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The family from one end street
The family from one end street











My love of that book reflects back onto the predecessors in the series, though I prefer Holiday for its description of life in the countryside.

the family from one end street

There’s a ‘series’ of three books about the family from One End Street, and I was given the third one, Holiday at the Dew Drop Inn (1962), in the Danish translation when I was a child.

the family from one end street the family from one end street

It is the earliest of the “Carnegies of Carnegies” voted for by a national poll in 2007 to select the public’s favourite Carnegie winner of the past 70 years. This was first published by Heinemann in 1962.The family from One End Street by Eve Garnett won the Carnegie Medal in 1937. Garnett subsequently wrote a final book in the series, Holiday at the Dew Drop Inn, which details Kate's return visit to Upper Cassington alone the following summer, with the setting remaining as the late 1930s. This is the story of the Ruggles siblings Kate, Peg and Jo - three of the seven children of Mr Ruggles the dustman and Mrs Ruggles the washerwoman - who go on holiday to the Dew Drop Inn, in the fictional country village of Upper Cassington, while Peg and Jo convalesce from the measles and Kate takes the opportunity to learn about agriculture, her planned future career. It first appeared in Puffin Books in 1963. Its setting is the late 1930s earlier than its publication date. The two elements were combined and Heinemann published the book in hardback in 1956. That part of the manuscript which remained completely legible had already been published in Junior Bookshelf magazine. Eventually she deciphered most of the burned pages.

the family from one end street

By 1950 some of the chapters had been deciphered and were published in Collins Magazine, but Garnett then abandoned the work of recovering the rest of the manuscript. However, before The Further Adventures could be published the manuscript was badly damaged in an accidental fire at her parents' home in 1941 in which she lost nearly all her possessions. It is the first of two sequels to Garnett's Carnegie Prize-winning book, The Family from One End Street, which was published by Muller in 1937.Įve Garnett originally wrote The Further Adventures of the Family from One End Street shortly after The Family from One End Street had been published to general acclaim in 1937. Further Adventures of the Family from One End Street is an English children's book by Eve Garnett which was first published by Heinemann in 1956.













The family from one end street