How can the naughtiest girl be good at camp with horrible Arabella in the very same tent? Especially when she's busy stirring up trouble for Elizabeth's best friend, Joan ...
Bonus material in these new editions include:
A rare, complete serial story about a "very" special school. An interview with Enid Blyton about her school days. Enid Blyton's experiences as a teacher. A timeline of the author's life. Photos from Enid Blyton's younger days.
Anne Digby is a popular British children's author, best known for her fourteen-book Trebizon series, set at a large boarding school. In addition to her own Trebizon books, Digby has contributed new volumes to Enid Blyton's Naughtiest Girl series.
This is the 6th book in the Naughtiest Girl series and this time Elizabeth and her best friend Joan have stayed at school for the half term holidays where they are camping on school grounds. Joan is a tent monitor who has to keep the other girls in the tent in order and look after one particular girl Teeny who is struggling fitting in. Elizabeth's enemy Arabella is also in the same tent so she is finding keeping her temper quite difficult. Anyway Elizabeth can't work out why Joan is behaving strangely and sets out to find out what is wrong. This book was quite enjoyable as it wasn't set inside the school so it was a little bit different from the rest of the series I have read so far.
I liked character of Joan and Elizabith.really this book gave me immence pleassure and imagination.Thank you My school Kerala Smajam library that provide me this book.
The kids are camping out and Elizabeth is reunited with Joan, put in the same tent as a shy junior Tina and the troublemaking Arabella. Yes, the adventure outside is fun but I liked this book for its definition of courage.
Four more books to go, and I am loving the series. It's bringing happiness, and I think reading should do just that.
Read directly after the last, it was refreshing to follow along with Elizabeth once more. This one deals with an unusual aspect of Whyteleafe School; the holidays! What the children get up to at half term has never really occurred to me, as we don't have one in Australia. This time they are having a camp within the school for any student not going away, and of course Elizabeth finds mischief! Another good story, and introduces some more new characters too. Four stars.
Very disappointing - the original Enid Blyton 'naughtiest girl' series was one of my favourite sets of books growing up, but this was just a bland immitation. It felt like a stretch to give it 2 stars. :-(
The second Naughtiest Girl continuation novel written Anne Digby. The first one was good and I thought very much in the style and spirit of the original stories in this series by Enid Blyton. This one, however, kind of misses the mark.
It's set in a school camp during the midterm holidays. The children who don't go home at that time get to do a camp which consists of a group of tents set on school property.
However, camps are supposed to be fun, and you get none of that in this book. Elizabeth's camp experience seems to be trying to help her friend Joan, who is "tent monitor" of her tent, do a good job. However, Joan is incredibly inept in this book. Their time is spent in extremely petty intrigues against the awful Arabella, who is also in their tent. Even the school meeting takes part in these petty intrigues, instead of telling them to grow up and fix it on their own. Also, they spend a lot of time looking after teeny, the junior member of their tent, who is an extremely shy girl who acts like she's a kindergartener and needs constant supervision to keep alive.
In the beginning everything Elizabeth does to help Joan backfires, but in the end they will be vindicated.
Anne Digby really does try to write a good story arc here, but the whole thing doesn't come out right because everything is so joyless, and the situations so contrived and absurd. I think the change of setting didn't work well, since Digby didn't have a clear template to follow. Also, this series probably didn't need continuation novels, given that it's so focused on the problems of the title character, and for her to keep getting into the same sort of misunderstandings and good-intentioned bad decisions, it negates her character growth in the previous books.
Elizabeth Allen is excited to be going to a half-term camp - a chance to be with her best friend Joan. Joan is anxious about her responsibilities as tent monitor and Elizabeth is determined to help her shine. But being in a tent with awful Arabella and nervous Teeny seems to cause nothing but problems…
It’s nice to see Joan and Elizabeth reunited, but everyone seems too determined to believe the worst of Elizabeth and the best of Arabella, while Joan is just a bit on the wet side of quiet for me. And as ever in children’s books we are given a detailed description of all the camping arrangements except one.
In this story, Elizabeth tries to be a good friend to Joan. She does manage to help but it takes a few missteps to get it right in the end. I was a bit disappointed that Arabella was not addressed for her part of the last problem with Teeny at the special meeting. She lost her tent monitor status but no mention during the meeting!
I could connect with the mischief and fun through and through. A must read for every school-girl. After all, only work and no play would make us such prudes!
A story that would resonate with every school girl across ages and generations.
I have always loved the friendship between Elizabeth and Joan in this series. In this book by Anne Digby, Elizabeth helps her friend overcome a big and embarrassing problem, helps Teeny to make friends and Arabella gets her comeuppance at last as her selfish nature is revealed.
Not a very great book compared to the other books in this series (The Naughtiest Girl), only read it to follow the storyline. (Wouldn't recommend it to anyone.)
This series is the one that introduced me to Enid Blyton’s books and it remains my favourite of all till date. Elizabeth is a spoilt brat who is sent to Whyteleafe so that she can learn and be disciplined. Even there she comes to be known as the naughtiest girl in school. But slowly she blossoms into a wonderful girl (who can be bratty if she wants to be) with slight push from her teachers and a lot of help from her friends. The series led me to romanticize the life at a boarding school (which I later experienced for myself) and taught me a lot of life lessons. I particularly loved how the girls formed a group to make decisions and solve any problems on their own. There’s a lot of lessons to be learnt from these pages and I consider this series to be one of the must reads for every child (boy or girl) while growing up.
Another non-Enid in the series. The children of Whyteleaf are camping out at half term. Elizabeth's beat friend Joan is tent monitor, and struggling with a secret of her own. A needy lower former, and the obnoxious Arabella sharing their tent leads the Naughtiest Girl into more trouble than usual
In book six, the school goes camping and the Naughtiest Girl means to be well-behaved. But horrible Arabella is sleeping in the very same tent and busy stirring up trouble for Elizabeth's best friend, Joan... I recommend everyone to read this book!!
I am addicted ! I’ve read this book so many times and love it more and more . Two friends from whytleafe school are staying behind for half term , however there’s trouble afoot . Gentle Joan has been made a tent monitor and looking after teeny , her junior , is slowly weighing her down ….