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Kiss Chase and Conkers: The Games We Played

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BfK No. 174 - January 2009

Cover Story

This issue’s cover illustration by Helen Oxenbury is from Ten Little Fingers and Ten Little Toes by Mem Fox (Walker, 978 1 4063 1592 9, £10.99 hbk). Helen Oxenbury writes about her illustration here. Thanks to Walker Books for their help with this January cover.

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Kiss Chase and Conkers: The Games We Played

Caroline Sanderson
(Chambers Harrap)
272pp, 978-0550104274, RRP £14.99, Hardcover
Books About Children's Books
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The generous size of this compendium of the most popular social games currently played by children in the playground should act as a useful corrective for those adult pessimists convinced that the young these days are in total thrall to Play Stations and little else. The author also adds brief comments after her description of each game, all of which are worth reading. Did you know that the French call ‘Chinese Whispers’ Téléphone arabe and ‘Blind Man’s Buff’ Colin-Maillard, after a medieval fight between a lord from Louvain and a man named Colin who was armed with a mallet and became blinded in the course of battle? Had you ever realised that the rhyme ‘Here we go gathering nuts in May’ makes no sense, given that nuts do not ripen until autumn? One possible solution to this conundrum suggests that for ‘nuts’ read ‘knots’, referring to the posies of flowers traditionally gathered to celebrate May Day and the end of winter. Be that as it may, children themselves have never worried about a lack of meaning while playing this or any other traditional game. There are many more interesting historical nuggets to be found here, from descriptions of Jane Austen’s vigorous participation in many of these activities with her nephews and nieces to Leo Tolstoy’s incorporation of the ‘Cat and Mouse’ game into his superlative novel Anna Karenina. Enclosed in a dust cover which incongruously has the effect of making this book look well used even before it has been opened, there is much to enjoy here, not least its numerous photographs old and new.

Reviewer: 
Nick Tucker
5
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