Comprehensive information and links about A.A. Milne

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, was a British author, best known for his books about the animated teddy bear, Winnie-the-Pooh, and for various children's poems. Milne had made several reputations, most notably as a playwright, before the huge success of Pooh overshadowed all his previous work.

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Biography

Milne was born in Scotland but raised in London at a small private school in Kilburn run by his father John Vine Milne. One of his teachers was H. G. Wells. He attended Westminster School and Trinity College, Cambridge where he studied on a mathematics scholarship. While there, he edited and wrote for i, a student magazine. He collaborated with his brother Kenneth and their articles appeared over the initials AKM. Milne's work came to the attention of the leading British humour magazine Punch, where Milne was to become a contributor and later assistant editor of i.

His son Christopher Robin was born in 1920. Milne joined the British Army in World War I but after the war wrote a denunciation of war titled i).

During the war, Milne was one of the most prominent critics of English comic writer P.G. Wodehouse, who was captured at his country home in France by the Nazis and imprisoned for a year. Wodehouse made radio broadcasts about his internment, which were broadcast from Berlin. Although the lighthearted broadcasts made fun of the Germans, Milne accused Wodehouse of committing an act of near treason by cooperating with his country's enemy. Wodehouse got some revenge by creating fatuous parodies of the Christopher Robin poems in some of his later stories.

In 1925, Milne bought a country home, Cotchford Farm, in Hartfield, East Sussex. He retired to the farm after brain surgery in 1952 left him an invalid.

Literary career

Milne is most famous for his Pooh books about a boy named Christopher Robin, after his son, and various characters inspired by his son's stuffed animals, most notably the bear named Winnie-the-Pooh. (Reputedly, a Canadian black bear named Winnie (after Winnipeg), used as a military mascot by the Royal Winnipeg Rifles, a Canadian Infantry Regiment in World War I and left to London Zoo after the war, is the source of the name.) E. H. Shepard illustrated the original Pooh books, using his own teddy, Growler ("a magnificent bear") as the model; Christopher Robin's own toys are now under glass in New York.

The overwhelming success of his children's books was to become a source of considerable annoyance to Milne, whose self-avowed aim was to write whatever he pleased, and who until then had found a ready audience for each change of direction: he had freed pre-war Punch from its ponderous facetiousness; he had made a considerable reputation as a playwright (like his idol JM Barrie) on both sides of the Atlantic; he had produced a durable, character-led and witty piece of detective writing in i -- indeed, his publisher was displeased when he announced his intention to write poems for children -- and he had never lacked an audience.

But once Milne had, in his own words, "said Goodbye to all that in 70,000 words", the approximate length of the four children's books, he had no intention of producing a copy of a copy, given that one of the sources of inspiration, his son, was growing older.

His reception remained warmer in America than Britain, and he continued to publish novels and short stories, but by the late 1930s the audience for Milne's grown-up writing had largely vanished: he observed bitterly in his autobiography that a critic had said that the hero of his latest play ("God help it") was simply "Christopher Robin grown up ... what an obsession with me children are become!"

Even his old home, i verses had first appeared, was ultimately to reject him, as Christopher Milne details in his autobiography i, though Methuen continued to publish whatever Milne wrote, including the long poem 'The Norman Church' and an assembly of articles entitled i (which Milne likened to a benefit night for the author).

After Milne's death, the rights to the Pooh characters were sold by his widow, Daphne to the Walt Disney Company, which has made a number of Pooh cartoon movies, as well as a large amount of Pooh-related merchandise. She also destroyed his papers.

Milne also wrote a number of poems, including i

Biographies

There are a number of highly readable books about Milne. His friend Frank Swinnerton's book i, in particular, is an account of his attempt to escape from the shadow of a famous father and a burdensome name; i is an excellent and detailed biography, although it gives little space to the plays; a spin-off book tells the story for a younger readership, concentrating on Pooh, with numerous pictures of Pooh-related merchandise. Then Pooh became a Disney figure.

, (1905) (Some consider this more of a short story collection; Milne didn't like it and considered iPooh and the Philosophers: In Which It Is Shown That All of Western Philosophy Is Merely a Preamble to Winnie-The-PoohInventing Wonderland: The Lives and Fantasies of Lewis Carroll, Edward Lear, J. M. Barrie, Kenneth Grahame and A. A. Milne

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