Betty MacDonald fan club fans,
Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle's Farm (1954) is my favourite book in Betty MacDonald's comic series about the expert child-curative Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle.
The series begins with Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle and continues with Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle's Magic and Hello, Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle.
None of the books can be considered novels, but episodic problems with children and their exasperated parents in Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle's neighbourhood, and the always winning solution provided by Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle.
Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle's Farm (illustrated by Maurice Sendak) has Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle move from her "upside-down house" to a farm, bought with her husband's pirate treasure found at the end of the last book.
Unlike that book, Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle uses no magic for her cures; the farm itself does the most good: fresh air, animals, and responsibility are what children seem to really need.
In 1996 Betty MacDonald's Family had been interviewed by Betty MacDonald fan club founder - author Wolfgang Hampel.
Especially Betty MacDonald's youngest sister Alison Bard Burnett had a perfect memory and told very funny stories about the original Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle Stories.
Alison Bard Burnett and her family has been mentioned in Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle's Magic.
Betty MacDonald fan club newsletter April will be available with many more info on 70th anniversary of The Egg and I, new fascinating info on Dorita Hess and a Betty MacDonald quiz.
We are looking for signed or dedicated first editions in great condition with dust jackets by Betty MacDonald and Mary Bard Jensen for our fans.Betty MacDonald Memorial Award Winner Wolfgang Hampel and Betty MacDonald fan club research team are working on an updated Betty MacDonald biography and new Betty MacDonald documentary.
Dearest new Betty MacDonald fan club fans you'll receive a very important message by Betty MacDonald fan club event team.
This message includes a very nice Betty MacDonald fan club surprise and many info on our current Betty MacDonald fan club projects.
Betty MacDonald fan club honor member Mr. Tigerli and our 'Italian Betty MacDonald' - Betty MacDonald fan club honor member author and artist Letizia Mancino belong to the most popular Betty MacDonald fan club teams in our history.
Their many devoted fans are waiting for a new Mr. Tigerli adventure.
Letizia Mancino's magical Betty MacDonald Gallery is a special gift for our Betty MacDonald fan club fans.
Don't miss Brad Craft's ' I've been lifted ', please.
Yours,
Alexander & Martin
Don't miss this very special book, please.
Vita Magica
Betty MacDonald fan club
Betty MacDonald forum
Wolfgang Hampel - Wikipedia ( English )
Wolfgang Hampel - Wikipedia ( English ) - The Egg and I
Wolfgang Hampel - Wikipedia ( German )
Vashon Island - Wikipedia ( German )
Wolfgang Hampel - Monica Sone - Wikipedia ( English )
Wolfgang Hampel - Ma and Pa Kettle - Wikipedia ( English )
Wolfgang Hampel - Ma and Pa Kettle - Wikipedia ( French )
Wolfgang Hampel - Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle - Wikipedia ( English)
Wolfgang Hampel in Florida State University
Betty MacDonald fan club founder Wolfgang Hampel
Betty MacDonald fan club interviews on CD/DVD
Betty MacDonald fan club items
Betty MacDonald fan club items - comments
Betty MacDonald fan club - The Stove and I
Betty MacDonald fan club groups
Betty MacDonald fan club organizer Linde Lund
Rita Knobel Ulrich - Islam in Germany - a very interesting ZDF ( 2nd German Television ) documentary with English subtitles
The situation in Germany and Sweden with many refugees is rather difficult.
Childhood Memories: Betty MacDonald
Children’s
literature has always had a special place in my heart; not only was I
first exposed to the English language through these books, but also
because these books apparently spoke enough to me that I’m now doing a
degree in English Literature. As such, one of my favourite children’s
series will always be the Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle series by American author Betty MacDonald. With the exception of the last book of the series, Happy Birthday, Mrs. Piggle Wiggle
(which was published in 2007 by MacDonald’s daughter Annie), the series
was written by MacDonald between 1947 and 1959, comprising just five
books in total. The eponymous Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle, the cheerful widow of a
pirate, lives in a charming little house built upside down, in an
equally charming little town. In each book she makes it her mission to
rid the children in her neighbourhood of various bad habits using the
magical chest her husband left behind. To this day, I keep waiting on a
short story or two from Annie about how Mr. and Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle met
and got on in their brief married life – it must have been exciting!
Looking
back on the books now, the town that Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle lived in was
probably not a very endearing place, given that it was full of kids who
each had one continuing fault. Granted, things have to be put on a
spectrum; Melody Foxglove’s penchant for excessive crying, or Nicholas
Semicolon’s bullying could both probably be considered more annoying
than Harbin Quandrangle’s constant daydreaming, or Lee and Mimi
Wharton’s persisting boredom. In fact, I still have my doubts whether or
not Harbin’s or the Wharton siblings’ afflictions qualify as real
faults warranting some sort of cure. I suppose also, as a child then
myself, I should have been a little bit offended by her attempts to
right many of the bad habits I had at the time, but I think most of that
was masked by the fact that I was so happy to read a series of short
stories bound into a chaptered book, Maybe even on some unconscious
level, I always behaved better after reading.
In fact, some of the
cures that Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle comes up with are thoroughly
entertaining. To cure Fetlock Harroway of his compulsive lying, Mrs.
Piggle-Wiggle’s collection of friendly farm animals assure him that
there isn’t really a reason for Fetlock to lie and that he is a
wonderful boy just the way he is. ‘The Radish Cure’ introduces us to
Patsy Waters, who dislikes bathing. As such, Patsy’s mother Mrs. Waters
is advised by Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle to leave Patsy alone for long enough
that radishes can be planted on her to prove a point. I’ve always
wondered about why MacDonald chose radishes as the vegetable to plant on
Patsy—is it because they can be harvested quickly?
However, there
is also a darker side to Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle’s various cures, so to
speak. To cure Allen of taking super tiny bites in ‘The
Slow-Eater-Tiny-Bite-Taker Cure,’ Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle presents his mother
with a set of specially-made dishes made to serve smaller and smaller
portions until Allen runs out of energy and loses the ability to
function. Upon revisiting that particular story, I find myself slightly
concerned that Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle is in a sense advocating starving
Allen – even if only for a short amount of time. When Allen’s mother
voices this concern, Mrs. Piggle Wiggle appears to be not very bothered,
as if she’s absolutely sure that her remedy will work. The fact that it
might not doesn’t seem to have registered. However, in the vein of
Roald Dahl, who I still view as one of the most successful children’s
storyteller of all time, no children’s tale is complete without a
retrospective nugget or two to worry (or perhaps even intrigue) the
parents.
In short, despite some slightly alarming realisations that have since become obvious to me as an adult reader, the Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle
series is a charming gem for children, which quite accurately
encapsulates growing up in idyllic 1950s America. This bit is
particularly dear to me as someone who has grown up in a small-town
environment. Acting both as a fun advice column and maybe additionally
as slightly tongue-in-cheek cautionary tales for the young reader, the Mrs Piggle-Wiggle series is overall a gentle, motherly breeze from the past, and well worth a look.
Betty MacDonald fan club got fans from 40 countries.
Her books have been translated in many languages and Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle has many different names.
The Quick 10: Mrs. Piggle Wiggle
1. Like a lot of good children's stories, Betty MacDonald made up the Mrs. Piggle Wiggle stories simply to entertain her kids, nieces and nephews at bedtime. "I hope this book sells," she once said. "If it doesn't it will prove that all these years I've been boring children instead of amusing them."
2. Maurice Sendak illustrated Mrs. Piggle Wiggle's Farm before he was a famous author himself.
3. Hilary Knight illustrated the rest of the Piggle Wiggle books. Although these books were quite popular, Knight is best known as the artist who brought another character to life - Kay Thompson's Eloise.
4. A few of Mrs. Piggle Wiggle's famous (or infamous) cures: The Thought-You-Saiders Cure, The Interrupters, The Whaddle-I-Doers, The Slow-Eater-Tiny-Bite-Taker Cure, the Fighter-Quarrelers Cure, The Never-Want-to-Go-to-Schooler, The Fraidy-cat Cure, The Show-off Cure and The Slowpoke.
5. Betty MacDonald actually started out writing for adults. The Egg and I, a humorous autobiography about her life as a chicken farmer, is probably the most well-known. It sat at the top of the bestseller list for a while in 1945. She also wrote about her brief stint in a sanatorium due to a bout of tuberculosis. It was called, of course, The Plague and I.
6. The Egg and I was later made into a movie starring Fred MacMurray and Claudette Colbert; it later spawned the uber-popular Ma and Pa Kettle series.
7. Over the course of four books, Mrs. Piggle Wiggle cures or runs across 151 children. Many of these children were named after people in her own life - for example, Sylvia Quadrangle was named after her little sister who died in childhood; the Burbank siblings from Mrs. Piggle Wiggle's Magic shared names with another sibling and a nephew. There was also a Burbank sibling named Bard Burbank; Bard was MacDonald's maiden name.
8. After a long hiatus (Betty MacDonald died in 1958), Mrs. Piggle Wiggle returned in 2007 with Happy Birthday Mrs. Piggle Wiggle. Betty's daughter, Anne, found some old notes of her mother's and based the book largely around those. The release date honored what would have been MacDonald's 100th birthday.
9. I've always enjoyed the quirky names in Harry Potter; apparently I completely forgot that this was a trick Betty MacDonald used in the Mrs. Piggle Wiggle series as well. A few of my favorites: Calliope Ragbag, Paraphernalia Grotto, Cormorant Broomrack, Pergola Wingsproggle, Imogene Haversack, Enterprise Beecham, Corinthian Bop and Nicholas Semicolon.
10. After being in print for nearly 50 years, the series was finally made into a T.V. show in 1994. It didn't last too long, but it starred Jean Stapleton as Mrs. P.
Did you have a favorite Mrs. Piggle Wiggle Cure or tale?
Betty MacDonald Fan Club proudly presents:
The amazing, very witty, charming, intelligent story written by our brilliant Betty MacDonald Fan Club Honor Member - artist and writer Letizia Mancino.
WHEN YOU DREAM, DREAM BIG
Copyright 2011/2016 by Letizia Mancino
All rights reserved
Translated by D. Tsiaprakas
Betty, I love you! Your books „Anybody can do anything“ and „Onions in the Stew“ are really outstanding! I take them into my hand, and at a stone's throw I am right away in America ! Columbus and the egg: The great discovery!
Your bestseller „The Egg and I“ the greatest discovery. And you and I! I know America: It's true what you are writing: That's America: Absolutely right! No, even to the least detail! The landscape and the passion: Do you know the country where pistols blossom? Brava, Betty, you are describing the Americans vividly, genuinely, insufferably, brushed upon paper. If I like to read your works? To read doesn't even express it! I can even hear and see everything: Nature, culture, subculture.
America has almost remained unchanged! O those cool Americans! Calculating, stockmarket, Wall Street, the financial crisis (even back in 1930), the gamblers, the bankruptcy of companies! The swarming of dodgers and cheaters. People left without money. Dispair und hunger! A terrible „Worst Case“ (when I knew but little English I thought it is sausage with cheese).
Still how impressive is the ability to adaptone self of the Americans: They know how to enjoy life, acrobats of survival! In the twinkle of an eye they achieved to adapt themselves and effect the work of pioneers: In the morning you are a cleaningwoman, in the evening a brothel woman! No problem!
„The insufficient, here it's becoming an event; The indescribable, here it's done;“ Mary Bard Jensen, your sister, was the treasure trove of procuring work: My word, what a power woman with unlimited imagination! She has recommended you everywhere: Betty can do everything, also write novels! Go ahead, sister, hurry up! The editor wants to see your manuscripts! Up to that point you had not written a single line! Wow! And if still everything goes wrong? No problem: When you dream, dream big!
Just look, you have become famous.The Egg and I You know that, Betty? I'll slip into „The Egg and I“ and come and be your guest! I want to get to know your chickens. I hate chickens! I'm a chickens slave from North America! O Betty, without these damned animals, no chance of you becoming famous! „The Egg and I“ you would never have written! How many readers you have made happy!
Your book is so amusing! Your witty fine (almost nasty) remarks about your family members and roundabout neighbours made me laugh so much! You have been born into a special family: Comfort was not desired: I can't but be amazed: What did your father say to your mother? After tomorrow I am going to work elsewhere: Thousands of miles away...He sent her a telegram: LEAVING FOR TWO YEARS ON THURSDAY FOR MEXICO CITY STOP GET READY IF YOU WANT TO COME ALONG – That was on Monday. Mother wired back: SHALL BE READY, and so she was.That's America! Improvisation, change, adventure. You show no weakness: Let's go! Your descriptions, Betty, about the tremendous happenings in nature have deeply frightened me.
Continent America, I'm terrified by you! I feel so small and threatened like a tiny fly before an enormous flyswatter! Your novel is very many-sided! The reader may use it even as a cook book! „The Egg and I“ starts straight away with a recipe: „Next to the wisdom that lamb meat doesn't taste good unless it has been roasted with garlic“. Do you enjoy the American food?
O Betty, it's too fatty for me and I hate garlic! (Betty is presently cooking lunch for Bob. She's continually talking to „STOVE“: STOVE is Bob's rival; in the beginning I thought it was being himself). She turns round and says: Well, so no garlic for you. No lamb either, Betty. I don't eat any meat! I'd actually prefer only fried eggs. Betty, let me make them myself. Then you try it!
Blow! „STOVE“ out of order! I don't succeed in turning it on! Damned! It's got more of a mind of its own than „STOVE“ of my friend, Hilde Domin! Bob's coming! He must eat directly! „Men eat anything, the swines! Says your grandmother Gammy“. Is it true? Do you like my chickens? Bob asked me without introducing himself. Yes, Bob (rude) I love them! I'm vegetarian. Do you want to clean the henhouse with me tomorrow? A, you're always getting up so early at four o'clock! Bob, that's not a job for me! He looked at me disdainfully! A Roman cissy! You need a reeducation at once! Help, Bob's attacking me! I rather change the novel immediately and move to the „Island“!
Turkey demands Germany prosecute comedian for Erdogan insult
The row could jeopardise the EU’s controversial migrant deal with Turkey.
The German government confirmed on Monday it had received a “formal request” from Turkey over the weekend indicating it wishes to press charges in the case.
If Mrs Merkel agrees to allow the prosecution, she will face accusations of limiting free speech to placate the authoritarian Mr Erdogan.
But if she refuses it could put the migrant deal with Turkey, which she personally brokered, at risk.
Jan Böhmermann, one of Germany’s most successful young comedians, faces up to five years in prison over a poem in which he referred to Mr Erdogan as a “goat-f*****” and described him as watching child pornography.
Insulting a foreign head of state is illegal under German law, but a prosecution can only take place if a foreign government requests it.
Any prosecution also requires the express authorisation of the German government — leaving Mrs Merkel in a difficult position.
Turkey was previously thought to be prepared to let the matter lie after Mrs Merkel personally intervened with a phone call to Ahmet Davutoglu, the Turkish prime minister, and issued a public condemnation of the poem.
But the demand to press charges makes it clear Turkey intends to force her government to make a decision over the case.
A spokesman said the German government would “consider the request carefully” before coming to a decision.
Any impression the government is willing to sacrifice free speech to placate Mr Erdogan could prove highly damaging to Mrs Merkel.
Mr Böhmermann is hugely popular in Germany and could quickly become seen as a popular martyr.
He has defended his poem as a satirical response after Turkey summoned the German ambassador to complain about a song mocking Mr Erdogan that was aired on German television.
He said it was intended to show the Turkish president the difference between satire and slander.
“This kind of attack, including insults and rude statements to a country's president and also targeting a society, has nothing to do with freedom of expression or with press freedom,” Ibrahim Kalin, a spokesman for Mr Erdogan claimed.
Mrs Merkel’s spokesman said it would take her government several days to consider the request, but stressed her commitment to freedom of speech. “Free speech is not negotiable, either at home or abroad,” Steffen Seibert told a press briefing in Berlin.
“I am saying this to counter the impression freedom of opinion and art...is no longer important for the chancellor just because she, along with other Europeans, wants to resolve the refugee question in partnership with Turkey.”