Is Enid Blyton still a thing?
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@Taskerland My mom read some to us back around 1990 and they were quite cool.
Though felt a lot like historical fiction even then. Maybe because of my mother keeping to point of old-timey things she thought for funny.This post is deleted! -
Is Enid Blyton still a thing? When I was a kid it felt like Enid Blyton and Rupert the Bear were these things that adults kept trying to force me to care about despite them smelling of mothballs and wee.
@Taskerland I feel so seen. I was complaining yesterday there was no point in owning a cardigan if it didn't have pockets and was suddenly aware I am a character from popular 1940s fiction.
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Is Enid Blyton still a thing? When I was a kid it felt like Enid Blyton and Rupert the Bear were these things that adults kept trying to force me to care about despite them smelling of mothballs and wee.
@Taskerland I had a Rupert annual when I was small and the illustrations of Raggety gave me nightmares.

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@Taskerland I had a Rupert annual when I was small and the illustrations of Raggety gave me nightmares.
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@Taskerland some sort of weird twig creature I think.
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@Taskerland some sort of weird twig creature I think.
@satsuma @Taskerland Even worse on the TV version. The titles alone are horrifying (which, incidentally, is the source of everyone thinking that Rupert Bear is called Rupert the Bear).
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@satsuma @Taskerland Even worse on the TV version. The titles alone are horrifying (which, incidentally, is the source of everyone thinking that Rupert Bear is called Rupert the Bear).
@satsuma @Taskerland Exhibit A:
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Is Enid Blyton still a thing? When I was a kid it felt like Enid Blyton and Rupert the Bear were these things that adults kept trying to force me to care about despite them smelling of mothballs and wee.
@Taskerland Alan Moore is clearly a fan, Enid Blyton references in V for Vendetta and one chapter of Jerusalem is written from the PoV of a "savage, hallucinating Enid Blyton".
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@satsuma @Taskerland Exhibit A:
Yes, his real name is Shardik
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Is Enid Blyton still a thing? When I was a kid it felt like Enid Blyton and Rupert the Bear were these things that adults kept trying to force me to care about despite them smelling of mothballs and wee.
@Taskerland My second-grade teacher read the Faraway Tree stories and possibly some others to us in class, and my primary school library was fairly well stocked with other titles, as I recall.
Sometime in the late 1980s, though, criticisms of racism and sexism (which had been around since the 1960s, TBF) started to stick, and Blyton was either sanitised or removed from the shelves.
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@Taskerland Alan Moore is clearly a fan, Enid Blyton references in V for Vendetta and one chapter of Jerusalem is written from the PoV of a "savage, hallucinating Enid Blyton".
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@Taskerland He is usually quite vocal about the things he doesn't like. But in interviews he professes to like Blyton.
IIRC Magic Faraway Tree is quoted directly in V for Vendetta (I don't have a copy here to check).
Interview With an Author: Alan Moore
Alan Moore is an English writer widely regarded as the best and most influential writer in the history of comics. His seminal works included From Hell and The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen. He is also the author of the bestselling Jerusalem. He was born in Northampton, and has lived there ever since.
(www.lapl.org)

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@Taskerland He is usually quite vocal about the things he doesn't like. But in interviews he professes to like Blyton.
IIRC Magic Faraway Tree is quoted directly in V for Vendetta (I don't have a copy here to check).
Interview With an Author: Alan Moore
Alan Moore is an English writer widely regarded as the best and most influential writer in the history of comics. His seminal works included From Hell and The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen. He is also the author of the bestselling Jerusalem. He was born in Northampton, and has lived there ever since.
(www.lapl.org)

@Taskerland I also confess a soft spot.

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@Taskerland I also confess a soft spot.
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They are all about the solace of blood dimmed personal rituals, and the way we all scream silent in paralytic terror when we realise the consummate privation of the universe from any existential meaning except futility. You'd love them.
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Yes, his real name is Shardik
I'm genuinely amazed how many book covers Shardik has had. Some of them are great.
@BigJackBrass @satsuma @Taskerland

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I'm genuinely amazed how many book covers Shardik has had. Some of them are great.
@BigJackBrass @satsuma @Taskerland

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That would do me for an RPG style actually. Red vector overlay on black iconography of weapons/ghosts/wes-streeting. Nice white space pages. Themed so it's all SVGs and rescales flawlessly on a PDF or to print. I think that would have a nice impressionist quality as game art. Thematic, compelling but not demanding.
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That would do me for an RPG style actually. Red vector overlay on black iconography of weapons/ghosts/wes-streeting. Nice white space pages. Themed so it's all SVGs and rescales flawlessly on a PDF or to print. I think that would have a nice impressionist quality as game art. Thematic, compelling but not demanding.
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*stabsies*
I suspect if you released a few "this is minimalism" revivalist RPGs it would take off.
"Coffee Table RPGs"
