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Hazel Townson

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Occupation
  
Author

Role
  
Author

Nationality
  
British

Died
  
October 11, 2010

Genre
  
Children's

Education
  
University of Leeds

Name
  
Hazel Townson


Hazel Townson wwwbabeliocomusersAVTHazelTownson9360jpeg

Born
  
12 April 1928 Nelson, Lancashire, England (
1928-04-12
)

People also search for
  
Philippe Dupasquier, Tony Ross, David McKee, J. Hall Stephens

Books
  
Deathwood Letters, The Speckled Panic, Diamond Hunt, The Adventures of a Lotter, Dark Deeds at Deathwood

Hazel Townson (12 April 1928 – 11 October 2010) was an English children's-literature author. She had over fifty books published from 1975 onwards, including in countries such as the Netherlands, Spain, France and Japan.

Contents

Hazel Townson wwwcompartelibroscomsrcautoreshazeltownson9

Career

Hazel Townson began her writing career with Punch magazine, for which she was a regular contributor for many years. The magazine invited her to write reviews of children's books, which would eventually lead to her writing her own material. She also worked as Chief Assistant Librarian for part of Greater Manchester, a role that included responsibility for libraries in 110 schools, eleven public children's libraries, and four colleges.

Her first book, entitled Looking for Lossie, was published in 1975. As of 1998, Townson published books totalled 55. These ranged from picture books to teenage novels. Some of Townson's books, such as The Speckled Panic and Terrible Tuesday, have been adapted for television. She also had stories commissioned for Granada Television's Time for a Story, Tickle on the Tum and Story World programmes.

In an article for Books for Keeps, Townson wrote: "I've been lucky with my illustrators. For instance, Philippe Dupasquier and Tony Ross both have the exact measure of childhood, felicitous touches of humour and an apparently total recall of their own early days. Each of their illustrations can be dwelt upon lovingly to extract from it more and more delicious detail - such as one of Tony Ross's illustrations for Terrible Tuesday, which shows gunmen threatening a bank manager on the steps of his bank. Not only does the bank manager have his hands up in surrender, but also the passing baby in its pram and the statue in the road outside. Even a dog has raised its front paws, and the birds their wings."

She frequently visited schools, libraries, colleges and writers' groups to talk about children's literature and to assist with creative writing. Following its formation in 1985, Townson chaired the panel for the annual "Lancashire Children's Book of the Year" award.

Personal life

Born in Nelson, Lancashire, Townson was brought up in the Pendle valley. She attended Accrington High School and then studied English at the University of Leeds. She was a widow to Kenneth Smith; mother to Christopher and Catherine; grandmother to John, Vickie, Max and Clea; and great-grandmother to Leon. Townson died on 11 October 2010, surrounded by family, after a long battle with Alzheimer's disease.

References

Hazel Townson Wikipedia