Victor Watson (author)

Last updated

Victor Watson
VictorWatson.jpg
Watson at the Saffron Walden Library, December 2015
Born1936 (age 8788)
Littleport, Cambridgeshire, England
OccupationAuthor
PeriodSecond World War
GenreAcademic, Children's
SubjectHistorical fiction, Adventure
SpouseJudy White
Children3
Website
paradisebarn.com

Victor Watson (born 1936) is an English author who has written on the nature and history of children's literature and on how children learn to read. He later turned to writing novels for children, young adults and adults.

Contents

Early life

Watson was born and brought up in Littleport in the Isle of Ely (now part of Cambridgeshire). His father, George Watson, was a printer and stationer, and his mother, née Emily Manning, one of a large family of fairground travellers. His mother ran the family stationer's and bookshop while his father served in the Second World War.

Education

Watson attended the County Primary School at Littleport, Cambridgeshire and Soham Grammar School. After national service in the Royal Artillery, he read English at University College, London studying amongst other topics Old English which is also known as Anglo-Saxon. He followed that with a master's degree, while employed as a research assistant to Professor J. R. Sutherland. [1]

Career

From 1962 until 1969 he taught English at Sherrardswood School, a private primary and secondary institution in Welwyn Garden City. [2] He then moved into teacher education: five years at Saffron Walden Teacher Training College, and later as a lecturer in English at Homerton College, Cambridge, where he specialised in 18th and 19th-century literature and the history of children's books.

Books published

Watson's main academic publications are After Alice – Exploring Children's Literature, [3] The Prose and the Passion: Children and their Reading, [4] and Voices: Texts, Contexts and Readers [5] all of which Watson co-edited with Eve Bearne and Morag Styles. Later came Talking Pictures: Pictorial texts and young readers [6] with Morag Styles; Opening the Nursery Door, [7] with Morag Styles and Mary Hilton, and Where Texts and Children Meet, [8] with Eve Bearne. He edited The Cambridge Guide to Children's Books in English, [9] and co-wrote Coming of Age in Children's Literature [10] with Professor Margaret Meek.

One of his later academic works, Reading Series Fiction: from Arthur Ransome to Gene Kemp, [11] allowed him to focus on the genre of children's books he is most interested in. Subsequently, he wrote a series of war stories for eight to thirteen-year-old children, beginning with Paradise Barn, [12] which was shortlisted for the Branford-Boase Award. Watson followed this with three sequels. [13] [14] [15] The last of these, Everyone a Stranger won the 2014 East Anglian Children's Book Award. This quartet was followed by a thriller which was also a war novel, Operation Blackout; although this was last to be published it comes chronologically after Paradise Barn. [16] All five remain in print in the UK.

Watson has been influenced as a writer by the work of Jan Mark, William Mayne and Philippa Pearce, indeed in 2008 he gave an inaugural lecture at the first Philippa Pearce Memorial Lecture [17] and wrote an afterword for a 2014 reissue of Pearce's Tom's Midnight Garden . [18] At an Oxford Children's Book Group meeting in 2013 he spoke of his belief that series fiction is "a powerful way of fostering a love of independent reading", quoting a small boy as telling him that reading a new book was like entering a room full of strangers, but that series fiction was like "a room full of friends". [19]

In June 2020 Watson published his first novel for adults "The Cuckoo Season" which is set in East Anglia and London in 1952, [20] and in 2022 the book he edited about Lucy Boston was launched. [21] Of his latest novel, Time After Time, he said, "I’ve always been fascinated by the idea of England before it became crowded, when you could walk for days without meeting anyone." [22]

Novels published so far

National Centre for Children's Books

Almost from its inception, Watson has been a trustee of an organization committed to establishing in the UK a national archive of manuscripts, artwork and books relating to children's literature. He chaired this organization during the main fundraising and building period, which led in 2005 to the opening of Seven Stories, the National Centre for Children's Books. His own collection of children's popular literature, mainly story papers and annuals, was transferred there in April 2016.

Walden Writers

Watson is a member of the Walden Writers co-operative, set up in Saffron Walden by authors Amy Corzine and Martyn Everett in 2008 to promote the work of its members and organise literary events. [23] Other members include children's authors Rosemary Hayes and Penny Speller, fiction and non-fiction writer and poet Amy Corzine, travel-writer and novelist Jane Wilson-Howarth, biographer Clare Mulley, novelist Carol Frazer, and historian Lizzie Sanders.

Personal life

Watson is married to Judy, also a teacher; they have three children, Sally, Lucy and Tim, and four granddaughters. [24]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Philip Pullman</span> English author

Sir Philip Nicholas Outram Pullman is an English writer. His books include the fantasy trilogy His Dark Materials and The Good Man Jesus and the Scoundrel Christ, a fictionalised biography of Jesus. In 2008, The Times named Pullman one of the "50 greatest British writers since 1945". In a 2004 BBC poll, he was named the eleventh most influential person in British culture. He was knighted in the 2019 New Year Honours for services to literature.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Paradise Lost</span> Epic poem by John Milton

Paradise Lost is an epic poem in blank verse by the 17th-century English poet John Milton (1608–1674). The first version, published in 1667, consists of ten books with over ten thousand lines of verse. A second edition followed in 1674, arranged into twelve books with minor revisions throughout. It is considered to be Milton's masterpiece, and it helped solidify his reputation as one of the greatest English poets of all time. The poem concerns the biblical story of the fall of man: the temptation of Adam and Eve by the fallen angel Satan and their expulsion from the Garden of Eden.

Young adult literature (YA) is literature, most often including novels, written for readers from 12 to 18 years of age. The term YA was first used regularly in the 1960s in the United States. The YA category includes most of the genres found in adult fiction, with themes that include friendship, drugs and alcohol, and sexual and gender identity. Stories that focus on the challenges of youth may be categorized as problem novels or coming-of-age novels.

Ann Philippa Pearce OBE FRSL was an English author of children's books. Best known of them is the time-slip novel Tom's Midnight Garden, which won the 1958 Carnegie Medal from the Library Association, as the year's outstanding children's book by a British subject. Pearce was a commended runner-up for the Medal a further four times.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Green Knowe</span> Series of childrens books by Lucy M. Boston

Green Knowe is a series of six children's novels written by Lucy M. Boston, illustrated by her son Peter Boston, and published from 1954 to 1976. It features a very old house, Green Knowe, based on Boston's home at the time, The Manor in Hemingford Grey, Huntingdonshire, England. In the novels she brings to life the people she imagines might have lived there.

Puffin Books is a longstanding children's imprint of the British publishers Penguin Books. Since the 1960s, it has been among the largest publishers of children's books in the UK and much of the English-speaking world. The imprint now belongs to Penguin Random House, a subsidiary of the German media conglomerate Bertelsmann.

<i>Toms Midnight Garden</i> 1958 novel by Philippa Pearce

Tom's Midnight Garden is a children's fantasy novel by English author Philippa Pearce. It was first published in 1958 by Oxford University Press with illustrations by Susan Einzig. The story is about a twelve-year-old Tom who, while staying with his aunt and uncle, slips out at midnight and discovers a magical, mysterious Victorian garden where he befriends a young girl named Hatty. The novel has been reissued in print many times and also adapted for radio, television, cinema, and the stage.

Vivien Alcock was an English writer of children's books.

<i>The Coral Island</i> 1857 novel by R. M. Ballantyne

The Coral Island: A Tale of the Pacific Ocean (1857) is a novel written by Scottish author R. M. Ballantyne. One of the first works of juvenile fiction to feature exclusively juvenile heroes, the story relates the adventures of three boys marooned on a South Pacific island, the only survivors of a shipwreck.

<i>The Nargun and the Stars</i> Novel by Patricia Wrightson

The Nargun and The Stars is a children's fantasy novel set in Australia, written by Patricia Wrightson. It was among the first Australian books for children to draw on Australian Aboriginal mythology. The book was the winner of the 1974 Children's Book Council of Australia Children's Book of the Year Award for Older Readers, and Patricia Wrightson was awarded an Order of the British Empire in 1977, largely for this work.

<i>Janet and John</i> Series of childrens early reading books

Janet and John is a series of early reading books for children, originally published in the UK by James Nisbet and Co in four volumes in 1949–50, and one of the first to make use of the "look and say" approach. Further volumes appeared later, and the series became a sales success in the 1950s and 60s, both in the UK and in New Zealand. By the 1970s, the books were considered outdated, and several updated versions were issued. Facsimiles of two of the original volumes were reprinted in 2007 to cater for the nostalgia market.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ursula Dubosarsky</span> Australian writer

Ursula Dubosarsky is an Australian writer of fiction and non-fiction for children and young adults, whose work is characterised by a child's vision and comic voice of both clarity and ambiguity.

Nicholas Tucker is an English academic and writer who is an honorary Senior Lecturer in Cultural Studies at the University of Sussex.

<i>The Far-Distant Oxus</i> 1937 novel

The Far-Distant Oxus is a 1937 British children’s novel by Katharine Hull (1921–1977) and Pamela Whitlock (1920–1982), written while they were still children themselves. The title is taken from Matthew Arnold's poem Sohrab and Rustum, and the characters in the story choose names from it for the places around them in the north coast of Devon; the real Oxus is a river in Central Asia.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Phillip Mann</span> British science fiction writer in New Zealand (1942–2022)

Anthony Phillip Mann was a British-born New Zealand science fiction author. He studied English and drama at Manchester University and later in California before moving to New Zealand where he established the first drama studies position at a New Zealand university in 1970; at the Victoria University of Wellington in Wellington. He retired from the position of professor of drama at Victoria in 1998 to concentrate on other projects.

<i>Dont Forget the Bacon!</i> Book by Pat Hutchins

Don't Forget the Bacon! is a children's book written and illustrated by Pat Hutchins. It was published by Bodley Head in 1976. The story is about a little boy who tries to memorise a list of groceries his mother has asked him to buy. The book has been used as a teaching tool to instruct children about early learning concepts.

Amy Corzine is an American-born fiction and non-fiction writer and poet. Her first book was a Cadogan travel guide to Ireland for families in which she included stories she wrote based on Irish folktales. After that, Watkins Publishing commissioned her for 'The Secret Life of the Universe: The Quest for the Soul of Science'.

<i>The Adventures of Peter Rabbit & Benjamin Bunny</i> 1996 video game

The Adventures of Peter Rabbit & Benjamin Bunny is a 1996 interactive children's storybook video game developed and published by Mindscape for Windows and Macintosh in association with Beatrix Potter publisher Frederick Warne & Co.

Philippa Dowding is a Canadian writer of children's literature, whose novel Firefly was the winner of the Governor General's Award for English-language children's literature at the 2021 Governor General's Awards.

Jane Johnson was an English vicar’s wife who wrote letters, poetry, children’s fiction and teaching aids. Although none of her work was published during her life, it has since been studied as part of the history of education, children’s fiction, and epistolary literacy.

References

  1. The Great Courses page: Professor John Sutherland, Ph.D.
  2. School website Retrieved 20 February 2016.
  3. Styles, Morag; Eve Bearne; Victor Watson (1992). After Alice – Exploring Children's Literature . Cassell Education. ISBN   0-304-32412-4.
  4. Watson, Victor; Eve Bearne; Morag Styles (1994). The Prose and the Passion: Children and their Reading. Cassell Education. ISBN   0-304-32771-9.
  5. Watson, Victor; Eve Bearne; Morag Styles (1996). Voices: Texts, Contexts and Readers. ISBN   0-304-33579-7.
  6. Watson, Victor; Morag Styles (1996). Talking Pictures: Pictorial texts and young readers. ISBN   0-340-64821-X.
  7. Watson, Victor; Morag Styles; Mary Hilton (1997). Opening the Nursery Door. ISBN   0-415-14899-5.
  8. Watson, Victor; Eve Bearne (2000). Where Texts and Children Meet. ISBN   0-415-20663-4.
  9. Watson, Victor (2001). The Cambridge Guide to Children's Books in English . Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN   0-521-55064-5.
  10. Watson, Victor; Margaret Meek (2003). Coming of Age in Children's Literature. ISBN   0-8264-5842-4.
  11. Watson, Victor (2000). Reading Series Fiction: from Arthur Ransome to Gene Kemp. ISBN   0-415-22701-1.
  12. Paradise Barn. Catnip, London, UK. 2009. ISBN   978-1-84647-091-2.
  13. The Deeping Secrets. Catnip, London, UK. 2011. ISBN   978-1-84647-118-6.
  14. Hidden Lies. Catnip, London, UK. 2012. ISBN   978-1-84647-146-9.
  15. Everyone A Stranger. Catnip, London, UK. 2013. ISBN   978-1-84647-161-2.
  16. Operation Blackout. Catnip, London, UK. 2015. ISBN   9781910611005.
  17. The Philippa Pearce Lectures
  18. Book Depository page Retrieved 20 February 2016.
  19. Mostly Books, 16 October 2013 Retrieved 20 February 2016.
  20. "The Cuckoo Season, a Free Book by Victor Watson".
  21. Lucy Boston biography
  22. Saffron Walden Reporter
  23. Walden Writers in Essex Book Festival
  24. "Saffron Walden author's wartime experience brought to life in latest book". saffronwaldenreporter.com.UK. 16 October 2013. Retrieved 23 December 2018.