Description
This book was published by Hodder and Stoughton 1955 FIRST EDITION with dust jacket. This book is in very good condition with a bit of discolouration on the first blank page (please see photograph). The Dust Jacket is slightly faded and scuffed at the edge (please see photographs). The inside of the Dust Jacket has been trimmed (please see photograph).
First Edition dust jacket should show the original price of 7 shillings and 6 pence however, this dust jacket has been trimmed.
For a 68-year-old book, it is in amazing condition, especially for a First Edition and contains six illustrations which are in excellent condition.
Please note, all photographs are high-resolution and therefore, magnify all blemishes.
If you require any further details of this book, please contact Books4U.
Preface
A picture of Erich von Stalhein in an Australian paper is the clue that starts this adventure. Von Stalhein was rescued with others after apparently being shipwrecked. Biggles flies to Australia to investigate exactly what von Stalhein was up to.
Searching the islands and atolls of northwest Australia, Biggles and Ginger settle on a lagoon for the night. Here a giant squid attacks their seaplane and this is the picture that is on the dust jacket of the book. Eventually, they find the island where the shipwreck happened. They also find a number of bodies, a Geiger counter and what appears to be part of a list of German agents in Australia.
It appears that another boat was also shipwrecked and a fight ensued to get the one and only lifeboat. Biggles enlists the help of local police officer Sergeant William Gilson and they take him to the island to show him the bodies. However, von Stalhein has returned in a boat called the Matilda and cleaned away all evidence of any crimes. Enquiries about the Matilda lead to further clues. A man name Smith chartered a plane to rescue von Stalhein and his cronies after they were shipwrecked. Meanwhile, Algy and Bertie have arrived and an Aborigine tries to kill Biggles.
It appears that various Iron Curtain agents are stirring up the local natives and encouraging them to murder white people. Travelling to Tarracooma with Bill Gilson there is a confrontation with the bad guys and some arrests are made. Meanwhile, von Stalhein is unexpectedly found at the airport.
His pilot, a man called Cozens is befriended by Biggles and his comrades. He knows nothing of the villain’s affairs, as he is just a pilot. However, by just talking to Biggles, Cozens’ life is now in jeopardy and he is taken away on the Matilda. Biggles has to fly to Sydney and so it is down to Algy, Ginger and Bertie to rescue Cozens. This they do by flying after the boat. Cozens jumps into a crocodile infested river to escape and get to the Seaplane. Cozens takes Ginger and Bertie to the Smiths’ operational base at a place called Daly Flats.
Here they find that hostile Aborigines have already attacked and they have to fight them off. Smith is killed in the fighting but von Stalhein escapes to fight another day.
Please note, all photographs are high-resolution and therefore, magnify all blemishes.
Series Preface
James Bigglesworth, nicknamed “Biggles”, is a fictional pilot and adventurer, the title character and hero of the Biggles series of adventure books, written for young readers by W. E. Johns (1893–1968). Biggles made his first appearance in the story The White Fokker, published in the first issue of Popular Flying magazine and again as part of the first collection of Biggles stories, The Camels Are Coming (both 1932). Johns continued to write “Biggles books” until his death in 1968. The series eventually included nearly a hundred volumes – novels as well as short story collections – most of the latter with a common setting and time.
The chronology of the canon, spanning both world wars, set up certain inconsistencies over the unavoidable ageing of Biggles and his friends. Also, later editions had to be somewhat edited in line with changing norms of acceptability, especially regarding race, and in view of the pre-teenage readership who increasingly favoured both the books and the comics.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biggles
About The Author
Capt. W. E. Johns – About the Author
Captain W. E. Johns was the pen name used by an English author of adventure novels William Earl Johns. He is famously known as the pioneer of the famous character, ‘Biggles’. Johns was born and raised in Bengeo, Hertford, Hertfordshire, England, the son of Elizabeth and Richard Johns. The author’s dreamt of being a soldier. He attended Hertford Grammar School and also attended art classes at the local art school.
Johns was never a ‘serious’ scholar, and this is evident in his novel Biggles Goes to School which was published in 1951. During the summer of 1907, Johns served as an assistant to a county municipal surveyor for four years, and later in 1912, he served as a sanitary inspector in Norfolk. In 1916, Johns enlisted in the military, and in 1916, he was transferred to the Machine Gun Corps and whilst serving at the Macedonian front in Greece, he was hospitalised with malaria. Soon after his recovery, he was enlisted in the Royal Flying Corps in September 1917 and later posted back to England for flight training. He took his initial flying training at Coley Park in Reading where he flew the Farman MF.11 aircraft. He was then sent to a flying school at Thetford a place closer to where his family was living. In 1918 he was appointed a flying instructor. The aircraft of the time where unreliable and he crashed three planes in three days due to engine failure. The first crashed into the sand, the second into the sea and then he flew over through a fellow officer backdoor. He was later was caught in thick fog flying over trees and narrowly escaped crashing into a cliff.
After the Second World War, Johns remained in the Royal Air Force still with the rank of Pilot Officer. His promotion to the position of Flying Officer was gazetted in 1920 and he then worked in London as a recruiting officer.
After the death of his father, Johns married the love of his life, Maude Penelope Hunt from 1882 to 1961. Johns was a prominent author and also an editor. During his career as a writer, he authored over 160 novels including 100 Biggles books and more than 60 factual books and novels, short stories and magazine articles. John’s debut novel was Mossyface published in 1922 under the pseudonym William Earle. He also worked as a newspaper air correspondent and edited and illustrated books about flying.
The first book in Biggles series was The Camels Are Coming published in 1932. Johns continued writing the series until 1968. At first, the novels in the series were attributed to William Earle, but later Johns adopted a more familiar name “Captain W.E. Johns.”
Johns was a regular contributor to Modern Boy magazine in the late 1930’s and wrote and edited for both Flying and Popular Flying. Johns died while writing his last Biggles novel ‘Biggles does some Homework’ which was an indicator that he intended to retire after the publication of this book. The twelve chapters of his final story were published privately in 1997.
Apart from the famous Biggles series, Johns also published other novels which include the Steely series, a six-volume series which began publication in 1936, featuring a first world war pilot now a crime fighter Deeley Delaroy also known as Steeley. The author also wrote a six-volume series titled Worrals series published from 1941 – 950, a series that details the exploitation of plucky WAAF Flight Officer by the name Joan “Worrals” Worralson. This novel series was created at the request of the Air Ministry. The series was intended to inspire young women to enlist in the Women’s Auxiliary Air Force.
Johns also wrote a ten-volume book titled Gimlet featuring a hero called “Gimlet” King. The author also wrote other eight books in the juvenile fiction and other eight factual books, twelve fictions for adults and several other books in aviation and treasure hunting pirates and a book on gardening. Unusually amongst the children’s authors of the time, the author included working-class characters. Typical were the Biggles books. Two of the Biggles team were working-class, one of which was Ginger Hebblethwaite, the son of a Northumberland miner. The readers were never told Ginger’s real Christian name, but he claimed himself to be of a Yorkshire origin.
https://www.bookseriesinorder.com/captain-w-e-johns/
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