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Enid Blyton Froze At 13

Late children's writer Enid Blyton's only surviving daughter has revealed that the author had the emotional age of a 13-year-old, as her development "froze" after she witnessed violent arguments between her parents.
Imogen
Smallwood
said
that
the
lady,
known
for
the
''
and
the
'Secret
Seven',
was
quite
"childlike" and
would
often
behave
like
a
"spiteful"
teenager
even
after
she
became
a
mother.
Smallwood also revealed that the reason behind Blyton's troubled personality could be a result of a particularly troublesome argument between her mother and drunken father, soon after he moved in with another woman.
"Barbara Stoney, (Blyton's 1974 biographer), suggested the trauma she suffered around about her 13th birthday was so huge that a lot of her emotional development just froze there and I think this is a very good way of looking at her," the Telegraph quoted Smallwood as telling in a new Radio 4 documentary, 'A Fine Defence of Enid Blyton'.
She added: "I think her approach to life was quite childlike and she could also sometimes be almost spiteful like a teenager." Earlier, Blyton's brother Hanly had also blew the covers off the distressing impact of the fights on the author. "Enid and I used to stop at the top of the stairs with our arms around each other, crying and listening to all that was going on," said Hanly.
Blyton's traumatic childhood had serious repercussions on her health as well— Stoney's biography revealed how the author was given hormone injections to help her conceive after a gynaecologist described her underdeveloped uterus as "like that of a 12 or 13-year-old-girl".
However,
later
Blyton
went
on
to
have
two
children:
Gillian
in
1931
and
Imogen
in
1935.
Blyton's
books,
including
the
Noddy
series
and
Malory
Towers,
have
sold
more
than
500
million
copies
around
the
world.
She
was
recently
voted
Britain's
best-loved
author.



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