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The 'Penny' books by A.Stephen Tring,
r.n. Laurence Meynell
A. Stephen Tring was just one of
several pseudonyms adopted by Laurence Meynell. Laurence
Meynell was born in 1899 in Wolverhampton. He went to
school in Hertfordshire and served in the artillery
during the First World War. After spells as an articled
clerk in a land agency, an advertising agency and as a
teacher he won a literary competition in 1924 that
allowed him to take up a career as a professional writer.
He served in the R.A.F. during the Second World War and
was once mentioned in despatches. Most of his output was
for adults but, in spite of this, he still produced a
substantial number of childrens books.
His most celebrated childrens character was
Penelope Patricia Anderson or Penny whom we
first meet as a schoolgirl of 10 and whom we leave as a
(relatively) responsible young lady of 17.
There are many different editions of the
Penny books and they are most commonly
available in the Goodchild reprints. However, the correct
order of publication and the order in which to read them
is as follows:-
Penny Dreadful (Oxford University
Press) 1949
Penny Triumphant (Oxford
University Press) 1953
Penny Penitent (Oxford University
Press) 1953
Penny Puzzled (Oxford University
Press) 1955
Penny Dramatic (Oxford University
Press) 1956
Penny In Italy (Oxford University
Press) 1957
Penny and the Pageant (Oxford
University Press) 1959
Penny Says Goodbye (Oxford
University Press) 1961.
For those of you meeting Penny for the first time it
is both essential and convenient for you to start the
story with Penny Dreadful. It is essential
because, as mentioned above, Penny grows up as we read
the stories. Tring often shows quite a different approach
to Penny and her world as the years roll by. It would be
a real shame to put the cart before the horse and
anticipate the way she develops. It is
also convenient to start with Penny
Dreadful because a quick survey of on-line
booksellers would reveal that there are more copies of
that volume available than the rest of the
Penny books put together.
So what should you expect ? The best comparisons are
probably with the Susan books by Jane Shaw or
the Jennings books by Anthony Buckeridge. The
humour is less broad and the situations somehow less
frantic than with the eponymous protagonists of those two
series. There is a greater concern with the world of
adults but the sheer unpredictability of parents,
teachers, shopkeepers, policemen, neighbours, artists,
actors and foreigners is a part of the rich tapestry that
the author weaves together. Perhaps the most satisfactory
element is that Penny can be seen to be growing up and
changing as the reader moves further into the series.
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Penny Dreadful
The opening story in the
Penny series is as much about her
elder sister, Felicity, as it is about ten-year
old Penny. Fizzy has just returned from a year in
Belgium and, at the ripe old age of 17, had
decided that she must stop being a drain on the
Andrews family and get a job. Mr. Andrews is a
local solicitor with many connections in the
surrounding towns and villages (The setting is a
fictionalised Buckingham.) that we meet during
the course of the Penny saga.
However, Felicity is determined to make her own
way in the world and secures her first job purely
by chance when she responds to an advertisement
in a bookshop window.The owner is Captain
Donald Western, a man of uncertain age, who has
newly established the business in the town.
Fizzy's youth, charm and good looks,
together with some rather basic secretarial
skills, prove to be perfectly fitted for doing
the accounts and managing the customers. Captain
Western is often absent attending book-sales
around the surrounding county. It isnt long
before Fizzy discovers that there is a mysterious
back room that she is not allowed to enter. She
also has misadventures with shop-lifters who turn
out to be quite different from what they first
seem.
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Meanwhile Penny pursues her usual eventful life at
school whilst her mind is entirely pre-occupied with the
never-ending problem of persuading her father to buy her
a pony. The obsession leads her into all sorts of
mischief some of it harmless and innocent and some
of it more wilful and dangerous. A forbidden trip to
London to attend a Horse Show in Islington also allows
her to blunder across the vital clue that leads to the
unmasking of a villain and to her sisters
unemployment. It also makes Penny confront for the first
time the penalties of her own conscience.
The portrait of Fizzy is an engaging one of a young
girl on the threshold of adult life. She is presented as
good-hearted, naïve and easily susceptible to the charms
of a pleasant rogue. In the background is Tony Grant, her
childhood friend, who is ready to offer the much-needed
friendship and attention when the crisis comes.
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Penny Triumphant
By the age of twelve Penny has become a
much more determined character and it is this
determination and resourcefulness that sees her
through when events involving her family and the
neighbours seem to promise disaster. Pennys
mother, a bastion of the local Womens
Institute, plays a much larger part in this story
that the first one. Her sister Fizzy by contrast
fades into the background, though we are told she
is busy dealing with a constant stream of
young men who are all anxious to take her
out. Pennys two preoccupations continue
to be the ownership of her pony and the
consumption of a large amount of food. She
attends the Meadows School where too often she
daydreams about belonging to the local County
Association of Young Riders. An episode near the
beginning of the book where Penny rises early to
watch the cubbing of the local hunt
brings her a whole new set of acquaintances.
First there is Mr. King - a recluse who lives in
the forest and who has decidedly anti-hunting
views that the author allows him to express with
clarity and passion. The rest of the book
demonstrates that Mr. King is honest, trustworthy
and in tune with his natural surroundings.
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More unpredictable is Miss Marchant, the lady who
lives in the local big house and who, because of her
deafness falls into disagreement with Pennys
mother. Penny soon finds herself in the unenviable
position of being sympathetic to both points of view in
the local dispute. At school she finds herself at enmity
with Valerie Summers-Wilson and plunged into the mystery
of the gyms shoes when she starts a detective agency with
her best friend. By the end of the book she has also
drawn in a film star, a hairdresser and a thief. However,
as the title indicates, Penny ultimately emerges
unscathed and with her reputation enhanced.
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Penny Penitent
It is Summer Term at the Meadows School
and Penny Andrews is in trouble. This is a fairly
normal state of affairs for this young lady.
However, the everyday mishaps of school life have
been compounded by the arrival of a new form
teacher and the promotion of a deadly enemy to
the position of form captain. Penny is now nearly
fourteen and her family begin to expect hereto be
more responsible. Things dont get off to a
good start when Penny realises that new teacher
is the woman she accused the previous day of
stealing her bike. (Incidentally Penny calls the
bike by the name of Tom and treats it
as an old pony rather than a mere machine.)A
school prank that goes wrong leads to an
uncomfortable interview with Miss Crane, the
Headmistress of the Meadows. Penny is reduced to
self-reproach by the very niceness of
Miss Crane and vows to do all she can to raise
money for the new school hall. This leads to her
brief and secret career as an artists model
and to her inadvertently introducing a romantic
interest into the life of her endlessly-patient
form teacher. All the action culminates in the
events of a Sports Day where Penny knows the
bitterness of defeat and the sweet taste of
victory. In her case it is an ice-cream provided
by Tony Grant, still resolute in his pursuit of
the now glamorous-looking Fizzy.
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Penny Puzzled
For the first time this story takes our
heroine away from her home ground in
Buckinghamshire and on a trip to stay with a
family in coastal Suffolk. No sooner has she got
on to the small branch-line leading to the East Anglican resort than she finds herself embroiled
in a mystery about a stolen painting. She quickly
makes friends with Elizabeth and David Bale and
fits comfortably into the life of the family. For
the first time the reader sees signs that Penny
is beginning to think about her appearance. The
delights of a new dress and the opportunity for
wearing it at a special dance are ideas that
would never have crossed the mind of the younger
Penny. The villain of the piece is easy to spot
from the beginning but the dramatic intervention
of a flood causes an exciting episode that makes
Penny realise that every one has a mixture of
qualities that go into their character. There are
signs that Penny is growing up, though the author
maintains a lot of the comic element by the
dialogue between Penny and young David who spends
most of his time coming up with impossible
inventions. |
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Penny Dramatic
Just how did Penny Andrews, the
dreamy-headed, mischievous nuisance become head
of the Fifth Form ? More than any of the other
adventures in the series Penny gets into
difficult situations not because of faults in her
own character but because of the dictates of a
seemingly malignant fate. Two passions have now
overtaken Pennys life one is
learning how to be a good actress and the other
is playing a full part on the school tennis team.
Lots of the plot is about the build-up to the
performance of a play and also about Penny taking
part in vital tennis matches. The author stays
firmly on the side of realism by granting his
heroine only a plausible measure of success in
both activities. On the other hand Penny
continues to win a multitude of new friends
including the lively and attractive Danny Taylor,
a junior reporter on the local newspaper. She
also crosses the path of a fierce-looking goat
and a famous Shakespearean actress. Though a much
more responsible young person than ever before,
she still manages to do incomprehensibly strange
things like putting out a fire with water
from a dogs bowl ! |
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Penny in Italy
The author constructs the opening of
this Penny adventure with a good deal
of care. The reason for Pennys departure to
foreign climes is a tragic one involving the
aftermath of a horse-jumping accident.
Continental travel appears to be the one way to
re-engage our depressed heroines interest
in the world around her. The story travels across
Europe with Penny gradually emerging from her
period of gloom. A romantic glow surrounds the
time that Penny spends with her friend and her
family near Naples. When Penny is drawn into a
mystery, again one surrounding a valuable
painting, the reader is soon confident that all
her old high spirits will return. Her generous,
friendly nature attracts strays of both the human
and animal kind. Once again the fates conspire to
place her at the centre of events which are by no
means under her control. It is disappointing to
report that the author, anxious to build up the
momentum of Pennys need to go abroad,
wrongly declares that Fizzy was envious of her
sister because Felicity had never herself
been abroad at all. He seems to have
entirely forgotten that year in Belgium mentioned
in Penny Dreadful. |
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Penny and The Pageant
Once again the author demonstrates that
the older Penny is now ready to develop as a
person who will be able to live independently
from the watching eye of her family. Her summer
holidays are spent helping Lady Peterly organise
a Pageant and ensuring that by hook or by crook
that it will be a success. Using the same plot
device of two simultaneous village
happenings falling on the same day as
he used in Penny Triumphant the
author still manages to skirt the dangers of mere
repetition. Pennys resourcefulness in the
face of the hazards of chance is skilfully
handled and once again the readers find
themselves drawn into admiring her impetuous
enthusiasm and high spirits.<<<No
cover scan available; illo is of 'Fizzy'.
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Penny Says Goodbye
It is not often that an author of series
books has the courage to draw a line under his
own efforts and say no more. The
temptation to continue with the adventures of a
character who has been very successful with an
ever book-hungry audience must have been strong.
However, by bringing the saga to a conclusion
with Penny Says Goodbye A. Stephen
Tring kept faith with both himself and his
readers. By the last page of this eighth volume
Penny has grown up. As she walks away from school
for the last time her mother speaks to her.
Ready, Penny ? her mother
asked quietly.
Penny Andrews nodded. Yes,
she answered. Im ready.
And what she really meant was, I am
ready to hear the good news and to see the fine
things. I am ready for life.
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William (Richmal Crompton) , Jennings (Anthony
Buckeridge) and Susan (Jane Shaw) never grow up. That is
almost the essence of their attraction.. The Penny of
Penny Dreadful is now just a distant memory,
though, strangely enough, it is thoughts about herself in
the past that give this last tale such poignancy. In
Penny Says Goodbye our heroine is now the
same age that her sister Fizzy was in the very first
book. The awkward gangling shape of the ten-year madcap
of the Junior Section of Meadows School has been
transformed into an attractive 17 year old. Her driving
instructor tells her,
Good looks seem to run in the family, if I may
say so.
And Penny has the good grace and good sense to accept the
compliment without taking it too seriously or letting it
go to her head. Her driving lessons are another measure
of her development, for once again Stephen Tring avoids
the possibility of creating humour by cataloguing the
foolish errors that beginners will make. Pennys
competence and confidence reveal some of the inner
resilience of her character. She proves a tower of
strength to her family as the arrangements for
Fizzys wedding draw to their climax. At the same
time, whilst taking some of the strain, she doesnt
fail to be moved by the solemnity and beauty of the
occasion.
At school too Penny takes on the responsibilities of
Head Girl with admirable good sense and good humour. She
is not afraid to stick to her principles even when this
brings her into conflict with her oldest friend. Though
understanding of the sins of the junior pupils,
recognising many of her own faults from first form days,
she is never indulgent for old times sake. She is
also able to understand and tolerate some of the least
attractive features of the adults around her. A grown-up
who cheats at tennis is demonstrated to be a bad
sport at the same time as Penny learns the useful
lesson of self-control and keeping a sense of proportion
in difficult circumstances. Most of all she suddenly
starts to realise her potential for academic achievement,
finding both pleasure and reward in her English and
French studies.
The challenge of making a public speech is appalling
for her but the new Penny is prepared to face it with the
right mixture of trepidation and determination. With her
outward-going character and her instinctive friendliness
Penny is able to draw together people from all areas of
society and create harmony where conflict seemed
inevitable.
Strangely enough, as we read the last volume, we begin
to realise that the qualities Penny has gained during her
last year at school are also reflected in the behaviour
and attitudes of her long-suffering parents and in the
instinctive understanding of the admirable headmistress
who has always guided her along the right path.
It is sad to say goodbye to an old friend but it is
fair to conclude that the author gave her a nearly
perfect send-off.
Also by Stephen Tring are three adventures charting
the career of a grammar school boy called Barry.
Barry's Exciting Year (1951)
Barry Gets His Wish (1952)
Barry's Great Day (1954)
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