donnaimmaculata ([personal profile] donnaimmaculata) wrote2008-08-20 12:56 pm

The Twins at St Clare's

There's been some discussions on Enid Blyton on my flist lately, and then [livejournal.com profile] shocolate linked to this article, on which I wanted to comment, but then the comment kinda expanded...

So, I'm bringing you a post instead. Here are some titbits which you Blyton readers from English-speaking countries may not be aware of:

The St Clare's series is wildly popular in Germany. In fact, it has been almost entirely germanised, with the twins being renamed "Hanni" and "Nanni" (I've no idea which one's supposed to be Pat and which Isabel) and going to a school named "Lindenhof". The other characters' names have been changed, too. There's a Heidi, if I'm not mistaken, and Alison's been turned into "Ellie".

Also, I've only just learned that the St Clare's series originally included only six books. The German series has, like, two hundred, most of which were written in the 1970s/1980s by German authors employed by the publishing house. Seriously, there seems to be an endless supply of "Hanni und Nanni" books, with all sorts of adventures in a castle haunted by ghosts (IIRC), a stay in a school hostel in the country, Pat (or Isabel) being kidnapped in a Philippine princess's stead, and many more. St Clare's fanfiction, if you will - albeit very, very gen. I supposed none of the ghostwriters dared tread the femmeslash path. At least one of the books has horses.

At their midnight parties they have cake, sausages and lemonade; I understand that the food selection is much more multi-varied and out-there in the original?

Instead lacrosse, they play handball. And even though it's never explicitly stated, I think the new books are contemporary - i.e. set in the 1970s/80s. It's definitely heavily implied in the illustrations: I re-read one of the books only last week, and it's got very 70s illustrations, including a poster of a long-haired, bearded rock singer on the common room wall.

There's a film being currently made: Hanni & Nanni, scheduled for release in 2009. And did you know there's a Japanese series?


Just a thought, but: if the German publisher actually employed people to continue writing books for a popular British boarding school series - why not do the same with Harry Potter? Maybe I should put the idea forward and see what they think.

ETA: Um, is the embedding working? I can see the embedded video in the preview and on my LJ, but it doesn't show up in my f-list view.

ETA 2: Nevermind, it does now.

ETA 3: From the Wikipedia entry on Malory Towers:

"The German translation of the series adds twelve books occurring after the sixth, with Darrell (in the German version: Dolly Rieder) returning to a college associated with Malory Towers ("Burg Möwenfels"), the "Möwennest" (Malory Nest). As the story develops she returns to Malory Towers, first as educator, then she becomes matron of the famous 'North Tower' where she resided as a child. She marries her former "Möwennest" teacher in German and Literature, has a baby girl (Katharina) and finally becomes headmistress of Malory Towers, after Miss Grayling (Frau Greiling) had been seriously injured in a traffic accident, and is unable to work any longer." (emphasis mine)

Reads somewhat like a Harry/Snape fanfic, doesn't it?

[identity profile] missingkeys.livejournal.com 2008-08-21 10:54 am (UTC)(link)
I just realised that the Chalet School books have a lot about World War II, so Germany's censorship may have prevented the series from being published there. Which is a bugger, because they were the best school stories ever. :)

It ended up being over sixty books long and followed one of the main characters into adulthood and I think until the eldest of her thirteen children were prefects or something. So trashy, so good.

[identity profile] donnaimmaculata.livejournal.com 2008-08-21 04:34 pm (UTC)(link)
I also thought that might have been the reason, but the books were first published in 1925, and I'm not sure that censorship was all that firmly in place then. But I might be completely wrong.

Over sixty books sounds like the German version of the St Clare's series! I am seriously tempted to try and hunt them down now - they sound exactly right for the long autumn and winter evenings ahead.

[identity profile] missingkeys.livejournal.com 2008-08-22 09:22 am (UTC)(link)
I used to have a fair number of them as ebooks, which was great. I just went to offer them to you, except they were lost along with my current wip when my computer died *cry*.

[identity profile] donnaimmaculata.livejournal.com 2008-08-22 02:16 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh, that's a shame. But it's the thought that counts, so thank you nevertheless :-)

[identity profile] missingkeys.livejournal.com 2008-08-22 09:10 pm (UTC)(link)
Not a problem!

I have a friend who may be able to access them. I'll see if I can contact her. If I can, do you want me to forward them to your email address? (We didn't have all the books as ebooks, so quite a few terms were missed and it's a little patchy, but when I was growing up they only had twelve of the 62-odd at the library and I got by.)

[identity profile] donnaimmaculata.livejournal.com 2008-08-25 07:15 am (UTC)(link)
Oh, that would be great! No problem if there are any missing - 60 books would be a lot to read anyway.