The Making of Fingers Finnigan
The Making of Fingers Finnigan is a sequel to How Green You Are!, both of which were Jackanory favourites. Weird George, Julie and Bee campaign to save their open air swimming pool. 8+
Sadly, The Making of Fingers Finnigan is no longer available, although you may be able to find secondhand copies on Amazon or elsewhere.
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I can well remember the day it started. It was Saint Swithin’s Day, and it was raining… It was the most miserable summer I could ever remember.
The Making of Fingers Finnigan was also published in the Netherlands and Sweden.
…Realistic, racy, funny stories…
Junior Education
How Green You Are! and The Making of Fingers Finnigan are companion books. They were my first, and began their lives as stories for the radio, (BBC Radio Sheffield, BBC Radio Merseyside). Each chapter is a complete short story, building up to a novel. The story chapters are based on my own childhood, growing up in the 1950s in a small seaside town called Hoylake, on the Wirral coast, and each begins with something that really happened, and develops into something that didn’t.
This technique of story-telling, based on memories and make-believe, is what I came to call ‘I remember’ and ‘Let’s pretend’ – the title of my autobiographical chapter in Something About the Author, vol. 16, Gale Press (see my autobiography page).
How Green You Are! tells stories of friendships, rivalries, betrayals, schools, ghosts, street play, all seen through the eyes of Bee. By a strange, perhaps self-conscious twist, although Bee the narrator would seem to be me, I am in fact the shy, convent school character Julie.
It was dedicated to my three children, Janna, Tim and Sally, who were exactly the right age for it at the time.
In The Making of Fingers Finnigan the same children – Julie, Bee, Kevin, Weird George and Marie, try to save the local open-air swimming pool from closure – something which I failed to do in reality.
It was dedicated to my parents, but, sadly, Mum died before the book was published, so she never knew.
Both books were televised on BBC TV Jackanory, a wonderful programme where stories were read out by actors. Nerys Hughes was the reader in both cases.
…A collection of connected stories, which bubbles with characters and incidents…
Times Literary Supplement