A Valley Grows Up Explained

A Valley Grows Up
Author:Edward Osmond
Illustrator:Osmond
Cover Artist:Osmond
Country:United Kingdom
Subject:England from 5000 BCE to 1900
Genre:Children's non-fiction, landscape history, cultural history
Publisher:Oxford University Press
Pub Date:1953
Media Type:Print (hardcover)
Pages:81 pp. (first edition)
Oclc:4676338
Congress:DA110 .O72[1]
Dewey:914.2

A Valley Grows Up is a history book for children, written and illustrated by Edward Osmond and published by Oxford University Press in 1953. It features an imaginary English valley over the course of seven thousand years, from 5000 BCE to 1900. Osmond won the annual Carnegie Medal, recognising the year's best children's book by a British subject. In more than seventy years only a handful of nonfiction books have been so honoured.

Description

Ten full-colour double-page paintings and numerous black-and-white drawings combine with a simple, fluent text to tell the story of the changes in a valley's landscape and its gradual settlement from prehistoric to Victorian times. "[A]n uninhabited stretch of forest ... [becomes] a hillside, a swamp, a village and eventually the bustling Victorian town of Dungate." The same bend in the river, rounding a hill, appears throughout, as on the cover.

Origins

Edward Osmond, a well known illustrator, was asked to help students with learning difficulties: "I illustrated on a blackboard my lectures by means of an imaginary village which, together, we created 'from scratch'." The educational effectiveness of the concept in seizing the imagination led to the idea for a picture book. The text was always secondary. Marcus Crouch describes the resulting book as "an imaginative interpretation of history".[2]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://archive.today/20121213075422/http://lccn.loc.gov/55014135 "A valley grows up"
  2. Marcus Crouch, Treasure Seekers and Borrowers, Library Association, 1962, p. 131.