The Puddle Lane children's books were published by Ladybird Books during the second half of the 1980s. The stories were followed by a TV programme of the same name. Sheila K McCullagh, who wrote the stories for the TV programme, also wrote the books.
The books are directed to children who are between the ages of 3.5 and 6.5. Five illustrators worked on the books. [1] The first batch of 12 books was released on 12 September 1985. [2] [3]
After the books went out of print, the publisher Mercury Junior and Sheila McCullagh came to an agreement in 2006 to have the publisher print more copies of the books. The publisher targeted parents who in their youth were viewers of the television programme Puddle Lane to purchase the books. [4]
The books take place in Puddle Lane, a fictional place in Candletown. A magician lives in Puddle Lane as do cats who reside in his garden. There is the Griffle, an affable monster capable of partially disappearing. When he does this, viewers can see just his tail or his eyes and ears. The stories feature four kids: Sarah, Davy, Hari, and Gita. [1]
Five sets of books were produced, the first set being the easiest to read (Reading Programme Stage 1). Books of each set featured a distinct cover colour. All books are in hardcover format, 7 inches tall and 4.75 inches wide (standard Ladybird format). Here's a list of all 54 books in the series:
1Additionally, two standalone books were produced: Christmas in Puddle Lane and The Big Puddle Lane Story Book, both written by Sheila McCullagh. They contained several new stories and some songs.
Linda Ashworth of Child Education penned a mixed review of the book series. She praised the advice given to parents, writing, "The free guide for parents is very good. The information is given clearly in layman's terms and the advice is sound." She criticised the stories, writing, "The stories seem tame and don't stand up to reading aloud. They have been written to teach the children to read, not by an author simply wanting to tell a story. Aesthetically the books don't come up to the standard of picture story books by authors such as Anthony Browne, Pat Hutchins or Maurice Sendak. The Ladybird format kills any possibility of individuality or originality of presentation. Although the subject matter of the books—magic, fantasy, toys coming to life—usually captures children's imagination, these stories are just not up to the standard of Tim and the Hidden People." [5]
The Loughborough Echo 's Bridget Dakin called the book series "a colourful and imaginative newcomer to the shelves designed to make learning fun". [6] The newspaper said Puddle Lane stories have a mystical setting guaranteed to capture infants' imagination and interest." [3] The Times Educational Supplement published a negative review of the book series. [7]
In a positive review, Betty Root of the University of Reading's Reading and Language Information Centre wrote, "Teachers, parents and children will delight in these stories which create, so successfully, an imaginary world yet contain characters both animals and human to whom the young readers can relate. With the provision of context support in the early stages—adults read the long story and children the shorter version—the books will tolerate reading over and over again. Thus building the confidence of children first learning to read. In everyway Puddle Lane has changed the image of Ladybird readers." [8]
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