Gillian Baverstock Explained

Gillian Baverstock
Birth Name:Gillian Mary Pollock
Birth Date:15 July 1931
Birth Place:Bourne End, Buckinghamshire, England
Death Place:Ilkley, West Yorkshire, England
Occupation:Writer
Education:Benenden School
Alma Mater:University of St Andrews
Children:4
Relatives:Rosemary Pollock (half-sister)

Gillian Mary Baverstock (born Pollock; 15 July 1931 – 24 June 2007) was a British author, non-fiction writer and memoirist. She was the elder daughter of English novelist Enid Blyton and her first husband, Hugh Pollock. She wrote and spoke to audiences and the media extensively about her mother as well as her own childhood and life.

Early life

Gillian Mary Pollock was born on 15 July 1931, the elder daughter of the children's author Enid Blyton (1897–1968) and her first husband, Major Hugh Pollock (1888–1971), a World War I veteran. On 27 October 1935, her younger sister, Imogen Mary Pollock, was born.[1] When she was 10 and her sister was 6, their parents divorced.[2] Her mother later married the surgeon Kenneth Fraser Darrell Waters (1892–1967); and her father married the writer Ida Crowe, with whom he had a daughter, Rosemary Pollock.

After divorce and remarriage, her mother decided that the best thing for Gillian and her sister was not to have contact with their father, of whom they had not seen much during World War II. Enid even changed her daughters' surname to "Darrell Waters". Years later, Gillian tried to contact her father Hugh; but she was never to see him again, although she did establish a relationship with her half-sister Rosemary Pollock, who also became a writer.

Pollock was educated at Benenden School, a boarding independent school for girls in Kent in South East England, followed by the University of St Andrews in Fife in Scotland.[3]

Career

Baverstock worked as a primary school teacher at Moorfield School, Ilkley, and wrote and spoke to audiences and the media extensively about her mother as well as her own childhood and life. She was estranged from her younger sister, Imogen, who - in contrast to Gillian - did not remember her childhood or Blyton's qualities as a mother fondly.[4]

Quill Publications, Ltd.

In 1999, Baverstock founded Quill Publications Ltd., with comic writer Tim Quinn, to produce twelve editions of the children's comic book Blue Moon. She wrote a series of stories which were based on popular fairy tales like "Sleeping Beauty" and "Little Red Riding Hood". The comic is no longer in production.

In 2005, Baverstock defended her mother's book The Mystery That Never Was after claims that it contained 'racist overtones'.[5]

Appearances

Personal life

In 1957, Pollock married Donald Baverstock, a BBC producer and executive, at St James's Church, Piccadilly; they had four children: Glyn (b. 1961, d. 1983, car accident), Sian (b. 1958, d. 2006, heart attack), Sara, and Owain. For years, and after her husband's death, she lived in Ilkley, England.

Death

At her death from disease on 24 June 2007 in Ilkley, at the age of 75, Baverstock was survived by two of her four children and five grandchildren; Glyndwr, Dominic, Zoe, Alec and Georgina.

Bibliography

References and notes

  1. https://www.enidblytonsociety.co.uk/chronology.php Enid Blyton Society website, Chronology
  2. https://www.thetelegraphandargus.co.uk/news/8065172.happy-days-with-the-dad-i-lost/ Telegraph and Argus website, Happy Days with the Dad I Lost, article dated May 11, 1999
  3. https://www.heraldscotland.com/default_content/12771829.gillian-baverstock/ Scottish Herald website, Gillian Baverstock, article dated July 21, 2007
  4. http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2002/03/30/1017206160031.html Unhappy families
  5. https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/1503430/Publisher-rejected-Blyton-tale-for-being-xenophobic.html Publisher rejected Blyton tale for being 'xenophobic'
  6. Web site: Success Story: Enid Blyton . 15 July 2024 . BBC.
  7. http://media.edbookfest.co.uk/bookfestival/index.php?q=node/89 "Growing Up with Enid Blyton", Audio recording and transcript
  8. http://www.sundaytimes-oxfordliteraryfestival.co.uk/events_25march.htm#115 Oxford Literary Festival 2007