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Mystery of the Burnt Cottage (Mysteries)

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Inspector Jenks - A good friend of the Five Find-Outers and an inspector of police, always making Mr Goon nervous even though he is an extremely cheerful, kind and gentle man Larry Daykin spots the fire to the west of the village from his bedroom window as he is preparing to go to bed. As his parents are out, he and his sister Daisy are free to get dressed and go and investigate. En route down their lane they pass another house from which they are joined by their contemporary Pip Hilton and his sister Bets who is four years younger. As the Hilton parents are quite strict about letting their children out we must assume they too are out for the evening. Stumped, the Find-Outers go off for a bike ride (where did Fatty get his?) and for the first time Enid takes them to a real place, Burnham Beeches. Bets is deemed too young to go and Fatty lets her walk Buster again. In typical Fatty style he promises to reward Bets with a bunch of primroses.

After some discussion they decide to form a detective club, at first intending to have just the three older children as members but eventually all five get together and Bets comes up with the name 'The Five Find-Outers and Dog'. According to the Index Translationum, Blyton was the fifth most popular author in the world in 2007, coming after Lenin but ahead of Shakespeare. It seems incredible to think that Enid Blyton, the world's sixth most popular author (right up there with Shakespeare), is virtually unknown in the United States, but so it is. Whether this strange reality is owing to the anti-American prejudice some have perceived in Blyton's work, or simply to the fact that the U.S. has a long-standing and very prolific tradition of children's series of its own, I couldn't say. But as someone with a great interest in children's literature, I have long thought that I should familiarize myself with her work. It was plainly no use to look about where all the watchers had been the night before. The garden was completely trampled down just there, and the criss-cross of footprints was everywhere. The children separated, and very solemnly began to hunt about alongside the overgrown path to the cottage, and in the tall hedges that overhung the ditches at the bottom of the garden. Buster looked too, but as he had a firm idea that every one was hunting for rabbits, he put his nose down each rabbit hole, and scraped violently and hopefully. It always seemed to him a great pity that rabbits didn’t make their holes big enough for dogs. How easy, then, to chase a scampering bunny! “Look at Buster hunting for clues,” said Pip, with a giggle. The children looked for footprints. There were none on the path, which was made of cinders, and showed no footmarks at all, of course. They looked about in the celandines that grew in their hundreds beside the path. But there was nothing to be seen there either. Pip wandered off to a ditch over which hung a drooping hedge of bramble and wild rose. And there he found something! He gave a low and excited call to the others. “Here! I say, come here! I’ve found something! “ At once everyone crowded over to him. Buster too. His nose quivering. “What is it?” said Larry. I would have easily loved this series when I was eight. It's still very charming now. It has a fantastic sense of humour -- the 'Find-Outers' being kid-speak for detectives, naming the grumpy policeman Clear-Orf because he's always yelling 'Clear off!', for example.

urn:lcp:mysteryofburntco0000blyt:epub:0d8bf2ff-f189-4761-8375-23c0da8b7614 Foldoutcount 0 Identifier mysteryofburntco0000blyt Identifier-ark ark:/13960/t8z968x7v Invoice 1213 Isbn 9781405228244 other side of the hedge,” said Fatty. “What about us all squeezing through that gap where the man got in and out, and seeing if we can spy anything the other side.” They all scrambled through the hole in the hedge. Fatty was the last. His eye caught sight of something as he squeezed through. It was a bit of grey flannel, caught oa a thorn. He gave a low whistle and clutched at Larry, who was just in front of him. He pointed to the scrap of flannel. “The man tore his coat as he got through this gap,” he said.“See that? M y word, we are getting on! We know that he wore a grey flannel suit now!” Larry carefully took off the scrap of grey rag from the thorn. He put it into a match-box, wishing that he, and not Fatty, had noticed it. “Good for you!” he said. “Yes - that may be a veiy valuable clue.” “Has Fatty found a glue?” asked Bets., in excitement. Every one crowded round to hear what Fatty had discovered. Larry opened the match-box and showed the bit of grey flannel. “Now we’ve only got to find some one who wears a suit of grey flannel,, a bit torn somewhere, and we’ve got the man!” said Daisy, p leased. “I think we’re much cleverer than Clear-Orf,” said Pip. Blyton was a prolific author of children's books, who penned an estimated 800 books over about 40 years. Her stories were often either children's adventure and mystery stories, or fantasies involving magic. Notable series include: The Famous Five, The Secret Seven, The Five Find-Outers, Noddy, The Wishing Chair, Mallory Towers, and St. Clare's. Eventually, in a surprising turn of events, the mystery is solved and it would seem that the career of the Find-Outers is over and Daisy sums it all up with 'What an exciting week we've had. I suppose now the Find-Outers must come to an end, because we've solved the mystery!' But Fatty is more far-seeing (or he was acquainted with Enid Blyton!) as he replies, 'No. We'll still be the Five Find-Outers and Dog, because you simply never know when another mystery will come along for us to solve. We'll just wait till it comes.' Findouters Challenge: Book 1. Among Enid Blyton’s mystery series, the Five Findouters have always been my favourite (though I read and loved the others too), one reason being the very imaginative solutions to so many of their cases. This time around I’ve decided to read all 15 of the books chronologically for the first time.

As an aside there appears to be some discrepancy as to whether the real Inspector's name was Jennings or Jenkins. I have used the former because it is the name Barbara Stoney uses in Enid's biography, but I note Imogen Smallwood amongst others uses the latter, so perhaps readers of this article many supply the true answer.

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Access-restricted-item true Addeddate 2019-09-21 13:52:06 Bookplateleaf 0008 Boxid IA1665917 Camera Sony Alpha-A6300 (Control) Collection_set printdisabled External-identifier This is the first of Enid Blyton's thrilling 'Mystery' books. It is the story of five children and their dog Buster. They become detectives, trying to discover who set fire to a thatched cottage, and what an exciting adventure it became! The Mystery of the Burnt Cottage' is the first in the series (there are 15 titles in all) featuring the Five Find-Outers and Dog and we are introduced to the characters: The other point is that when the Inspector's face first appears above the rim of the high riverbank it is described as 'a large round face'. The overall impression given throughout the series is that the Inspector has a tall sturdy appearance, not dissimilar to Bill Cunningham in the 'Adventure' series, yet the photo of the real Inspector — Stephen Jennings — which appears in The Story of My Life indeed reveals a large round face with a distinctive double chin!

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