982 album by the Cockney Rejects
  • Songs

  • "Wild One" (Bobby Rydell song), 1960
  • "Wild One" (Faith Hill song), a country music song written by Pat Bunch, Jaime Kyle, and Will Rambeaux
  • "Wild One" (Martha and the Vandellas song), 1964
  • "Wild One" (Johnny O'Keefe song), also known as "Real Wild Child"
  • "Wild One" (Green Day song), a song by Green Day from the 2012 album ¡Dos!
  • Elder Gods (Marvel Comics)

    The Elder Gods are fictional characters from the Marvel Comics universe. They were the first generation of Earth's gods, apparently inspired by Greek mythology and the Cthulhu Mythos.

    Fictional group history

    The Elder gods first appeared billions of years ago, when organic life was beginning to evolve on Earth. The first of them was a being known as the Demiurge, born from Earth's natural magical energies. It then decided to spread its substance over the planet, creating the rest of the gods. The full number of the Elder gods has not been revealed, but among them were: Gaea, goddess of the Earth; Chthon, god of black magic, Set the serpent god of chaos, and Oshtur, goddess of the stars. Hyppus and Isuus are other mentioned Elder gods. The "Wild One" (seemingly inspired by Rebel Without a Cause) is an Elder god who only made one brief appearance, in a plot involving the otherdimensional Sorcerer Supreme Shanzar. The Gibborim are also Elder gods, surviving the Demogorge, having ruled Earth before humanity arose, but as their power faded, they retreated to a limbo-like dimension; they are sustained through souls and possess vast magical powers, including that of resurrection and reality-manipulation; they existed in a void-like limbo until the events of X-Infernus released them, albeit temporarily.

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