tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3816075755902555378.post8239946482640658797..comments2024-03-22T05:09:57.169+00:00Comments on Cloud 109: Peff, Pan and Poachers; The Weird World of U.K. Postwar PaperbacksPeter Richardsonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15566601617123798061noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3816075755902555378.post-87356408870403915602018-07-24T21:40:42.448+01:002018-07-24T21:40:42.448+01:00Thank you. Great post! Some of us may not know how...Thank you. Great post! Some of us may not know how to paraphrase our essay correctly. Luckily, there is a page <a href="https://www.paraphraseuk.com/harvard-paraphrasing-how-to-do-it-the-right-way/" rel="nofollow">https://www.paraphraseuk.com/harvard-paraphrasing-how-to-do-it-the-right-way/</a> that you can check out that teaches you how to do it right to get an excellent essay.Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07008577740638714386noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3816075755902555378.post-7263512803143114602011-04-27T18:28:57.467+01:002011-04-27T18:28:57.467+01:00I suppose the creation of the affordable paperback...I suppose the creation of the affordable paperback was as revolutionary in its way as the sudden arrival of the internet, which made large printed encyclopedias virtually obsolete within just a few years. Having been born just too late to observe the revolution taking place I've always found it hard to imagine a world in which people found it perfectly normal to visit the the local chemist whenever they wanted to lose themselves in the pages of a popular Whodunnit, Western or Romance. <br /><br />Funnily enough, though, it seemed to take much longer for 'pocket money' paperback books to be aimed specifically at children (as opposed to Allen Lane's Puffin range which were generally bought by parents). I can still vividly remember the excitement with which my classmates and I greeted the arrival of Armada during the early sixties, and while the artwork was initially quite dull some of those first covers can still set my pulse racing - particularly the Enid Blyton titles and John Theydon's novels set in the world of Gerry Anderson!<br /><br />To paraphrase Noel Coward 'it's extraordinary how potent cheap literature can be'...!Phil Rushtonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11115717268103349676noreply@blogger.com