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Down With Skool! - A Guide to School Life for Tiny Pupils and Their Parents
 
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Down With Skool! - A Guide to School Life for Tiny Pupils and Their Parents [Hardcover]

Geoffrey Willans , Ronald Searle
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 106 pages
  • Publisher: Max Parrish; First Edition edition (1953)
  • Language English
  • ASIN: B0000CINQE
  • Product Dimensions: 19.8 x 13.6 x 1.6 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 602,204 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Review

Imported humor from Britain, this makes the most of the "boners" and the attitudes of one "nigel molesworth, the curse of st custard's" and carries on from his photograph album, to his thorts on head beaks, (or the enemy and are they nesessessary?), on their subjects (those weedy things, English, Peotry, Latin, French, Maths and Singing; to his schedules for avoiding lessons and some passing chizzes on parents. The finis is on skool food, which includes etiquette and a nightmare on the revolt of the prunes. Everybod?? may not think this is WIZZ but it does go to prove: BOYS triumphant agane and the only good things about skool are BOYS. ??Searle's wobbly drawings hand in glove this awkward age. (Kirkus Reviews) --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Description

A story featuring the trials and tribulations of Nigel Molesworth at St Custards school. Using his own brand of outrageous spelling, it includes his advice on how to cope with "bulies, snekes, grown-ups and other chizzes". --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
By Paul Magnussen TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:Hardcover
Ronald Searle was one of Britain's best-loved cartoonists, and Geoffrey Willans (if I remember correctly) a former teacher. If there is such a thing as a genius, then Willans and Searle together were one.

The Molesworth books purport to be instructional manuals by an English public schoolboy named Nigel Molesworth, about how to survive the school experience. From the day the first was published in 1953, they became a wild success, especially with schoolchildren. They are still in print and still eminently applicable (which says something both about the quality of the books, and about the nature of the British school system, which even at that point hadn't changed much in 400 years).

The wild misspelling that permeates them caused hysteria among parents, and their removal from many school libraries (the books, not the parents). Nevertheless, many phrases from them have since gone into the English lexicon, particularly "enuff said" and "as any fule kno".

The quartet consists of:

Down with Skool
How to be Topp
Wizz for Atomms
Back in the Jug Agane

and an omnibus edition,

The Compleet Molesworth, reprinted by Penguin as
Molesworth

These are considered absolute classics in the UK along with gems such as 1066 and all that. Whether they're intelligible to anyone but Britons is another matter; but I didn't think Monty Python would be, and I was wrong about that...

P.S. And should you be wondering (during reading) exactly what Treens might be, they're the myrmidons of that most unforgettable villain The Mekon (whose portrait you can see here), from the wonderful contemporary comic-book series Dan Dare.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
By B. Cox VINE™ VOICE
Format:Hardcover
I read these books in the 60s and can still recite word-perfect phrases from them, they were so memorable. My three teenage kids have regularly been told that they are 'utterly wet and a weed' and school dinners remain 'the piece of cod which passeth all understanding'. (They all love the books too!) These books will have you laughing out loud from start to finish, even though they echo a distant age and a school environment that modern kids would not believe ever existed! Treat yourself and grab a copy.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com:  2 reviews
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
Simply the best, as any fule kno 14 May 2009
By Paul Magnussen - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
Ronald Searle was one of Britain's best-loved cartoonists, and Geoffrey Willans (if I remember correctly) a former teacher. If there is such a thing as a genius, then Willans and Searle together were one.

The Molesworth books purport to be instructional manuals by an English public schoolboy named Nigel Molesworth, about how to survive the school experience. From the day the first was published in 1953, they became a wild success, especially with schoolchildren. They are still in print and still eminently applicable (which says something both about the quality of the books, and about the nature of the British school system, which even at that point hadn't changed much in 400 years).

The wild misspelling that permeates them caused hysteria among parents, and their removal from many school libraries (the books, not the parents). Nevertheless, many phrases from them have since gone into the English lexicon, particularly "enuff said" and "as any fule kno".

The quartet consists of:

Down with Skool
How to be Topp
Whizz for Atomms
Back in the Jug Agane

and an omnibus edition,

The Compleet Molesworth, reprinted by Penguin as
Molesworth

These are considered absolute classics in the UK along with gems such as 1066 and all that. Whether they're intelligible in the US is another matter; but I didn't think Monty Python would be, and I was wrong about that...

The reviews here are sparse, I see, so look at Amazon UK for a fuller perspective.

I see also that the second-hand price of some of the individual volumes is becoming ludicrous, so best just to go straight for the Penguin. The original "Compleet Molesworth" was actually missing a small part of "Back in the Jug Agane" (which is why I bought the individual volumes), but I don't know about the Penguin.

I hope perhaps this has provided some context; now you can look at Amazon UK :-)

P.S. If you can't remember Britain in the 50's and need a cultural glossary, see my So You'd Like To... Guide.
Simply the best, as any fule kno 10 Aug 2009
By Paul Magnussen - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Mass Market Paperback
Ronald Searle was one of Britain's best-loved cartoonists, and Geoffrey Willans (if I remember correctly) a former teacher. If there is such a thing as a genius, then Willans and Searle together were one.

The Molesworth books purport to be instructional manuals by an English public schoolboy named Nigel Molesworth, about how to survive the school experience. From the day the first was published in 1953, they became a wild success, especially with schoolchildren. They are still in print and still eminently applicable (which says something both about the quality of the books, and about the nature of the British school system, which even at that point hadn't changed much in 400 years).

The wild misspelling that permeates them caused hysteria among parents, and their removal from many school libraries (the books, not the parents). Nevertheless, many phrases from them have since gone into the English lexicon, particularly "enuff said" and "as any fule kno".

The quartet consists of:

Down with Skool
How to be Topp
Whizz for Atomms
Back in the Jug Agane

and an omnibus edition,

The Compleet Molesworth, reprinted by Penguin as
Molesworth

These are considered absolute classics in the UK along with gems such as 1066 and all that. Whether they're intelligible in the US is another matter; but I didn't think Monty Python would be, and I was wrong about that...

The reviews here are sparse, I see, so look at Amazon UK for a fuller perspective.

I see also that the second-hand price of some of the individual volumes is becoming ludicrous, so best just to go straight for the Penguin. The original "Compleet Molesworth" was actually missing a small part of "Back in the Jug Agane" (which is why I bought the individual volumes), but I don't know about the Penguin.

I hope perhaps this has provided some context; now you can look at Amazon UK :-)

P.S. If you can't remember Britain in the 50's and need a cultural glossary, see my So You'd Like To... Guide.
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