Tots to Teens
PADDINGTON Bear is 50 years old this year! I'm not a big fan of the series about the little bear (I have only read the first book, A Bear Called Paddington ), but have never been able to resist the bear himself, as drawn by the original illustrator Peggy Fortnum, or his mysterious past in Darkest Peru.
Paddington, who has a Peruvian name that he never divulges, lived with his aunt Lucy until she went to live in a home for retired bears. He then emigrated to England
where he met the Brown family, of 32 Windsor Place, London, at Paddington station.
When you first meet Paddington, he's a scruffy-looking thing sitting on a battered suitcase. All he has on is a wide-brimmed hat and a label, on a string around his neck, which says "Please look after this bear. Thank you."
Peggy Fortnum's sketches in the first chapter show messy fur in a vague bear-shape, including a snout that speaks volumes about its owner's curious and enquiring mind. Paddington reveals that he is rather partial to marmalade, and enjoys the odd sticky bun. An accident at tea leaves him plastered in strawberry jam and causes the driver of the taxi the Browns hire to say, "Bears is six pence extra ... Sticky bears is nine pence." This, in my opinion, is the high point of the book.
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