Freddy the pig was one of the books at around age 8 or 9 that introduced me
into the wonderful world of fantasy and fiction and adventure. It peaked my imagination in multiple directions and kept my mind open while many other young people's minds were closing around me. Often I felt like I was strangling in the real world by so many deaths of friends and adults I knew then. So, escape into a world where animals talked and had adventures I found very comforting at the time and this allowed me to survive without going completely insane in the 1950s like so many other children did. But, I also had good parents who were ministers who didn't smoke or drink and who stayed together from 2 years before I was born to my father's passing in 1985. So, I was very lucky as a child to have stable people taking care of me and also one of my grandmothers lived with us during this time too which helped my parents in caring for me. My grandmother and I when I was under 6 years old would listen to radio shows like Gildersleave and Fibber McGee and Molly until my parents finally bought a TV because I was always going next door and watching my friend's TVs then so around 1956 or 1957 we finally bought a black and white 17 inch TV then. By the 1960s we had a color TV that was about 24 to 36 inches which was pretty big at the time so we could watch the Virginian and Bonanza and eventually Star Trek with William Shatner.
Freddy the Pig - Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freddy_the_Pig
Freddy the Pig is the central figure in a series of 26 children's books written between 1927 and 1958 by American author Walter R. Brooks and illustrated by Kurt ...
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Freddy and the Dragon (Freddy the Pig): Walter R. Brooks, Kurt Wiese ...
https://www.amazon.com/Freddy-Dragon-Pig-Walter-Brooks/dp/1590208668
Walter R. Brooks was born in Rome, New York on January 9, 1886, and died in Roxbury, New York on August 17, 1958. Brooks attended the University of ...
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Freddy the Pig
Freddy the Pig is the central figure in a series of 26 children's books written between 1927 and 1958 by American author Walter R. Brooks and illustrated by Kurt Wiese, consisting of 25 novels and one poetry collection. The books focus on the adventures of a group of animals living on a farm in rural upstate New York.
Freddy is introduced as "the smallest and cleverest" of the pigs on the Bean farm. He is initially just one of the ensemble, but he becomes the central character shortly into the series. Freddy's interests drive the books as he becomes a detective, politician, newspaper editor, magician, pilot, and other vocations or avocations. A recurring villain is the slimy but dignified Simon, who leads a gang of criminal rats. Human characters include Mr. and Mrs. Bean (who own the farm), the population of local Centerboro, and human villains.
Much of the humor in the books is derived from the self-referential way in which the author acknowledges the unreality of talking animals, unlike other children's works in which they are accepted as normal. As the series progresses, the Bean Farm animals attain national fame for their ability to talk and read, and the humans whom they encounter are taken aback at first (though only momentarily) to find themselves conversing with animals. The animals and humans do not age, although the stories reflect the social conditions at the time of writing; for example, the books published during World War II feature scrap drives and victory gardens.
Contents
History[edit]
Brooks created his animals for To and Again, published in 1927 by Alfred A. Knopf.[1] It took some time before their personalities were fully developed, along with their ability to talk to humans when they chose, beginning with the fourth volume in 1936.[1] In the remainder of the series, the animals of the Bean Farm lead a highly developed life, variously operating a bank, a newspaper, the First Animal Republic, and Freddy's detective business, which follows the principles of Sherlock Holmes as Freddy knows them from his reading.
The books went out of print in the 1960s, despite their popularity in the 1940s and 1950s, but children's libraries continued to have them. In the past decade, they have been republished by The Overlook Press in response to plaintive requests from Freddy fans who treasure their combination of ingenious plots, well-drawn characters, literary allusions, and wholesome (but not cloying) moral lessons. The audio and film rights to the series have been sold.[2] Audio versions of some books were made and, as of 2009, others are apparently in preparation.
Reception of books[edit]
Adam Hochschild describes the series in The New York Times Book Review as "the moral center of my childhood universe." He also observes that sales of the books have increased since when they were first written. Roger Sale sums it up in his history of children's literature: "If L. Frank Baum has a successor, it is Brooks."[3] Columnist Nicholas Kristof named them among the best children's books ever and called them "funny, beautifully written gems."[4]
Location of books[edit]
Nearly all the books focus on the Bean farm and Centerboro area. Centerboro does not actually exist, nor do the other towns mentioned as being nearest (Aeschylus Center, Gomorrah Falls, South Pharisee, Plutarch Mills, and West Ninevah). However, other towns do exist, described as slightly farther away: Syracuse, Rome, Buffalo, and Utica, New York (mentioned, for example, in Freddy and the Baseball Team From Mars). This would put Centerboro somewhere east of Syracuse, close to where Brooks lived as a boy. However, in Freddy and Mr. Camphor, the nearby fictional lake Otesaraga is described as "thirty miles around, and only a mile across". This corresponds closely (and only) to Skaneateles Lake, some ten miles southwest of Syracuse. Regardless, the evidence supplied by Brooks points to the Bean farm being loosely within 30 miles southwest or generally east of Syracuse.
Illustrations[edit]
The series is illustrated by Kurt Wiese, who became an award-winning illustrator and author (although not for the Freddy series). The first book was originally illustrated by Adolfo Best Maugardbut redone by Wiese when the book was re-released. After the first books, the pattern of illustration was established: a half-page black and white drawing at the beginning of each chapter, and a full page black-and-white drawing within each chapter. The covers are line drawings colored with watercolor, each emphasizing a dominant color. The endpapers are two-tone illustrations, loosely matching the cover's color theme. For example, the yellow background and blue drawing of the endpapers for Freddy Rides Again match the yellow and blue colors of the cover (Freddy, a horse, and a goat are yellow). Wiese drew more than 900 illustrations for the series. [5]
Freddy books in order of publication[edit]
These are all 26 titles in the Freddy the Pig series. Five were originally published with other titles, in parentheses.
- Freddy Goes to Florida, 1927 (To and Again), LCCN 2001-16049; re-issued as both Freddy Goes to Florida and Freddy's First Adventure in 1949[1]
- Freddy Goes to the North Pole, 1930 (More To and Again), LCCN 00-50151; re-titled
- Freddy the Detective, 1932
- Freddy and Freginald, 1936 (The Story of Freginald); re-titled 1952[1]
- Freddy and the Clockwork Twin, 1937 (The Clockwork Twin); re-titled
- Freddy the Politician, 1939 (Wiggins for President); re-titled 1948[1]
- Freddy's Cousin Weedly, 1940
- Freddy and the Ignormus, 1941
- Freddy and the Perilous Adventure, 1942
- Freddy and the Bean Home News, 1943
- Freddy and Mr. Camphor, 1944
- Freddy and the Popinjay, 1945
- Freddy the Pied Piper, 1946
- Freddy the Magician, 1947
- Freddy Goes Camping, 1948
- Freddy Plays Football, 1949
- Freddy the Cowboy, 1950
- Freddy Rides Again, 1951
- Freddy the Pilot, 1952
- Freddy and the Spaceship, 1953, LCCN 2001-48439
- The Collected Poems of Freddy the Pig, 1953
- Freddy and the Men from Mars, 1954
- Freddy and the Baseball Team From Mars, 1955
- Freddy and Simon the Dictator, 1956
- Freddy and the Flying Saucer Plans, 1957
- Freddy and the Dragon, 1958
References[edit]
- ^ ab c d e "Brooks, Walter R". Revised November 13, 2014. The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction (sf-encyclopedia.com). Retrieved 2015-01-29. Entry by 'JC', John Clute.
- ^ http://www.overlookpress.com/freddy-the-pig/freddy-the-pied-piper.html
- ^ "Two Pigs", in Roger Sale, Fairy Tales and After: from Snow White to E.B. White", Harvard Univ. Press, 1978, p. 245. ISBN 0-674-29157-3.
- ^ The Best Kids’ Books Ever
- ^ Brooks, Walter R.; Wiese, Kurt (2002). The Art of Freddy. Woodstock, NY: Overlook Press. ISBN 978-1585673155.
Further reading[edit]
- Cart, Michael (2009). Talking Animals and Others: The Life and Work of Walter R. Brooks, Creator of Freddy the Pig. Overlook Press. ISBN 978-159020-170-1.
- Hochschild, Adam (May 22, 1994). "That Paragon of Porkers: Remembering Freddy the Pig". The New York Times. Retrieved 31 January 2018.
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