Open main menu

Changes

no edit summary
|aznus=0007560966
|cover=0007560966
|website=
|video=
|summary=Not one, but three, full books of witty, charming, old-fashioned yet necessary reads, that will probably be picked up by more than one generation in the house.
}}
The TV series never convinced me about Mrs Bird, the housekeeper – she didn't look very friendly or pleasant to my young eyes, but it's clear here the next-door neighbour is the one to look out for, especially when he uses Paddington as his golf caddy. (Although when there's a bizarre mention of some old handcuffs belonging to the human son of the household, Jonathan, I began to have my doubts about him.) This collection, starting with ''Paddington Goes to Town'', written ten years into the bear's written life, and completed with ''…Takes the Air'' and ''…on Top'', shows that of several changes made since the [[A Bear Called Paddington by Michael Bond|original volume]] one is the use of more recurring characters.
They also have several things in common, however – the vague mention of the kids' school calendar, and an ending about Christmastime, yet nobody aging ageing whatsoever. They show an absurdist's eye for what is unusual and silly about the English way of life, never more so than with old blokes on a park bench, or in a story describing a rugby match. They also, bar perhaps the tale '… Strikes a Bargain', have a perfectly high quality level, showing that Bond, while he may have rustled up thirteen whole books of the Bear by now, knew what he was doing in maintaining a standard. By this time in the series he was flowing one chapter into the next, so that they were not always self-contained episodes, although no book became a full novel, and it's surprising considering the original collection how little we have here of the Browns, especially the children. But that only gives us more Paddington, which is ''very good value indeed'', to quote one of PB's concerns, and an exceedingly good thing.
I must thank the publishers for my review copy.