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The Famous Five #1

Lima Sekawan : Di Pulau Harta

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Lima Sekawan terdiriatas empat anak bernama Julian, Dick, George, dan Anne, serta seekor anjing bernama Timmy. Mereka berlima sering melakukan penjelajahan ke tempat yang asing. Serunya, perjalanan Lima Sekawan sering kali berujung pada sebuah misteri yang harus mereka pecahkan. Kisah Di Pulau Harta ini adalah petualangan pertama Lima Sekawan. Pada suatu liburan, Julian, Dick, dan Anne diberi saran oleh kedua orangtua mereka untuk berkunjung ke rumah sang paman di pesisir Inggris. Di sinilah mereka bertiga bertemu dengan George dan Timmy untuk pertama kalinya. Keluarga George memiliki tanah yang luas, termasuk sebuah pulau karang kecil yang berada tak jauh dari pantai. Pulau Kirrin ini dikelilingi karang-karang tajam. Tak seorang pun warga yang berani mendekati pulau karena takut perahunya karam. Ada bangkai kapal tua muncul di Pulau Kirrin! Tapi di manakah gerangan harta karunnya? Lima Sekawan mengikuti semua petunjuk yang ada tapi ternyata mereka tidak sendirian! Ada orang lain yang ikut memburu harta karun…

232 pages, Paperback

First published February 1, 1942

1333 people are currently reading
16016 people want to read

About the author

Enid Blyton

5,144 books6,261 followers
See also:
Ένιντ Μπλάιτον (Greek)
Enida Blaitona (Latvian)
Энид Блайтон (Russian)
Inid Blajton (Serbian)
Інід Блайтон (Ukrainian)

Enid Mary Blyton (1897–1968) was an English author of children's books.

Born in South London, Blyton was the eldest of three children, and showed an early interest in music and reading. She was educated at St. Christopher's School, Beckenham, and - having decided not to pursue her music - at Ipswich High School, where she trained as a kindergarten teacher. She taught for five years before her 1924 marriage to editor Hugh Pollock, with whom she had two daughters. This marriage ended in divorce, and Blyton remarried in 1943, to surgeon Kenneth Fraser Darrell Waters. She died in 1968, one year after her second husband.

Blyton was a prolific author of children's books, who penned an estimated 800 books over about 40 years. Her stories were often either children's adventure and mystery stories, or fantasies involving magic. Notable series include: The Famous Five, The Secret Seven, The Five Find-Outers, Noddy, The Wishing Chair, Mallory Towers, and St. Clare's.

According to the Index Translationum, Blyton was the fifth most popular author in the world in 2007, coming after Lenin but ahead of Shakespeare.

See also her pen name Mary Pollock

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5 stars
14,879 (41%)
4 stars
12,765 (35%)
3 stars
6,874 (19%)
2 stars
1,141 (3%)
1 star
419 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 1,871 reviews
Profile Image for Grace Tjan.
187 reviews614 followers
August 22, 2010
Jess, my 7-year old girl, gives it 5 stars.

Comments while reading:

"Georgina is a girl but she wants to be called 'George'. Is she a tomboy?"

"Who says that boys never cry? The boys in my class cry. A lot!"

"Uncle Quentin is scary!"

"George is like a volcano --- she's always angry or is about to get angry."

"How can a kid own an island?"

"Awww, Tim is so cute!"

"Why can't Anne keep a secret? She's such a baby!"

"I like it when George took an axe and wrecked the bad guys' motorboat. She's so fierce!"

"I want to read more Famous Five books."

"Why are they famous? Is it because they have adventures?"

"Are they real? No, of course Pokemons are not real!"

Profile Image for Archit.
826 reviews3,200 followers
May 8, 2018


I remember putting this book back down in 2006 because it was "too big" to read. The number of pages of Secret Seven were tiny in comparison to this one.

I was reading a book this summer and not liking the immoral personalities present in there.

Guess, you sometimes need a break from these grown-up melodramas. And who better to go to than Enid?

The treasure hunting and ship wreck brought me back the memories of why I loved the Secret Seven. George and Tim are a delight to watch together. Coming together of all five of them over a beautiful island, fighting off the rogues and the thrill of an adventure -Enid Blyton is an all time classic.

Surely, I am going to read this entire series too.
Profile Image for Mark Lawrence.
Author 90 books55.7k followers
July 29, 2024
The first volume of the 23 Famous Five books sets up a number of patterns and themes that are returned to many times in the series.

It also establishes some basic groundwork that Enid Blyton later forgot and changed, leading to curious inconsistencies.

For example: Julian, Dick, and Anne discover they have a ten year old cousin they have never met. Georgina, daughter of their father's brother Quentin who lives in Kirrin Bay, a region that their own father has only visited once and can remember very little of.

Later we discover that Kirrin Cottage (where Uncle Quentin lives with Aunt Fanny), Kirrin Farm, and Kirrin Island are, or were, all owned by Aunt Fanny's family, along with significant other amounts of land.

But later in the series Julian, Dick and Anne are described as Kirrins (& on one occasion Bancrofts). Which would make Quentin a Kirrin too ... which makes no sense if their father has no association with Kirrin Bay and it was their aunt's family who owned it all...

In this book we see George acquire Timmy the dog, the 5th of the Famous Five. At the start Timmy is staying with the fisher boy Alf, who in later books mysteriously changes his name to James.

We establish George as the hot-tempered girl who wants to be a boy (which I guess these days might have her on a path to gender reassignment -- incidentally we meet at least two other girls who want to be boys in the series and everyone is cool with it but it is specifically stated that a boy can't grow his hair long to be like a girl, that would be madness).

We establish Uncle Quentin as a brilliant, forgetful, hot tempered scientist of unknown discipline - this confusion lasts the entire series despite his work being the centre of at least a third of the adventures. I suspect this is in part because Blyton had almost no understanding of science, didn't bother to find out anything as she assumed her readers would not care, and wanted to keep it fluid anyhow so it could spawn plots as required.

We are also introduced to Kirrin Island and its remarkably well preserved castle wherein the children discover the first of their many hoards of gold. In this instance it alleviates the curious poverty of George's father and mother.

The Famous Five are defined by one main characteristic each. Julian is level headed. Dick is good humoured. Anne is compassionate and "girly". George is hotheaded. Timmy is a Swiss Army knife of a dog possessed of vast intelligence and the power to overcome any three men.

Anyway, the action centres on the island. A dodgy sort from London wants to buy it but the children discover his motivation is the rumours of hidden gold, and wouldn't you know it, ten minutes with a spade and the bags of gold are theirs, all theirs!

On this occasion, as on many others in the series, the bad men have guns. There is, to a modern British eye, a ridiculously high prevalence of revolvers in these books. Possibly the proximity of WW2 and the 1940/50s laws actually made this easier to swallow.

Anyway, it's a jolly romp with lots of aspirational goodness for young children, and when I was 9 I was a big fan.

My star rating is fairly arbitrary here.



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Profile Image for Luffy Sempai.
783 reviews1,081 followers
February 19, 2021
This fresh and ingenious children's book is for me, divided into two parts. The first part gets 5 stars from me, but from the point where the children succeed, to past the climax, the book barely holds its own.

I really liked the first part. Many of the ideas were more than can be hoped in such a simple book. The children were lifelike. Their holidays's details were evocative. The Kirrin House, the island, the boat and the sea, and the people in the story were distinctive.

But when the villains made their appearance, I felt nothing. I really ought to like the climax, but the starkly real world felt like a doll's house.

I'm giving the book its due but I also cannot give the book more than it deserves. There were lots of positives to take from the story. I hope to reread this book one day and revisit the premise. For a while it made me feel like a wonderstruck person.
Profile Image for Alan Cotterell.
560 reviews189 followers
May 26, 2020
I owe this series a lot. This series is the first series I read well over 40 years ago, installing a love of reading that has stayed with me.

After finishing a brilliant but dark novel, I felt that I needed a palette cleanser. This book and the rest of the 21 book series written between 1942-1963, are perfect for this. It is a very quick and enjoyable read. Set in a different era, with no sign of health and safety, or hint of any danger to young children going off for several days on their own. All wonderful fun, adventure, and some mystery for the summer.

The basic story is that of 4 children aged 10-13? And a dog having lots adventures during their summer holidays, in this case searching for lost gold ingots on a small island.

I had forgotten how much I loved this book, the characters, Enid Blyton's way with words, her vivid descriptions. I felt as if I was there. I escaped from boring, adult life for 183 pages, and it. was. great. I will be re-reading the rest of the series, its great being a child again! With lashings of Ginger Beer.
Profile Image for Belinda.
1,331 reviews230 followers
August 1, 2019
4,50 sterren - Nederlandse hardcover 🌹🌹🌹
Quote uit het boek : Hij nam het boek en sloeg hem open. “ Het is een logboek van zijn scheepsreizen van je over-over-overgrootvader heeft bijgehouden, voor zover ik dat kan beoordelen tenminste, zei hij. “ Het handschrift is zo pietepeuterig en onduidelijk dat ik het bijna niet kan ontcijferen.” 🐳🐳🐳
Jeugd sentiment. Het blijft jeugdsentiment deze boeken. Als kind vond ik de verhalen geweldig spannend. Het is een blijft voor mij ook een goede schrijfster die voor de kinderen de juiste spanning kan stoppen in haar verhalen van de vijf. Hoe meer verhalen je van dit groepje leest hoe meer je van hun karakters ontdekt. Hier en daar is het een beetje oubollig omdat er nog geen computers en mobiele telefoons waren. Voor mij doet het niets af aan het verhaal. 🦋🦋🦋
Profile Image for Julie.
1,991 reviews626 followers
August 23, 2018
After finishing a rather emotionally taxing suspense novel, I needed a palate cleanser. Usually I turn to children's literature after reading harsh adult fiction. My brain needed something happy and sweet. Recently, I heard about the Famous Five series, a popular series of British books about the adventures of 4 kids and their dog. It sounded like just the thing....so I found a copy of the first book on Open Library. So glad I did! What a delightful and fun book!

The basics....Julian, Dick and Anne are disappointed when they can't go to their favorite place for a holiday. But the trio become excited when they learn they are going to stay with their aunt and uncle, plus their cousin Georgina (who demands to be called George). The kids happily travel to Kirrin Bay to meet their cousin for the first time and spend the summer having adventures....including searching for lost gold!

I loved this story! George is my favorite character. She doesn't want to be a girl and play with dolls. She wants to have short hair, wear comfortable boys clothes and romp outside having adventures with her dog. Both sets of parents seemed almost totally unlikable for me though. George's father is a domineering ass and her mother seems weak willed. I guess you'd have to be to live with an ass. Julian, Dick and Anne's parents seem to not be very concerned with their kids. The 3 kids attend boarding school most of the year. Then when they do come home for summer break, their parents decide to go to Scotland without them and dump the kids at their uncle's house to spend the summer with a cousin they've never even met. The kids don't seem to mind....they want holiday adventures on their own. Their parents seem totally flighty though. Uninvolved. Better than being a helicopter parent, I guess. Luckily, despite a bit of danger, the kids had a great time and ended the summer all in one piece.

There are 21 books in the Famous Five series. The series was written from 1942-1963. I really enjoyed this first book. I'm going to read more of the series. It was a nice palate cleanser....a quick, enjoyable read about kids having fun, adventure, and some mystery for the summer!
Profile Image for Praj.
314 reviews894 followers
May 26, 2010
This is one that lured me into the reading world. I still remember it like yesterday; it was during my 4th grade summer vacations. I was down with high fever and was crying for days for missing out on my yearly trip.So to pacify my tantrums , i was gifted this book. Ah! the mysterious world of Julian, Anne, Dick and my favorite George made me forget my pain and i ended up reading the whole series volume in that summer. Thanks Enid! for bringing me to a world of limitless imagination.
Profile Image for Janete on hiatus due health issues.
823 reviews431 followers
Read
July 20, 2020
DNF in the middle of Chapter 9. This book isn't for me because when I was a child, I really didn't like "treasure hunt". I tried to read and listen to the audiobook for improving my English, but this plot seemed to me so outdated. Sorry you all who like this book!
Profile Image for Paul.
2,707 reviews20 followers
February 16, 2019
Ah, the Famous Five! Talk about your blasts from the past. I haven't read these books since my age was still in single digits.

Re-reading them as an adult, their appeal is their innocence and the joy of recalling how I used to think my friends and I could have adventures just like the Famous Five! This book brought a big smile to my face.

There's another level of enjoyment to be had reading this book as an adult with a twisted sense of humour, as hardly a page goes by without some kind of unintended sexual innuendo... at least, I'm pretty sure it's unintended.

Buddy read with Sunshine Seaspray.
Profile Image for Exitgirl05.
153 reviews75 followers
July 2, 2019
Prvi put sam čitala ovaj serijal kada sam imala 10 godina. Sada, 30 godina kasnije, uživam ponovo. Jer je čitam naglas svom sinu. ❤️
Profile Image for Graham.
1,520 reviews61 followers
October 8, 2023
Back when I was a kid, Enid Blyton was MY author. Reading her books - and I read dozens of them - taught me, not to read, but to actually ENJOY reading. I remember feeling how it was a magical experience and twenty years later I still feel that when sitting down with a book today.

I've been wanting to catch up with Blyton as an adult, to see how her work stands up, and I finally got my chance with this handsome hardback. I remember that the Famous Five and the Secret Seven weren't my favourite of her books - that was the Five Find-Outers - but FIVE ON A TREASURE ISLAND was nonetheless a book I read because it was the first in a long-running (21 books!) series. I also had the computer game of this back on my old ZX Spectrum so after reading the book I could go and 'experience' the adventures for myself!

As for the book, I think it holds up admirably. Of course, Blyton's stories are dated, but therein lies their appeal. This is a world before the internet, before consoles, where children could go out by themselves and camp on a deserted island for a week without the threat of child molesters or the nanny state reporting their guardians for neglect. It's a fantasy world nowadays, but how great it is to go back there!

Blyton's strength lies in her vivid description, and the island, the ruined castle and the shipwreck make perfect backdrops for the simplistic action. The kids are great characters, and George is still the author's most interesting character. The descriptions of picnic and ginger beer we all remember are delightful, as is Timmy the dog. As an adult, I was surprised to find this book wasn't 'twee' at all - there are descriptions of blood gushing from body parts, and even the dog has a gun pressed against his head at one point, so 'real life' is addressed. Yes, there are mistakes, like the weight of gold ingots, but these are easy to look over. The parts in the well and the storm sequence I found particularly impressive and well written.

This is a children's book that cannot fail to inspire children of the right age to love reading. I enjoyed every second of it and flew through it as an adult reader. I was reminded, favourably, of childhood, and ended up with a warm and cosy feeling inside. I'm looking forward to catching up with more of the author's work in future.
Profile Image for Lisa.
1,458 reviews12 followers
April 11, 2020
I haven't read these books since I was a child when I read them repeatedly and it was such a treat to read this first in the series at a time when I needed a comforting and nostalgic read.
The characters are adorable and I just wish I lived in a world of picnics, adventures, swimming, seaside and sunshine - fantastic!
I bought the first three on kindle for 99p so be prepared for more Famous Five shenanigans!

Profile Image for Pramod Nair.
233 reviews211 followers
June 20, 2015
I had the opportunity to read the whole Famous Five series during my school vacations when i was an eleven year old and 'Five on a Treasure Island' was the first book that introduced me to the magical writings of Enid Blyton. It was during those school vacations that i chanced upon such highly addictive children's series like Secret Seven (from the same author), Nancy Drew, Dana Girls Mysteries, Hardy Boys etc. Hunting down and gobbling up each of those titles was a pure delight.

All the titles in the Famous Five series is written based on the same simple formula - a band of four kids (Julian, Dick, George and Anne) and their dog Tim going through one wonderful adventure after another chasing mysteries and unraveling criminal plots - but the highly entertaining way in which Enid Blyton narrates these tales of adventure is something very unique. Each scene is narrated by the author in such a way to spark the imagination of the young reader and make them enjoy every moment of reading.

In this first book of the series siblings Julian, Dick and Anne visits their uncle's for the summer holidays and are introduced to their cousin 'George' who is actually a hot tempered little girl with the name 'Georgina' and who dresses like a boy and is tomboyish. After a bit of initial quarrel the four of them become thick friends and George introduces them to her her faithful dog Timothy. George invite them to investigate a nearby island that belongs to George's mother and the band of four along with Timothy plunges directly into a whirlwind of adventure with lots of danger, excitement, an ancient ship wreck with a fortune of gold,creepy secret tunnels and cunning villains.

In my opinion factors like:

· the vivid clarity that the author uses to describe the scenes of the adventure;

· the mouth watering details of the food items that the Famous Five take during their mealtime - loads and loads of jam tarts, hard boiled eggs, slabs of cakes, fresh tomatoes, cool lemonade and ginger ale;

· the colorful and often envy inducing descriptions of the picnics they take;

· a bunch of highly likeable characters (after reading the famous five books who won't be longing for a cool dog like Timmy);

· a collection of exotic crooks like smugglers, treasure hunters and foreign agents;


these were enough to make young readers go drooling over Enid Blyton books.
Profile Image for ✨ kathryn ✨.
269 reviews18 followers
January 5, 2019
4.5/5
I read so much Enid Blyton as a child, that when my cousin wanted to do a book swap (he's reading The Ice Monster at the moment) I immediately said yes. And I'm *so* glad I did! I forgot how much I loved this book, the characters, Blyton's way with words, her vivid descriptions. I felt as though I could escape from annoying, often boring, adult life for 183 pages, and it. was. great. Will I be re-reading the rest? Damn right I will!
Profile Image for J.
176 reviews18 followers
January 31, 2009
I read the whole series (all 21 books) when I was about 13; those were the first books I read in English. I loved them, both the stories, the mystery and the writing. I liked the relationships (that was the time when I dearly wished I had siblings), the companionship and the good old picnicks in the woods/fields :)
Looking back, I don't quite agree with the view of girls/women presented. Still, at that time, while feeling most kinship with Anne and being drawn to Georgina, it didn't matter to me.
The books are a lovely memory of my first brush with English "literature" :) and therefore very dear to me.
Profile Image for Kelly-Marie.
206 reviews5 followers
July 18, 2018
Visiting these books again love this author so much they really are the best books. Even if your child is reading or learning to these would be the best books ever full of fun so they are. 🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟
Profile Image for Anna Catharina.
620 reviews59 followers
November 17, 2018
Seit zwei Jahrzehnten bin ich Drei???-Nerd und in all den Jahren erschien es mir geradezu abwegig, auch mal etwas von der "Konkurrenz" zu lesen. Warum sollte ich mich mit Kinderkram abgeben, wo ich mit Justus, Peter und Bob schon glücklich war - nichts konnte und kann meine Begeisterung für die drei übertreffen.

Nun ist es aber doch passiert: Aus einer plötzlichen Laune heraus, habe ich mich für den ersten Band der Fünf Freunde entschieden - und war positiv überrascht! Etwas altbacken fand ich zwar die Geschlechterklischees und mit allzuviel Logik darf man auch nicht an das Buch herangehen, aber die Atmosphäre der Felseninsel, des Wracks und der alten Burgruine, das hat was! Und wenn ich bedenke, dass das Buch 1941 erschienen ist, dann kann ich auch über die Schwächen in der Charakterisierung etwas hinwegsehen.
Profile Image for Sophie Crane.
5,150 reviews177 followers
July 29, 2021
I really like this book. It makes me want to go on holiday and explore old ruins. It's a really good adventure story and I like the characters. My favourite is George because she is bold and brave and I like her dog Timmy, he's funny. I think girls would like this story most but boys might like it too.
Profile Image for Rosanna Threakall.
Author 0 books92 followers
April 26, 2020
I loved this and I knew I would as it's a childhood re-read.

I had forgotten a lot of the details and this book still had me at the edge of my seat at the age of 21. I just love it.

I recommend you read it, even if you think you've outgrown it!

A classic, fun, tense, warming, summery read.

I feel at home reading it.
Profile Image for Fadwa.
597 reviews3,601 followers
Read
October 1, 2019
This was cute but boiiiiiiiiii it did not age well.
Profile Image for Hasti Khodakarami.
Author 1 book66 followers
March 28, 2023
The story is very attractive and suspenseful, but the ageist and sexist concepts are completely interwoven in the story. I read this for my Women Writers' class and we got to compare different versions of the book as well. Apparently the newer versions have been censored partly, which makes the problem even bigger, because the sexist concepts remain in the book in a more subtle way, easy for inexperienced readers to overlook. This novel might have been a great choice for 1942 when it was published, but doesn't seem to be appropriate for children now.
Profile Image for Shirley Revill.
1,197 reviews283 followers
November 2, 2017
Loved the famous five books when I was a child my children and Grandchildren loved them too.
Still have my Enid blyton club badge somewhere. How's that for nostalgia.
Recommended.
Profile Image for Meli.
114 reviews27 followers
July 18, 2019
This was lovely!🥰
Classic oldschool story about summer adventures of brave children and their wonderful dog. ♥️
I’m sure I will read more Famous Five stories!
🛶🏰💰☀️🐶
Profile Image for Tracy Larner-Brown.
252 reviews9 followers
August 13, 2022
I loved these as a child so it was interesting reading this 40-odd years later! Still enjoyed it and still adore Tim the dog. Looking forward to dipping into the next adventure.
Profile Image for Julian Worker.
Author 44 books447 followers
November 4, 2023
This took me back to the teenage years when I read all the 21 Famous Five books in order, but I didn't read a Secret Seven book.

Julian, Dick, and Anne go to stay with their cousin Georgina (George) in the south-west of England. Everything is jolly idyllic as the four children get to know each other and meet Timothy the dog, who isn't allowed in the house by George's parents.

There's an island, Kirrin Island, close to George's house. George owns the island. The children row across to the island, but have to shelter when a monstrous storm hurls itself at the island, bringing a shipwreck up from the seabed and depositing it on the rocks.

Of course, the children investigate the wreck and find a treasure map in a tin-lined box. For reasons outside their control, the box and map end up in the wrong hands, although the children make a copy of the map, which has a vital word on it - ingots.

You can probably guess the rest, but it's still a good story that hurries along at an impressive pace.
Profile Image for Biljana.
263 reviews18 followers
May 14, 2022
Kupila sam prvi dio koji ponovo izdaje jedna izdavačka kuća, s ciljem da vidim oko čeg se to tolika prašina diže. Nekako mi je promaklo čitat ih u djetinjstvu, evo zbilja ne znam kako. A sad stalno slušam kako je to divan serijal za mlade, ma kakav Harry Potter, on je ništa prema ovome.
Kupuju se, traže i prodaju stalno po grupama za prodaju/potragu za starim knjigama. I sad konačno, novo izdanje. Je li vrijedno kupiti? 🤔
E pa, meni kao zakletom Potterovcu, to nije dalo mira. I kupila ja. Da vidim. Hoće li se mom 9-godišnjaku to svidjeti kao i HP, kojeg je pročitao, svih 7 knjiga 💪🏻
Ali prvo sam ja pročitala. Sviđa mi se. No, nećemo pretjerivati, Harry je ipak Harry.
Sad samo preostaje da vidimo što će klinac reći. Da li kupujem i ostalih 20, ili ostajemo na ovoj jednoj 🤔
Profile Image for Γιώργος Δάμτσιος.
Author 44 books299 followers
June 9, 2017
Ένα μικρό, μονοήμερο διάλειμμα από την ''κανονική'' αναγνωστική μου ροή, με ένα βιβλίο από την παρέα που μικρός είχα λατρέψει. Το διάβασα χαμογελώντας.
Profile Image for J. Aleksandr Wootton.
Author 9 books208 followers
September 28, 2020
series review

Liking Enid Blyton has been unfashionable since long before I was born, due to a combination of deserved criticisms (touches of racism, xenophobia, and sexism in her stories) and perhaps less-deserved criticism (general moral simplicity; touches of snobbery). They're phenomenally successful commercially - often in lightly revised forms nowadays - but have also very often been banned or censored. In fact they were not available in the U.S. when I was a child; but my mother remembered The Famous Five fondly from her own childhood, and so we collected them, a few at a time, through friends visiting the U.K.

The stories generally feature four children and their dog going on trips and having thrilling adventures during their school holidays. The world the Five inhabit is a kinder, calmer, less populous, and less dangerous version of the real world, where even the criminals are hesitant to harm children: the sort of place in which a group of preternaturally responsible children (and their dog!) can be allowed to take long trips on their own, with little or no adult supervision. It is a wish-world: a perfect setting for children's adventure stories.

As a child, the Five's formative influence led me to conclude that choosing to behave responsibly would be rewarded with increasing freedom and privileges (as in fact it is, both while growing up and as a grown-up). This is moral simplicity of a sort, but a positive kind digestible by youngsters.

As to the genuinely deplorable inclusions - which I little remember but which might well trouble me more if I reread these books now - I feel that Blyton's critics and book-banners may have overlooked the primary moral dilemma of reading. It takes place, not between the protagonists and the other characters or situations within the story, but rather between the reader and the book itself. The moral act of reading consists primarily in discerning, assessing, and either accepting as good or rejecting as bad the attitudes and ideas contained within the book, whether voiced by the hero, the antagonist, a side character, or the narrator. Very young readers need help doing this: they need the exercise modeled for them, so they can go on to beneficially read books on their own.

And the moral act of populating childrens' libraries and reading lists consists of selecting titles that lend themselves to developing readerly discernment: first by telling exciting and engaging stories; second by presenting diverse material, some worthy, some unworthy, of empathy; third, by not explicitly signalling the reader which is which, for that would be true moral simplicity, more apt to stunt a child's moral development than stimulate it.
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