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The Chalet School in the Oberland book cover
The Chalet School in the Oberland
1952
First Published
4.00
Average Rating
248
Number of Pages

Part of Series

A finishing branch of the Chalet School has been opened in the Bernese Oberland with Miss Wilson as Head. This new branch is originally called the Welsen branch, but this changes in a later book. The book occupies the same term as SHOCKS FOR THE CHALET SCHOOL. Peggy is one of the first students along with many others of her Chalet School friends. But there are also several students from other schools who nurse an imaginary grievance that the Chalet girls are trying to impose their own traditions. As this is a finishing school, the girls are given a considerable amount of freedom and there are no prefects. This rather goes to the head of some of the girls at first and there is trouble in the offing. Two problem pupils, in very different ways are Edna and Elma, Edna is a perfect example of the "prunes and prisms" type of girl, unable to enter into the fun of her fellows and miserable because she does not understand why she is not accepted. Peggy takes her in hand about half way during the term and manages to effect a great change, so much so that Edna is able to take a comic role in the end of term pantomime and carry it off quite well. Elma is a much more serious case, as she has actually been send to the Oberland because her parents are worried about a relationship she has developed with a particularly unsavoury man called Stuart Rainer. She breaks the rules with impunity, indulging in card playing on Sundays and crowns her iniquities by carrying on a clandestine correspondence with Stuart and even planning to sneak out and meet him. This causes a lot of trouble until the situation is sorted out. After all these confusions, the term ends happily with a pantomime got up by the girls, themselves. This is to later become a settled tradition, as the pantomime is one of the most eagerly awaited events in later books. As the term comes to an end, Miss Wilson is able to reflect that the finishing branch has got off to a really promising start.
Avg Rating
4.00
Number of Ratings
227
5 STARS
33%
4 STARS
40%
3 STARS
22%
2 STARS
5%
1 STARS
0%
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Author

Elinor M. Brent-Dyer
Elinor M. Brent-Dyer
Author · 87 books

Elinor M. Brent-Dyer was born as Gladys Eleanor May Dyer on 6th April 1894, in South Shields in the industrial northeast of England, and grew up in a terraced house which had no garden or inside toilet. She was the only daughter of Eleanor Watson Rutherford and Charles Morris Brent Dyer. Her father, who had been married before, left home when she was three years old. In 1912, her brother Henzell died at age 17 of cerebro-spinal fever. After her father died, her mother remarried in 1913. Elinor was educated at a small local private school in South Shields and returned there to teach when she was eighteen after spending two years at the City of Leeds Training College. Her teaching career spanned 36 years, during which she taught in a wide variety of state and private schools in the northeast, in Middlesex, Bedfordshire, Hampshire, and finally in Hereford. In the early 1920s she adopted the name Elinor Mary Brent-Dyer. A holiday she spent in the Austrian Tyrol at Pertisau-am-Achensee gave her the inspiration for the first location in the Chalet School series. However, her first book, 'Gerry Goes to School', was published in 1922 and was written for the child actress Hazel Bainbridge. Her first 'Chalet' story, 'The School at the Chalet', was originally published in 1925. In 1930, the same year that 'Jean of Storms' was serialised, she converted to Roman Catholicism. In 1933 the Brent-Dyer household (she lived with her mother and stepfather until her mother's death in 1957) moved to Hereford. She travelled daily to Peterchurch as a governess. When her stepfather died she started her own school in Hereford, The Margaret Roper School. It was non-denominational but with a strong religious tradition. Many Chalet School customs were followed, the girls even wore a similar uniform made in the Chalet School's colours of brown and flame. Elinor was rather untidy, erratic and flamboyant and not really suited to being a headmistress. After her school closed in 1948 she devoted most of her time to writing. Elinor's mother died in 1957 and in 1964 she moved to Redhill, where she lived in a joint establishment with fellow school story author Phyllis Matthewman and her husband, until her death on 20th September 1969. During her lifetime Elinor M. Brent-Dyer published 101 books but she is remembered mainly for her Chalet School series. The series numbers 58 books and is the longest-surviving series of girls' school-stories ever known, having been continuously in print for more than 70 years. One hundred thousand paperback copies are still being sold each year. Among her published books are other school stories; family, historical, adventure and animal stories; a cookery book, and four educational geography-readers. She also wrote plays and numerous unpublished poems and was a keen musician. In 1994, the year of the centenary of her Elinor Brent-Dyer's birth, Friends of the Chalet School put up plaques in Pertisau, South Shields and Hereford, and a headstone was erected on her grave in Redstone Cemetery, since there was not one previously. They also put flowers on her grave on the anniversaries of her birth and death and on other special occasions.

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