Alison Prince
Alison Prince (born 26 March 1931)[1] is a British children's writer, screenwriter and biographer now settled on the Isle of Arran in Scotland.[2][3]
Background
Alison Prince was born in Beckenham, Kent[1] (now in Greater London) and grew up in South London. She went to a girls' grammar school, where she enjoyed grammar and Latin, but not maths. Her parents were from Scotland and Yorkshire. Her father was a keen pianist, and Prince herself still plays the clarinet. As a child she enjoyed visiting Scottish relatives in Glasgow.
After completing a degree course at the Slade School of Art, where she had won a scholarship, Prince found only casual, low-paid jobs unrelated to art. She later took a postgraduate teaching diploma at Goldsmith's College, then taught art at the Elliott Comprehensive School, in Putney. She married a fellow teacher there, had three children, which interrupted her teaching career, and turned instead to occasional journalism. After the marriage collapsed, she ran a small farm in Suffolk for eight years.[4]
From television to books
Prince later moved into writing for children's television, achieving fame with the Trumpton series for pre-schoolers, first screened in 1967. Her first book was Joe and a Horse and other stories about Joe from 'Watch with Mother', with Joan Hickson, a 1968 spin-off from the BBC pre-school program Watch with Mother.[3][5][lower-alpha 1] In the late 1970s, she turned to writing books for children, some based on historical characters. They include My Royal Story about Catherine of Aragon, which was re-released in 2010. How's Business (1987), set in World War II, made the shortlist for the Nestle Smarties Book Prize.
The Sherwood Hero (1995) is a modern-day Robin Hood story for young adults, about a girl stealing a credit card from her father's client, drawing £100, attempting to hand it out to the poor in the streets of Glasgow, and then coping with the guilt. For this Alison Prince was a joint winner (with Philip Pullman) of the Guardian Children's Fiction Prize, a once-in-a-lifetime book award judged by a panel of British children's writers.[6] Her thriller Oranges and Murder was the Scottish Arts Council Children's Book of the Year in 2002.[7] Translations of her books have been published in several languages, including Danish, German, Japanese, and Welsh.[8]
Mainly for adults, Prince wrote well-received biographies of Kenneth Grahame (1994, reissued 2009) and Hans Christian Andersen (1998), a collection of essays on formative thinking,[9] two booklets of poetry,[10] and two volumes of pieces that originally appeared in a local Arran newspaper.
In 2005, Alison Prince received an honorary doctorate of letters from the University of Leicester for services to children's books.[3][11]
Forbidden Soldier, a children's book about the second phase of the English Civil War, appeared in 2014, as did The Lost King: Richard III and the Princes in the Tower, a biography of Richard III, whose remains were dug up in 2013 in a Leicester car park.[12]
Selected works
* These titles are or have recently been available in the UK, according to the websites of major internet booksellers.
- Forbidden Soldier (2014)*
- The Lost King (2014)*
- No Ordinary Love Song (2011)*
- Henry VIII's Wives (2011)*
- Catherine of Aragon (2010)*
- Web (2010)*
- Elizabeth (2010)*
- Tudor Stories for Girls (2009)*
- The Sherwood Nightmare (2008)
- Outbreak (2008)*
- Help (2008)*
- Princes in the Tower (2008)*
- Speed (2006)
- Jacoby's Game (2006)*
- Doodlebug Summer (2006)*
- Smoke (2005)
- Tower-Block Pony (2004)
- The Summerhouse (2004)
- Luck (2004)*
- Anne Boleyn and Me: the diary of Elinor Valjean, London 1525–1536 (2004)*
- Three Blind Eyes (2003)*
- The Whifflet Train (2003)
- Spud (2003)
- Turnaround (2002)*
- Oranges and Murder (2002)
- Dora Saves the Prince (2002)
- Boojer (2002)
- The Fortune Teller (2001)
- My Tudor Queen (2001)*
- Bumble (2001)
- Bird Boy (2001)*
- Dear Del (2001)*
- Second Chance (2000)*
- Acts of Union (2000)
- A Nation Again (2000)
- A Biker's Ghost (2000)
- The Biggish Ewe (1999)
- Dear Del (1999)
- Cat Number Three (1999)*
- Hans Christian Andersen: the fan dancer (1998)*
- Magic Dad (1997)
- Fergus, Fabulous Ferret (1997)
- Fatso's Rat (1997)
- The Witching Tree (1996)
- The Sherwood Hero (1995)
- On Arran (1994)
- Kenneth Grahame: an innocent in the Wild Wood (1994)*
- Having Been in the City (1994)*
- A Dog Called You (1993)
- A Book of Arran Poetry (edited with Cicely Gill, 1993)
- The Necessary Goat (1992)
- Blue Moon and other stories (1988)
- A Haunting Refrain (1988)
- How's Business? (1987)
- The Type One Super Robot (1986)
- The Others (1986)
- Nick's October (1986)
- A Job for Merv (1986)
- Rock On, Mill Green (1985)
- Scramble! (1984)
- Night Landings (illustrated by Edward Mortelmans, 1983)
- A Spy at Mill Green (1983)
- The Sinister Airfield (illus. Edward Mortelmans, 1982)
- Mill Green on Stage (1982)
- Mill Green on Fire (1982)
- Haunted Children (1982)
- Who Wants Pets? (1980)
- The Turkey's Nest (1979)
- The Night I Sold My Boots (1979)
- Whosaurus? Dinosaurus, with Joan Hickson (1975)
- The Doubting Kind (1975)
- Joe and the Nursery School, with Joan Hickson (1972)
- Joe Moves House, with Joan Hickson (1972)
- The Joe Annual, with Joan Hickson (1971)
- The Red Alfa (1971)
- The House on the Common (1969)
- Joe and a Horse and other stories about Joe from 'Watch with Mother', with Joan Hickson (BBC, 1968)[3][5]
Notes
- ↑ Prince was scriptwriter for the Watch with Mother "Joe" subseries in autumn 1966 and spring 1971. Joan Hickson (not the actress) was production designer for "Joe".
References
- 1 2 Alison Prince at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database (ISFDB). Retrieved 4 June 2013. Select a title to see its linked publication history and general information. Select a particular edition (title) for more data at that level, such as a front cover image or linked contents.
- ↑ "Faber author page on Alison Prince". Retrieved 24 April 2012.
- 1 2 3 4 "British Council page on Alison Prince". Retrieved 24 April 2012.
- ↑ "Publisher's page on Alison Walker". Retrieved 25 April 2012.
- 1 2 Joe and a Horse in libraries (WorldCat catalog). Retrieved 4 June 2013.
- ↑ "Guardian children's fiction prize relaunched: Entry details and list of past winners". guardian.co.uk. 12 March 2001. Retrieved 5 August 2012.
- ↑ Books from Scotland site Retrieved 5 June 2013.
- ↑ "WorldCat on Alison". Retrieved 5 August 2012.
- ↑ The Necessary Goat (Glasgow: Taranis, 1992). Scottish Poetry Library site. Retrieved 1 December 2013.
- ↑ Having Been in the City (Edinburgh: Taranis, [1994]); The Whifflet Train (Mariscat Press, 2003). Scottish Poetry Society site. Retrieved 1 December 2013.
- ↑ "Web Site of Alison Prince". Retrieved 24 April 2012.
- ↑ Amazon listings Retrieved 11 October 2014.; author's website. Retrieved 1 December 2013.
- Citations
- "[Short notes on Alison Prince's works]". Scottish Book Trust. Archived from the original on 13 September 2011. Retrieved 25 April 2012.
- Patrick Kingsley (20 February 2012). "How we made: Alison Prince and Brian Cant on Trumpton". The Guardian. Retrieved 25 April 2012.
- "Alison Prince". Trumptonshire Web. Retrieved 25 April 2012. – includes 1966 photograph
- Trumpton. Episode 6 – The Mayor's Birthday (part 1; part 2). YouTube. Retrieved 25 April 2012
- Alison Prince. "The proper use of hot air". Scottish Review. Retrieved 25 April 2012.
External links
- Alison Prince at British Council: Literature
- Alison Prince at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
- Filmography by TV series for Alison Prince at IMDb