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John Rowe Townsend

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John Rowe Townsend


Born
in Leeds, West Riding of Yorkshire, England, The United Kingdom
May 10, 1922

Died
March 24, 2014


John Rowe Townsend (born 1922) is a British children's author and academic. His best-known children's novel is The Intruder, which won a 1971 Edgar Award, and his best-known academic work is Written for Children: An Outline of English Language Children's Literature (1965), the definitive work of its time on the subject.

He was born in Leeds, and studied at Leeds Grammar School and Emmanuel College, Cambridge. Among his popular works are Gumble's Yard (his debut novel, published in 1961), Widdershins Crescent (1965), and The Intruder (1969), which won a 1971 Edgar Award from the Mystery Writers of America for Best Juvenile Mystery. In Britain, The Intruder was made into a children's TV series starring Milton Johns as the stranger. Noah's Cas
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Average rating: 3.71 · 518 ratings · 90 reviews · 62 distinct worksSimilar authors
Noah's Castle

3.65 avg rating — 134 ratings — published 1975 — 4 editions
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Gumble's Yard

4.07 avg rating — 56 ratings — published 1961 — 17 editions
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Written for Children: An Ou...

3.68 avg rating — 37 ratings — published 1974 — 28 editions
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The Intruder

3.80 avg rating — 35 ratings — published 1969 — 19 editions
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The Islanders

3.34 avg rating — 32 ratings — published 1981 — 15 editions
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The Visitors

3.79 avg rating — 28 ratings — published 1977 — 10 editions
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The Creatures

3.93 avg rating — 27 ratings — published 1980 — 8 editions
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The Summer People

4.04 avg rating — 26 ratings — published 1972 — 6 editions
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Cloudy Bright

3.28 avg rating — 18 ratings — published 1984 — 15 editions
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Rob's Place

4.33 avg rating — 12 ratings — published 1987 — 5 editions
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More books by John Rowe Townsend…
Gumble's Yard Widdershins Crescent
(2 books)
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4.06 avg rating — 67 ratings

Quotes by John Rowe Townsend  (?)
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“Another danger is that—as is already happening to some extent—authors and editors run scared and go to absurd lengths to avoid giving offence. (An American editor rejected Polar, a picture book about a toy polar bear which is published in England by Andre Deutsch, on the ground that the text, written by Elaine Moss, states explicitly that the bear is white). A demand to avoid stereotypes can easily become in effect a demand for a different stereotype: for instance that girls should always be shown as strong, brave and resourceful, and that mothers should always have jobs and never, never wear an apron. And books written to an approved formula, or with deliberate didactic aim, do not often have the breath of life. Some members of women’s groups in North America have published their own anti-sexist books, featuring such characters as fire-fighting girls or boys who learn to crochet. Good luck to them; but those I have seen are far below professional standard.

("Are Children's Books Racist and Sexist?" from Only Connect, 2nd ed., 1980)”
John Rowe Townsend
tags: kidlit

“It is natural if you feel as strongly as most decent people do about racial discrimination to welcome books that give it short shrift; but to assess books on their racial attitude rather than their literary value, and still more to look on books as ammunition in the battle, is to take a further and still more dangerous step from literature-as-morality to literature-as-propaganda—a move toward conditions in which, hitherto, literary art has signally failed to thrive.

("Didacticism in Modern Dress" from Only Connect (2nd ed., 1980).”
John Rowe Townsend
tags: kidlit

“Kate, like many other people, found herself a fascinating topic, and when encouraged was very willing to hold forth.”
John Rowe Townsend