A classic animal story from a celebrated author and much-loved illustrator.The
Wild Wood seems a terrifying place to Mole, until he finds it’s full of friends
– kind, sleepy Badger; brave and lively Ratty; and the irresponsible Mr Toad,
famous for his wealth and his car smashes.But there are also the sinister
weasels and stoats, and they capture Toad Hall when Mr Toad is in jail.
How will he escape? And can the friends fight together to save Toad Hall?A
very funny story about friendship, silly japes and messing about in boats –
with beautiful illustrations.
About the Author.
Kenneth Grahame was born in 1859. He grew up in Cookham Dene, Berkshire, in an
idealised country cottage. Water meadows ran down to the River Thames;
Grahame’s passion for rivers can be seen in The Wind in the Willows. Kenneth
went to school at St Edward’s, Oxford. Prevented for family reasons from
continuing on to university, he became a clerk at the Bank of England. By 1879
he belonged to several literary societies, and was writing pieces for papers,
including the National Observer. A collection of his magazine articles were
published in 1893: Pagan Papers. In 1898 he became Secretary to the Bank of
England. Soon after, in 1899, he married Elspeth Thomson. Their son Alastair
was born in 1900. It was on the evening of his fourth birthday that Kenneth
Grahame first told his son a story about moles and water rats. This story was
continued over the next three years, but it was only when Constance Smedley
suggested that he make a book out of it that it took shape as The Wind in the
Willows, and published by Methuen. The book was published on 8 October 1908. In
1931 Ernest H Shephard was asked to illustrate it, following his success with
the illustrations in Winnie-the-Pooh. In 1908 Kenneth Grahame retired. In 1924
he moved to Pangbourne, where he lived until his death in 1932.”