Norman Collins

//Norman Collins
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  • Set against the background of the Franco-Prussian war of 1870, Anna, born in Rhineland, falls in love with her French cousin who she follows to Paris on the eve of the outbreak of war. When he is killed by her compatriots she finds herself in besieged Paris, destitute, alone - and a German. Thrown into prison, she escapes by marrying a middle-aged restaurateur for whom she has no feeling.  Events take Anna to England in her search for true love and happiness.
  • Comparable to Treasure Island or Mutiny on the Bounty, here is a story of high adventure, mutiny and high-jacking told in the first person by a 13 year-old boy who runs away from home to seek a fortune for his family. Ralph Raikes is the son of a farmer who has been evicted from his holding  by an unjust landlord. He goes to Liverpool where a gang of scoundrels force him to sign on as a cabin boy under the notorious Captain Swing. He recounts his terrifying, strange experiences on board the Nero, which he discovers to be a slave ship bound for another load of 'black ivory' from Africa. There are many adventures, lessons and triumphs before Ralph goes home. With black and white illustrations.
  • Rammell’s is famous. It's the London department store that has everything. One can be clothed, fed, furnished, kept amused, and ultimately buried, entirely by Rammell’s. Provided you are in the right income bracket. The lives that revolve around Rammell's are diverse: the owner, retired Sir Harry; his son Eric with his digestive problems and a wife who's determined to make a social splash; and his other son Tony - to the newest salesgirl Irene, daughter of  floor-walker Mr. Privett. There is Mr. Bloot, the senior floor-walker who unexpectedly and disastrously falls in love; Tony gets into trouble with a model and it falls to dyspeptic Eric to straighten it out; and Sir Harry is always ready to causes chaos at his daughter-in-law's soirees. There's glamour and gossip, romance and intrigue; in all, a vivid portrayal of post-war London when business life  bustled with shop girls, typist, cashiers and secretaries who really ran the show.  There's plenty of sly satire and wry humour as Collins highlights the pretensions and snobbery of a social scale within and without the store as well as very human and likeable characters with dreams and hopes that are not too different from the dreams and hopes of today.
  • Set in an orphanage founded by an archbishop, the story opens on the No 14 bus trundling through London.  The reader is given the background on most of the bus passengers -  shadowy figures that play but a brief role - save one. A young woman who leaves the bus and disappears into the fog to the orphanage where she leaves a warmly wrapped baby on the doorstep. She kisses the child and leaves and all that is left is this new born child with a label attached to the shawl saying "Sweetie". And so Sweetie's life in St Mark's Orphanage begins.  It is not a harsh, Dickensian place - the children are well cared for and it is run by Canon Mallow, sweet-natured, kind and slightly inept. He loves all the children but he is soon to retire and his place is taken by a new appointee, Dr Samuel Trump who is determined that St Mark's will be run efficiently - on proper lines - and he is appalled at the inefficiency and disorganisation he sees before him.  Sweetie and Ginger, a real holy terror, strike up a friendship. Ginger is always up to all sorts of mischief and tricks who even manages to climb over the wall at night and go 'up West' on forays into the big wide world.   He is the bane of Dr Trump's life as no amount of punishment or detentions seem to have any effect on him whatsoever and Sweetie, who has an adventurous streak in her as well, causes a lot of upset for the new Warden.  https://cosmiccauldronbooks.com.au/p/london-belongs-to-me-norman-collins-2/
  • It is Christmas Eve, 1938 and the prospect of war hangs over every London inhabitant. But the city doesn't stop - everywhere people continue to work, drink, fall in love, fight and struggle to get on in life. At the lodging-house at No.10 Dulcimer Street, Kennington, the meek clerk Mr Josser returns home to Mrs Josser and his daughter Doris, a trifle tiddly and bearing the extravagant clock he has received as a retirement gift. The Jossers' son Ted and his wife Cynthia - a former usherette whose seen too many romantic films - will be coming for Christmas...The retired 'actress', Connie, gets ready for work as a ladies' cloakroom room attendant at the Club; widower Mr Puddy is contemplating the prudent acquisition of tinned food in case of a enemy blockade; widowed landlady Mrs Vizzard is feeling girlish heart-flutters over her new lodger, Professor Qualito (an experienced Spiritualist who wears a dashing wide black felt hat); and there is Mrs. Boon, a sweet, naive lady, whose flashy son motor mechanic Percy is led into the trade in stolen cars, then something far, far worse. Then there are  the others:  Mrs Jan Byl, a wealthy widower whose dearest wish is to contact the late Mr Jan Byl via Professor Qualito; Uncle Henry, Mrs Josser's brother and the family eccentric; Doreen, Doris Josser's best friend and Bill, a medical student who comes courting Doris. There is no doubt about it - Norman Collins, long-time Head of Drama at the BBC, knew these people. They are real - too real to have been invented.
  • This story is set just before the outbreak of World War II in a house in Dulcimer Street, London that's been converted into flats.  There's Percy, very Jack-the-Lad with ideas bigger than his stomach can hold; Mr. Puddy, whose main fear is the German blockade, which may result in him going hungry; the enigmatic Professor Qualito, a fake charismatic psychic; Mrs. Vizzard, the prim widow immersed in the supernatural; Connie, the elderly bit-part actress and  con-merchant and Mr Josser, newly retired and under his wife's feet. And their daughter Doris, who yearns for independence from her parents.  A wonderful read with characters that are visible because no writer could possibly invent them.
  • It is Christmas Eve, 1938 and the prospect of war hangs over every London inhabitant. But the city doesn't stop - everywhere people continue to work, drink, fall in love, fight and struggle to get on in life. At the lodging-house at No.10 Dulcimer Street, Kennington, the meek clerk Mr Josser returns home to Mrs Josser and his daughter Doris, a trifle tiddly and bearing the extravagant clock he has received as a retirement gift. The Jossers' son Ted and his wife Cynthia - a former usherette who's seen too many romantic films - will be coming for Christmas...The retired 'actress', Connie, gets ready for work as a ladies' cloakroom room attendant at the Club; widower Mr Puddy is contemplating the prudent acquisition of tinned food in case of a enemy blockade; widowed landlady Mrs Vizzard is having girlish heart-flutters over her new lodger, Professor Qualito (an experienced Spiritualist who wears a dashing wide black felt hat); and there is Mrs. Boon, a sweet, naive lady, whose flashy son Percy, a motor mechanic, is led into the trade in stolen cars...then something far, far worse. Others in the cast of characters are  Mrs Jan Byl, a wealthy widow whose dearest wish is to contact the late Mr Jan Byl via Professor Qualito; Uncle Henry, Mrs Josser's brother and the family eccentric; Doreen, Doris Josser's best friend and Bill, a medical student who comes courting Doris. There is no doubt about it - Norman Collins, long-time Head of Drama at the BBC, knew these people. They are real - too real to have been invented.
  • Set in a British Colony in Central Africa in the 1930's, the characters include bachelor Harold Stebbs, the Governor's secretary;  the Governor himself, Sir Gardner; Mr. Frith, the much-passed-over Acting Chief Secretary (and a too-familiar figure in the Milner Club bar); Tony Henley, ADC; Old Moses, the chief butler at the Residence; the socially irresponsible Mr Ngono;  Mr Telfwa, militant left wing newspaper editor; and Mr Das, an itinerant legal counsel.  Then there is the Governor's Lady - twenty years younger than her husband and already the subject of gossip in European, African and Asian circles.  Norman Collins was an expert observer of people for his entire life, enabling him to write very rich and satisfying books - that probably were NOT all fiction.
  • In a remote British colony in  Central Africa in the 1930s, we meet Harold Stebbs, bachelor, newly appointed to the Governor's secretariat; the Governor, Sir Gardnor Hackforth, tipped to be the next Viceroy; Mr Frith, the Acting Chief secretary and a familiar figure at the bar of the Milner Club; Tony Henley, A.D.C.; Old Moses, the butler; Mr Talefwa left wing editor of the African Independence newspaper...and the Governor's lady, twenty years her husband's junior and already the subject of gossip in European, Asian and African circles.