Winnie the Witch

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Winnie the Witch (also known as Winnie and Wilbur since 2016 [1] ) is a series of nineteen picture books, written by Valerie Thomas and illustrated by Korky Paul. More than seven million books have been sold of the series, and it has been translated into more than 10 languages. [1]

Contents

Following on from the success of the picture books, a series of 'young fiction' Winnie the Witch books were written by Laura Owen, also illustrated by Korky Paul. An animated series based on the books was initially produced for Milkshake!, but only two episodes aired as specials.

Book series

Winnie the Witch
Winnie the Witch.jpg
Front cover, designed by Korky Paul
AuthorValerie Thomas
Illustrator Korky Paul
Cover artist Korky Paul
LanguageEnglish
Genre Children's literature
Publisher Oxford University Press
Publication date
1987
Pages32 pages
ISBN 0-19-272683-8
OCLC 67869241

The original book Winnie The Witch was first published in 1987. It was reprinted nine times up until 1997 and re-issued with a new cover in 2006. In 2016, the book series was rebranded from Winnie The Witch to Winnie and Wilbur. [1]

Valerie Thomas has worked for many years in education, teaching in schools in Australia and the UK. Korky Paul is an illustrator of children's books. In 1986, he illustrated his first book for Oxford University Press, Winnie the Witch, which won the Red House Children's Book Award [2] in 1988.

Winnie The Witch (1987)

Winnie can't find her cat Wilbur in her house, because both her house and Wilbur are black. So she uses magic to turn Wilbur into a variety of colours, each one of which leads to a variety of mishaps and makes Wilbur miserable. In the end, Winnie turns Wilbur back to his original colour and changes the colour of her house instead. [3]

Winnie's New Computer (2003)

Winnie has ordered her first computer (which is illustrated like an iMac G4, but instead of an Apple logo it has a pumpkin on its backside) and logs on to the internet. Wilbur however is jealous because Winnie spends so much time with her new computer and doesn't even let him touch "the mouse". Winnie decides to throw away her book of spells and her wand - from now on all her magic will be at the click of a mouse! But when Winnie finally goes to bed, Wilbur finally wants to see what this "new mouse" is all about. The next morning Winnie wakes up to discover she has no cat and no computer. It turns out that she still needs her book of spells from time to time. In the end, she manages to get her computer and Wilbur back and decides to keep her magic wand and her book of spells!

Winnie's Midnight Dragon (2006)

Winnie and her cat Wilbur are woken up in the night by a baby dragon. The dragon sets Winnie's broomstick on fire. Winnie casts a spell to stop the baby dragon breathing fire; unfortunately now he breathes butterflies instead. Wilbur and the baby dragon chase the butterflies, causing much damage to Winnie's house. Winnie chases them to the roof and casts a spell to make a full moon. This allows the baby dragon's mother to see him and she comes to collect him. The dragons fly off and Wilbur and Winnie go to bed.

Bibliography

Television series

Winnie the Witch was adopted into a British animated children's television series titled "Winnie and Wilbur". The first two episodes of the series, following the adventures of witch Winnie, and her black cat Wilbur, debuted on Discovery Kids in Latin America on 17 December 2016, [4] and on Milkshake! in the United Kingdom on 24 December. [5] The first season was set for 52 11-minute episodes, [6] but only two episodes were aired.

Characters

Episodes

No.TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal air date
1"Wilbur's Big Clean"Leo NielsenEma Čulík24 December 2016 (2016-12-24) [nb 1]
Winnie and Wilbur plan a tea party with cupcakes, but their house needs to be cleaned.
2"Winnie's Tricky Tights"Leo NielsenEma Čulík24 December 2016 (2016-12-24) [nb 1]
Winnie tears a hole in her tights.

Notes

  1. 1 2 This episode first aired on 17 December 2016 in Brazil. [4]

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References

  1. 1 2 3 "Famous fictional witch Winnie celebrates her 30th birthday". Oxford Mail. 17 October 2017. Retrieved 29 January 2020.
  2. "Past winners from 1981-1989 of the Red House Children's Book Award". 4 May 2007. Archived from the original on 4 May 2007. Retrieved 22 May 2023.
  3. Thomas, Valerie; Korky Paul (1987). Winnie the Witch. Oxford University Press. OCLC   1029761928.
  4. 1 2 ""Programação Discovery Kids 2016-12-17"". Archived from the original on 3 February 2017. Retrieved 24 January 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link). mi.tv.
  5. Winduna Enterprises (19 December 2016). "Happy Christmas from Winnie and Wilbur!". YouTube . Archived from the original on 21 December 2021. Retrieved 11 January 2017.
  6. "OUP signs Winnie the Witch animation deal | the Bookseller".