Review “There is plenty of excitement, a little danger, a quality of thinking, planning and fun in connection with a gold-mine. The ingenuity of this group of children is delightful and stimulating.”― The Times Literary Supplement About the Author Arthur Ransome spent his childhood in England’s Lake District, and after a career in journalism that took him to Russia (where he married Trostsky’s secretary), China, and Egypt (interspersed with summers of cruising through the Baltic Sea and the canals of Europe), he retired to Coniston where he could practice his favorite pastimes of sailing and fishing and where he wrote the Swallows and Amazons series.
Features & Highlights
The Swallows, Amazons, and friends search for gold in the Lake District Hills―camping out, evading dangers, and staying in touch via homing pigeon.
Nancy and Peggy Blackett receive a letter from their Uncle Jim who’s on his way home after failing to find treasure in South America. When they hear a tale about a lost gold mine in the Lake District hills, Nancy and Peggy decide to find the mine as a surprise for their uncle. The children comb the nearby hills, while being shadowed by a mysterious figure they dub “squashy hat.” Undeterred by drought, sudden brushfires, and the continuing presence of Squashy Hat, the young prospectors persevere in their quest―with surprising results (aided by Dick’s knowledge of chemistry).Friendship and resourcefulness, dangers and rescues: Arthur Ransome’s
Swallows and Amazons
series has stood the test of time. More than just great stories, each one celebrates independence and initiative with a colorful, large cast of characters.
Pigeon Post
(originally published in 1936) is the sixth title in the
Swallows and Amazons
series, books for children or grownups, anyone captivated by a world of adventure, exploration, and imagination.
Customer Reviews
Rating Breakdown
★★★★★
60%
(218)
★★★★
25%
(91)
★★★
15%
(54)
★★
7%
(25)
★
-7%
(-25)
Most Helpful Reviews
★★★★★
5.0
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The ultimate volume of theseries
This was the first of Ransome's "Swallows & Amazons" series that I ever read, and it's still my favorite. We find the Swallows (the four Walkers), the Amazons (Captain Nancy Blackett and sister-Mate Peggy), and the D's (Dick and Dorothea Callum) headquartering at Beckfoot, the old Blackett house, while impatiently waiting for Captain Flint (the Amazons' Uncle Jim) to return from South America. "His mine wasn't any good," says Nancy, and she decides to fill in the time by searching for gold up on the high fells above the lake, following hints given by Slater Bob, a local miner. Complicating the program is the distance from Beckfoot to the target area and the fact that the Lake Country is seeing its driest summer in memory--and the presence of the mysterious lanky man the explorers call "Squashy Hat," who seems to be looking for the same thing they are. The book takes its title from the three homing pigeons the Blacketts own and resolve to use to keep Mrs. Blackett informed of their adventures while they camp nearer to the moors. The countryside is splendidly drawn, the children are unique individuals well sketched, their adventures and inventions are so thoroughly described that an American child could probably duplicate them, and there are thrills galore when the fells catch fire. What's more, the eight actually find...but that would be telling! Read it for yourself and find out.
Like most children's books of its period, this one is equally enjoyable by adults and would make a splendid family read-aloud. Highly recommended.
11 people found this helpful
★★★★★
5.0
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A book to fire the imagination of children of all ages
In this sixth `S & A' adventure, summer has come once more, and the Swallows are back in the Lake District, together with the two D's, on another holiday with their boating friends, the Amazon pirates. This time, the children desert the lake and take instead to the High Topps, prospecting for gold.
While adult readers will be unable to do other than admire the children's enthusiasm (sufficiently infectious to draw most young readers into it wholesale), they will probably have a feeling of impending disaster from quite early on, in this book. The Amazons' impetuous natures, combined with the others' general inexperience and limited knowledge of mining and its chemistry, lead them all (except, perhaps, the more sensible Susan!) into more scrapes, as well as rather more dangerous situations, than usual.
This leads to a different (but no less absorbing) desire to keep reading this tale than that likely to affect the more naïve younger reader. Both young and old are, nevertheless, likely to spend much of the time on tenterhooks during this book, as the young prospectors explore old mine workings, try their hand at charcoal burning and build and operate a blast furnace in their camp, out on the tinder-dry fells! For once, one can only feel something of a sense of relief that times have changed since 1936, when this was written! One can't help feeling - and being grateful for the fact - that modern children would not be terribly interested in repeating some of the activities undertaken here.
In summary, then, "Pigeon Post" is every bit as exciting (and at times far more nerve-wracking) and educational as the other books in this series: another winner from Arthur Ransome.
10 people found this helpful
★★★★★
5.0
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More fun and adventure
The summer after the snowy adventures in WINTER HOLIDAY and the D's learning to sail in COOT CLUB, the three sets of children (the Swallows, the Amazons, and the D's) converge on the lake again for their vacation. (By the chronology of the series, it's summer of 1932.)
However, there's complications. Only one boat, so they can't all sail. Camping is difficult because Mrs. Blackett is distracted with redecorating, and also because it's an especially dry summer there and the locals are paranoid of fires.
Making the best of it, they hear rumors of gold in them thar hills from a local miner, and decide to prospect themselves while Uncle Jim is on his way back from a failed mining expedition in South America. They soon find a lanky stranger, dubbed "Squashy Hat," seems to be prospecting himself, and they view him as a dangerous competitor.
The kids face all sorts of challenges, from camping near a farm whose owner won't let them cook for themselves and insists they sleep near the house....to dealing with the pigeons of the title that keep them in touch with the Amazon's mum....to finding the possible gold mine....to very real dangers, including a cave-in in an abandoned mine to a runaway brush fire.
All the usual delights of the S&A series are here...the joys of camping and exploring, added to the information about pigeons (and Dick's invention of an alarm) and information about prospecting and mining (which few kids are likely to try today, but you never know if there's a junior metallurgist lurking in your brood). Also some environmental content in the snarky view of tourists who carelessly start a fire that nearly kills the heroes.
Good fun, might inspire your younguns. Heck, it's inspired this adult to investigate a gold mine said to be nearby....
Next in the series: WE DIDN'T MEAN TO GO TO SEA.
8 people found this helpful
★★★★★
5.0
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Should be the next Pigeon Post MOVIE like Coot Club and The Big Six!
Would make a great movie. My husband had the book read in no time flat. Thank you! Great writing (and movies)!
1 people found this helpful
★★★★★
5.0
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Pigeon Post
This book is one of my many favorites in the series. It still holds the same imagination and romance, but the characters begin to face more dangerous and sometimes threatening problems.
Near the beginning, confusion arises that is not to be solved until the end of the book; Captain Flint sends a letter telling the Swallows, Amazons, and D's (Nancy, Peggy, John, Susan, Titty, Roger, Dick, and Dorthea) that he is sending Timothy to the Amazon's house. He does not mention who Timothy is, and so they somehow assume that he is an animal. Then, they decide to mine for gold. Camping in the High Topps, they discover a man, christen him "Squashy Hat", and decide he is an enemy. Roger makes a discovery that leads to days of hard work and several surprises and disasters.
1 people found this helpful
★★★★★
5.0
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Superb book for adventurous kids everywhere.
I read this fun book to my seven year old and had to restrain from reading ahead and finishing it on my own. The level of adventure and imagination the children in the book get into is inspiring for our children and us grown-ups alike. A good choice for any elementary aged child's library
1 people found this helpful
★★★★★
5.0
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Gift for wife. She thought it was bnew
Arrived on time, in perfect condition. Love this series!