Immagine dell'autore.

K. M. Peyton (1929–2023)

Autore di Flambards

84+ opere 3,113 membri 64 recensioni 8 preferito

Sull'Autore

Fonte dell'immagine: from kmpeyton.co.uk

Serie

Opere di K. M. Peyton

Flambards (1968) 464 copie
The Edge of the Cloud (1969) 261 copie
Flambards in Summer (1969) 237 copie
Flambards Divided (1981) 177 copie
Blind Beauty (1999) 153 copie
A Pattern of Roses (1972) 106 copie
Snowfall (1994) 100 copie
Fly-by-night (1968) 93 copie
Flambards Trilogy (1978) 91 copie
A Midsummer Night's Death (1978) 85 copie
Prove Yourself a Hero (1977) 83 copie
The Beethoven Medal (1971) 82 copie
Pennington's Heir (1973) 62 copie
The Team (1975) 51 copie
Darkling (1990) 49 copie
Who, Sir? Me, Sir? (1983) 49 copie
Minna's Quest (2007) 39 copie
Falling Angels (1979) 36 copie
Poor Badger (1992) 34 copie
Sea Fever (1962) 33 copie
Wild Lily (2016) 33 copie
Far from Home (2009) 31 copie
The Maplin Bird (1964) 30 copie
Blue Skies and Gunfire (2006) 29 copie
North to Adventure (1958) 29 copie
Thunder in the Sky (1966) 28 copie
Small Gains (2003) 27 copie
No Turning Back (2009) 26 copie
Stealaway (2001) 25 copie
The Right-hand Man (1977) 25 copie
The Swallow Summer (1996) 23 copie
Dear Fred (1981) 22 copie
The Last Ditch (1984) 22 copie
Downhill All the Way (1988) 19 copie
The Plan for Birdsmarsh (1965) 19 copie
The Swallow Tale (1995) 18 copie
Greater Gains (2005) 18 copie
Going Home (1982) 16 copie
The Scruffy Pony (1999) 16 copie
Horse And Pony Stories (1994) 15 copie
The Boy Who Wasn't There (1992) 13 copie
Swallow the Star (1997) 13 copie
Pony in the Dark (2001) 12 copie
Unquiet Spirits (1997) 12 copie
Stormcock Meets Trouble (1970) 10 copie
Froggett's Revenge (1987) 10 copie
Windy Webley (1997) 10 copie
The Pied Piper (1999) 9 copie
Paradise House (2011) 9 copie
Windfall (1962) 8 copie
Plain Jack (1988) 8 copie
Danger Offshore (1998) 7 copie
Crab the Roan (1953) 6 copie
No Roses Round the Door (1990) 6 copie
Sing a Song of Ambush (1964) 6 copie
Late to Smile (1992) 6 copie
Skylark (1989) 6 copie
Brownsea Silver (1964) 6 copie
Pennington: A Trilogy (1985) 6 copie
The Mandrake: A Pony. (1952) 6 copie
The Paradise Pony (1999) 5 copie
Horses: Wild Reads (2009) 5 copie
Firehead (1998) 5 copie
The Hard Way Home (1986) 4 copie
All that Glitters (2015) 3 copie
The Swallow Tales (2012) 2 copie
Queen Moon (1995) 2 copie
Angst (1998) 2 copie
Oxford Reds: Horses (2000) 2 copie
Pony In The Dark (2014) 1 copia
Apple Won't Jump (1992) 1 copia
Fly-by-Night 1 copia

Opere correlate

Horse Tales (1976) — Collaboratore — 75 copie
The Illustrated Treasury of Modern Literature for Children (1985) — Collaboratore — 64 copie
Chilling Christmas Tales (1992) — Collaboratore — 18 copie
Flambards [1979 TV mini series] (2001) — Original book — 17 copie
The Thorny Paradise: Writers on Writing for Children (1975) — Collaboratore — 15 copie
The Key to Flambards (2018) — Postfazione — 14 copie
Guardian Angels (1987) — Collaboratore — 11 copie
To Break the Silence (1986) — Collaboratore — 9 copie

Etichette

Informazioni generali

Nome legale
Peyton, Kathleen Wendy Herald
Altri nomi
Herald, Kathleen (birth name)
Data di nascita
1929-08-16
Data di morte
2023-12-19
Sesso
female
Nazionalità
UK
Luogo di nascita
Birmingham, England, UK
Luogo di residenza
London, England, UK
Istruzione
Manchester Art College
Attività lavorative
novelist
children's book author
pony book author
young adult writer
Premi e riconoscimenti
Member of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire (2014)
Breve biografia
K.M. Peyton, born in Birmingham, England, says she began writing at the age of 9. She was first published at 15 under her maiden name of Kathleen Herald. She says she "'never decided to become a writer...[she]...just was one." She grew up in London obsessed with horses: her early books are about girls who have ponies. In 1950, she married a fellow art student, Mike Peyton -- the M. in her pen name is in his honor -- and travelled with him around Europe.

She completed a teaching diploma on their return to the UK, but turned to writing full-time after a few years. One of her first books was Flambards (1967), which became the opener of a much-loved quartet. In 1979, the Flambards series was adapted into a 13-part TV series by Yorkshire Television. She has written more than 70 books in her career and received numerous top literary awards. She was appointed an MBE in 2014.

Utenti

Discussioni

KM Peyton and Flambards in Tattered but still lovely (Febbraio 2014)

Recensioni

Great ghost story with horses! I would have loved this as a kid. I immediately wrote to my sister about it. She loves horses and is caught up with ghost stories at the moment. I love KM Peyton. So sorry for her loss. I'm having fun tracking down titles of hers that I missed. Glad to have found this one. Short, quick read. More a novella or short story. Maybe a first chapter book, but the story not really at that level. Lovely illustration.
 
Segnalato
njcur | Jan 16, 2024 |
Lovely short book, first chapter book perhaps. Good story with a lot of depth for its brevity. I could really relate to Ros's worries. So glad to have it all work out. I did love the illustration with this one.
 
Segnalato
njcur | 1 altra recensione | Jan 11, 2024 |
This book completely shocked me, and I can see why so many fans of Flambards hate it. I wanted to throw it across the room several times. But it rewards reading and thinking about it, and why Peyton wrote it, and why people hate it so much.

Basically, Peyton ended the trilogy with Christina's story wrapped up like a chocolate box, she's got Flambards, she's got Dick (sweet, loyal, loving Dick, who has always cared for her since he first met her) and everyone gets to ride off into the sunset. And then ten years later she came back and wrote what I can only describe as the anti-fix-it fic, painfully deconstructing all the reasons her happy ending would never work with her actual characters, and heaping misery upon misery to Dick/Christina until they tear each other apart.

And the two big things that drive all of this are Class, and Mark. If, like me, you are very unimpressed by both of them, you will hate watching them take down Dick and Chrstina's happy ever after.

Class! Dick wanted Christina. But he didn't actually want to be master of Flambards. The servants hate him for being just another servant, raised above his station. All the social life of the gentry is closed to him, no-one invites him and Christina around for dinner because they disapprove of the marriage. People gossip, people tut, Dick wants to give Christina everything but is like a fish out of water trying to live in the world she lives in. And not only with class, she has travelled and been independant and adventurous, and Dick's imaginings of what his wife will be and what she will do make a box too small for Christina to fit in.

Mark! Uncle Russell in book 1 is 100% the bad guy. He's cruel, irrational, self obsessed, makes Will so unhappy he cripples himself, sells Sweetbriar to the hounds, burns Will's books on aeroplanes... we all hate Uncle Russell. And Mark is drawn as the chip off the old block, shallow, obsessed with hunting, casually cruel and able to trample over other people's feelings without even noticing. So the fact that the series gets rewritten to 'Christina finally realises it was Mark she has loved all along' is just... really jarring. Readers who have loved Will and loved Dick, and seen Mark be unbearably cruel to them and their families (he is literally the reason Christina loses the baby!) will not enjoy their heroine messing everything up with Dick and falling head over heels in love with Mark.

But does it make sense? Peyton is a skilled author and an excellent observer of people, and her cynical 'Dick cannot make Christina happy' is miserable but does ring true. Mark is as much a product of Uncle Russell's torture as the rest of them are. And Christina and Mark are cut from the same cloth, their love of adventure, hard riding, fast cars and parties. And there is something in Mark, that spark of 'if you can meet with Triumph and Disaster and treat those two imposters just the same'...

Ugh, I don't know. I think I preferred the end of book 3 to the end of book 4. But book 4 really made me think!
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
atreic | 3 altre recensioni | Sep 28, 2023 |
Again with Flambards books that swerve and swerve hard and catch you out with the change in mood!

The last book ended with Will and Christina married and riding off into the sunset (if with the ominous overtones of war everywhere). Never one to pull their punches, Peyton doesn't give us even a glimpse of their married life, but opens this book with Will dead, Mark missing in action, and Flambards even more decayed and run down than usual. The widowed Christina has to work out what to do with her life, which turns out to be a surprising mix of building up a found / chosen family, by having Will's baby, buying Mark's bastard son off Violet, and finally confessing her love to Dick.

Then drama ensues by Mark turning out not to be dead after all and actually being the heir to Flambards, and Violet's son decides that rather than be kicked out to the farm he'll burn the farm down, but with a little storybook magic it is all wrapped up in a bow, Dick and Christina get Flambards and the children, and Mark rides off into the sunset with his rich new fiance Dorothy who has promised him a much nicer house with much better hunting somewhere else.


War and grief, and love, and what we need and what we can have, and social class, and how we treat prisoners of war, and how our early teenage years shape us forever, this book is definitely more of the Flambards magic.
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
atreic | 4 altre recensioni | Sep 28, 2023 |

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Statistiche

Opere
84
Opere correlate
11
Utenti
3,113
Popolarità
#8,211
Voto
4.0
Recensioni
64
ISBN
371
Lingue
9
Preferito da
8

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