Thursday, January 06, 2011

OLL LEWIS: Obituary: Dick King-Smith OBE

Obituary: Dick King-Smith OBE (27th of March 1922- 4th of January 2011)

Perhaps the greatest children's author of his generation, Dick King-Smith OBE, died in his sleep on the 4th of January. King-Smith is probably best remembered for being the author of 'The Sheep-Pig' which was later adapted to film under it's American title 'Babe' and the touching story of 'The Water Horse' which was also adapted into a successful film. The Water Horse was the story of how a young boy found an egg which hatched to grow into the Loch Ness Monster, the story works in several parts of Nessie-lore including the 'real' reason why the 'surgeon’s photo' was faked. King-Smith's books were frequently about animals, farm animals in particular, and many had fortean themes like 'Dragon Boy' and 'Paddy's Pot of Gold'; stories about Dragons and Leprechauns respectively.

Dick King-Smith Served as a soldier in World War II before becoming a farmer for 20 years, an experience he would draw extensively from in his stories. He then became a teacher and later an author in 1978 with the publication of his first novel 'The Fox Busters', a story about a group of chickens that take matters into their own hands to eradicate a fox problem in a style reminiscent of 'Dam Busters'. From 1978 to 2007 he wrote a staggering 134 children's books, most of which gained consistently good reviews.

On a personal level Dick King-Smith's books meant a great deal to me. As a child I would love hearing and later reading his books myself at bedtime especially 'Daggie Dogfoot' (a charming story about a small pig born as the runt of the litter who became the first pig to fly) and 'Saddle Bottom' (the tale of a pig who became a military mascot after nearly becoming sausages), and they instilled in me a love and respect for animals from a very young age. My favourite book however was the Hodgeheg, which formed the inspiration for the Claude Gill Bookshop's young readers club.

Rest in peace Dick King-Smith, after bringing joy to so many people all over the world you've earned it.

WITH SO MUCH NONSENSE BEING TALKED ABOUT THE BIG BIRD-KILLS THIS WEEK, I WANTED TO PLACE THEM INTO SOME SORT OF PERSPECTIVE

http://www.economist.com/blogs/dailychart/2011/01/wildlife&fsrc=nwl

Charts, maps and infographics
Daily chart
Wildlife

Blackbirds down

Jan 5th 2011, 16:28 by The Economist online

Incidents of mass wildlife mortality are quite common

THREE thousand blackbirds fell from the sky in the American state of Arkansas on New Year’s Eve. The cause has not yet been determined but preliminary laboratory tests revealed acute physical trauma. Fireworks may have been to blame. While the incident was alarming, it is not unprecedented, according to America’s National Wildlife Health Centre which monitors wildlife mortality events across America. One of the biggest such events occurred in 1986, when 30,000 Ohioan blackbirds and starlings were poisoned over a period of eight days. Our chart shows the incidents that caused the most wildlife fatalities in 2010.

BEACHCOMBING SURPASSES HIMSELF

Beachcombing is in disgrace tonight for accidentally sitting on ten-day-old Tiny Miss B – she was wrapped in a duvet on a sofa and Beachcombing homes in on comfort wherever it is to be found. Beachcombing will expiate his guilt by writing about Mary Anning (obit 1847), the fossil hunter and an extraordinary fire-from-the-heavens episode in her childhood that proved almost as dangerous as Beachcombing’s posterior.

Read on...

ADAM DAVIES: Civil War in Garo Hills

Hi Jon,

Please can you post this on the CFZ website? It seems like we had a very lucky escape. I have just heard from Dipu that there has been 'communal fighting' between the Garos and Rabha people from Assam. As a result the Garo border is closed, shops and vehicles are burnt out, and people have been killed. I understand that National Geographic have cancelled their planned expedition to search for the Mande-Burung. I have checked on our team and can confirm that they are okay.

Adam.