Mandy Annual 1980

Picture Stories

  • The Willing Hands of Meg Smith (Pages: 4-9) [Art: Claude Berridge]
  • Mum’s Bargains (Pages: 11-16) [Art: Tom Hurst]
  • The Girl in the Mirror (Pages: 17-26, 49-54, 81-86, 97-106)
  • Gail’s Guardian Angel (Pages: 28-31)
  • Julie the Joiner (Pages: 32) [Art: Bill Ritchie]
  • Rikki’s Radio (Pages: 33-43, 65-75, 113-120)
  • You Little Monkey! (Pages: 44-48) [Art: Wilf Street]
  • Paula’s Pictures (Pages: 59-64) [Art: Hugh Thornton-Jones]
  • My Bionic Budgie! (Pages: 77-80) [Art: Robert MacGillivray]
  • Skateboard Sally (Pages: 88-89)
  • Twin Trouble (Pages: 90-95)
  • It’s a Dare! (Pages: 122-126) [Art: George Martin]

Text Stories & Rhymes

  • Warning Tale: Boy Bother (Page: 27)
  • Odd One Out (Pages: 55-58) [Art: George Martin]
  • Warning Tale: Cycle Care (Pages: 87)
  • Mandy’s Moments (Pages: 96) [Art: Peter Kay]
  • Warning Tale: Dance Disaster (Pages: 107)
  • Competition Crazy (Pages: 108-112)

Features

  • Feathered Friends (Pages: 10)
  • Wild Flowers (Pages: 76)
  • Animal Chain (Pages: 121)

 

(Click on thumbnails for bigger pictures)

Mandy Annual 1978

Picture Stories

  • “It’s a Dare!” (Pages: 6-11)
  • Rita the Record Breaker (Pages: 12-15) [Art: Tom Hurst]
  • Tuesday’s Child (Pages:17-23, 43-47, 81-87, 105-111) [Art: Len Potts]
  • Penny of P.A.W.S. (Pages:27-32)
  • Jo and Jeannie (Pages: 33-37) [Art: Richard Niellands]
  • The Secret of Clumsy Kate (Pages: 49-56)
  • The Slave Girls (Pages: 58-63)
  • The Girl Who Never Was (Pages: 65-73) [Art: Andrew Wilson]
  • Charmette (Pages: 75-80)
  • Tina of Task Force (Pages: 92-97) [Art: George Martin]
  • Brenda’s Book of Knowledge (Pages: 98-101) [Art: Claude Berridge]
  • Crystal Ball (Pages: 104)
  • That Bad Dog – Rex! (Pages: 113-118) [Art: Wilf Street]
  • Brampton’s Big Noise (Pages: 120-125) [Art: Guy Peeters]

Text Stories & Rhymes

  • Grim Warning – The Perils of Slimming (Pages: 16)
  • The Thing with Long Fingers (Pages: 24-25)
  • Grim Warning –  A Toothy Topic (Pages: 26)
  • My Own Brother! (Pages: 38-41)
  • Grim Warning: Nail Tale (Pages: 42)
  • Grim Warning –  Untidiness! (Pages: 57)
  • Grim Warning –  Hair Care! (Pages: 74)
  • Grim Warning –  Scruffy Story (Pages: 88)
  • A Change of Heart (Pages: 89-91)
  • Present Problems (Pages: 102-103)
  • Grim Warning –  Over-Eating (Pages: 119)

Features

  • It’s Magic! (Pages: 2-3, 126-127) [Art: Peter Kay]
  • Puzzle Page (Pages: 48)
  • A Do-It-Yourself Christmas (Pages: 64)
  • How to Make Woolly Folk (Pages: 112)

 

(Click on thumbnails for bigger pictures)

Mandy Annual 1975

Picture Stories

  • The Farmer Wants A Wife (Pages: 6-11) [Art: Bernard Greenbaum?]
  • The Slave Girls (Pages: 12-16)
  • The Sign Of The Acorn [3 parts] (Pages: 18-22, 49-58, 97-107) [Art: Claude Berridge]
  • Stella Starr – Policewoman From Space (Pages: 23-28) [Art: John Richardson]
  • Polly’s Piglet (Pages: 34-37) [Art: Richard Neillands]
  • Della in the Dark (Pages: 38-43) [Art: Guy Peeters]
  • Charley Boy! (Pages: 44-47) [Art: Geoffrey Whittam]
  • Terry’s Ferry (Pages: 60-64) [Art: Geoff Jones]
  • I Want To Be A Witch! (Pages: 70-73) [Art: Tom Hurst]
  • One Day In Rome (Pages: 74-80) [Art: “B Jackson”]
  • Netta’s Newshound (Pages: 82-85)
  • Ellen of Elmswood Farm (Pages: 86-91) [Art: Tony Higham]
  • Here Come The Mini-Mounties (Pages: 92-96)
  • Swinging Sue (Pages: 113-118) [Art: Tony Higham]
  • Little Phantom Of The Opera (Pages: 119-125) [Art: Dudley Wynne]

Text Stories

  • The Guardian Tree (Pages: 29-32)
  • Sheena And Her Stories (Pages: 65-69)
  • The Girl with the Smile (Pages: 108-112) [Art: George Martin]

Features

  • Mandy’s A B C In Rhyme Of Ways She Likes To Pass The Time[7 parts] (Pages: 2-3, 17, 33, 48, 59, 81,126-127)

 

* Thanks to Kaylana for information and cover picture

Mandy Annual 1973

Picture Stories

  • Mandy (Pages: 2-3, 96, 126-127) [Art: Peter Kay]
  • With Love from Lindy (Pages: 6-16) [Art: Dudley Wynne]
  • Caesar and Cleo (Pages: 17-23) [Art: Claude Berridge]
  • Little Miss No-Name [4 parts] (Pages: 24-28, 52-58, 74-80, 108-112)
  • Carol’s Cauldron (Pages: 33-36)
  • The Ghost of Sunday Manor (Pages: 37-42) [Art: “B Jackson”]
  • Carrie Chase – Girl Reporter (Pages: 43-48) [Art: Bernard Greenbaum?]
  • Late Kate (Pages: 49)
  • Elsie’s Elephant (Pages: 65-69)
  • Melinda – You’re A Marvel (Pages: 81-87) [Art: Tom Hurst]
  • Terry and her Trike (Pages: 88-91) [Art: Guy Peeters]
  • Mona’s Monkey (Pages: 92-95)
  • Tessa Pulls Her Weight (Pages: 97-102) [Art: Tony Higham]
  • The Singing Hinneys (Pages: 113-117) [Art: Richard Neillands]
  • Mighty Minnie (Pages: 118-125) [Art: Leslie Branton]

Text Stories

  • Lost Property (Pages: 29-32) [Art: George Martin]
  • Pirates Ahoy! (Pages: 50-51)
  • The Cave of Zuma (Pages: 59-64)
  • Beagle for Sale (Pages: 70-73)
  • The Girl with the Smile (Pages: 103-107)

 

* Thanks to Kaylana for information and cover picture

Friendless Fiona [1986]

  • Friendless Fiona – Nikki: #64 (10 May 1986) – #72 (5 July 1976)

Plot

Fiona Scott was a popular, outgoing girl while her friend Tara Martin was much quieter and shy. Mrs Martin worked at a Folklore Museum and Fiona thought she looked a bit like a witch. Mrs Martin was also very protective of her daughter, so when Tara has an accident on her bike, she blames Fiona. It was Fiona that convinced Mrs Martin to let Tara come on a bike ride after Fiona had seemingly fixed her brakes. After the accident Mrs Martin said Fiona was not to see Tara again and if she had her way she’ll be left without a friend in the world. Soon after incidents begin to happen to make believe Fiona that Mrs Martin had actually put a curse on her and soon she’d be friendless just like Mrs Martin promised!

Fiona has a bad day worrying about Tara, and she is snappy with her other friends. She falls out with her friend Kim about a party and next she annoys people by being overly cautious. Her trying to be careful actually make things worse, when she distracts her friend Christine who is up a tree trying to get her Gran’s cat, the cat falls hurting itself.  It becomes pretty clear that Fiona is becoming her own worse enemy. When Marie’s sister marks her for lateness she tries to get back at her by pretending the Head needs her as a joke, but that causes her to miss an audition. She is nervous about cycling and is convinced by Debbie to go on cycle but then Debbie thinks her nervousness was ploy to get John the boy she likes, as she cycles with him. When a new girl Sharon joins, she tries to make sure she doesn’t mix with others so they don’t turn her against Fiona, but then it turns out one of those people is her cousin!

So it continues, each episode a different friend is lost. Such as when Fiona and Rachel volunteer at a nursery and on the rainy day she tells kids story, but the next day is sunny and Rachel thinks they should run about. While they argue about it a kid has accident. When she joins a drama she ends up taking over her friend Jackie’s part after an attempt of helping her rehearse goes wrong. Things do get better when Jackie gets her part back, and Fiona becomes friendly with Nigel but after some accidents at rehearsal,  Nigel thinks she’s trying to cause trouble. She decides she has to go to Mrs Martin and ask her to remove the curse. She has surprise when she gets to the Martins, Tara is home from hospital and Mrs Martin is being friendly. It turns out Tara readjusted the brakes on her bike because she thought they were too stiff, so it wasn’t Fiona’s fault. Mrs Martin didn’t place a curse she just said things out of worry. Fiona realise her attitude to her friends changed because she thought they blamed her for accident. Now she knows there’s no curse everything goes back to normal and best of all she has her best friend Tara by her side again.

Thoughts

While some instances, her friends are being unfair, such as Fiona being nervous about a bike ride as it was first one since accident, then she didn’t deserve to be accused of boy stealing when she gains a bit more confidence cycling. A lot of the time though, Fiona really does make things worse for herself and makes herself unlikeable. One of the worst examples of this is when she thinks Marie’s sister should not mark her up for being late and keeps arguing about it and then playing the “joke” on her, causing her to miss out on a good opportunity.  She says mean things about her former friends to Sharon in attempt to keep her to herself. She also comes across as defensive and always having to have things her way, when Rachel wants to play games with the kids in the nursery, she gets in a huff, thinking she should be the one to decide. Or with the play insisting that Jackie stay longer to practice together causing them to be late to class and get detention, while Fiona finishes her work quickly and gets to go to rehearsal. She never questions her own behaviour because she blames it on an outside force, the “curse”.

The friend of the week formula can get a bit tiresome especially when Fiona comes across as unsympathetic at times. I was glad to see at the end it wasn’t actually a curse and it was Fiona’s own behaviour that caused her to lose friends. It does make her  a bit more sympathetic as we realise that worry over her friend (who she has been unable to see), her own guilty feelings projected, making her think her other friends blamed her, and the harsh words by Mrs Martin are all the root of her self destructive behaviour. Once these are worries are lifted her attitude changes and she can begin to mend friendships.

 

 

 

The Gold Medal [1966] /Slave of the Watch [1978]

  • The Gold Medal – Judy: #329 (30 April 1966) – #336 (18 June 1966)
  • Art: Paddy Brennan
  • Reprinted as Slave of the Watch – Debbie Picture Story Library: #05 [1978]
  • Cover Art: Ian Kennedy, Inside Art: John McNamara

Plot

June Laing lived with her strict guardian, Miss Sharpe, who didn’t allow her to have any close friends, as that could interfere with her swimming training. She was determined June would be a British champion and she trained her in secret in a pool at their house. Miss Sharpe had some secrets, and spent time in the attic, where June was not allowed go. One day June is alone in house and finds Miss Sharpe has not locked the attic door properly. There June finds magazine scrapbook about another June Laing and Olympic gold medalist, but all the photos are scratched out! Some of the ceiling of the old house falls,she is knocked unconscious, and Miss Sharpe finds her. She is not pleased to find Jane was in attic, but thinks she doesn’t remember what she saw. A few days later June collapses going home from school (Miss Sharpe has not let her recover from her injury enough). A man Colonel Blount helps June, and insist on bringing her home. He recognizes Miss Sharpe but she cuts him off before he can say too much.

This mystery has spurred June to stand up to Miss Sharpe more, she thinks the other June Laing was her mother but she wonders how Miss Sharpe is involved.  June does well at her first swim competition and she finds out the older June, lost her gold medal because she took money for advertising swim wear and was no longer considered an amateur. She also finds out Colonel Blount’s daughter Jessica was June’s biggest rival, but Miss Sharpe hurries her away before she can talk to them. When June asks if someone could lose their medal for taking money for advertising, it brings on a headache for Miss Sharpe. Soon after a coach interested in June, sneaks in to the backyard to see June swim and offers to coach her. Normally Miss Sharpe wouldn’t consider it, but as her headaches are getting worse she relents. Mr Shefford is right that competition spurs on June and her timings improve. June becomes friendly with her rival Anne Clifton, while at her father’s store one day, June. After finds the advert that caused Laing to be disqualified. Mr Clifton tells her more of the story, that Laing claimed to have been tricked by her rival Jessica, but Mr Clifton suspects that it was actually the work of her sister, Janice Sinclair. Miss Sharpe finds them in the shop and after some harsh words, the girls fall out,  but they make up again, when they are both chosen for British team.

Between swimming training and competition, Jane does a bit more investigating into her namesake. She finds out more about Janice who apparently was jealous of June, despite being famous as a first class glider pilot herself. June begins to suspect Miss Sharpe is Janice (especially as Mr Clifton thought she resembled her), but then she sees she is afraid of flying. At the international competitions, Miss Sharpe continues to push June hard and doesn’t allow her to socialise with the other competitors. June barely qualifies for  next stage of the  competition,and Miss Sharpe blames Coach Shefford for being too soft on her. But he tells Miss Sharpe that she’s too hard on June and has never made her feel wanted or loved.  Miss Sharpe seems surprised at this. That night someone sneaks into June’s room to wish her luck and it spurs her on to win her next race. While Miss Sharpe dismisses the visitor as superstitious nonsense, June’s mystery friend is what keeps June going.

June’s is becoming quite famous and offers start pouring in, but she won’t make the same mistake as the older June and she burns them all. While doing this she notices one letter is a personal one, she rescues it and although it is half burnt,  she gathers that it is from her aunt Janice and she wants to meet at the international championships.  When June turns up, it turns out Janice wanted to meet original June to ask her for forgiveness, as it was indeed her that was the cause of the medal loss. June tells Janice, her mother is dead, but then later that night Miss Sharpe arrives and tells her she is her mother!  She confesses that she wanted to make Jane into a champion, to make up for her own disappointment.  She was also her secret visitor, showing that she did care about June, and she forgives her. With the truth out in the open, Miss Sharpe’s headaches go away as they were caused by tension. Her mother now openly affectionate and encouraging June is motivated to do her best and she wins the International gold medal.

Thoughts

While the reader may hope that June will win her swimming competitions and go on to win gold, the real drive of the plot is the mystery. The mystery of Miss Sharpe and June’s mother is quite intriguing, with some good red herrings throughout. Good pacing, means we get more snippets of information inter-weaved with June trying to become a swimming champion. With the case of many of these shorter stories, the end with the explanations and quickly forgiving protagonist, doesn’t work as well. Miss Sharpe/June Laing told her daughter she was dead and didn’t want to show her affection for fear she would lose control of her and she wouldn’t become a swimming champion, and June is very quick to accept that! I think it might have worked better if Miss Sharpe turned out to be the aunt trying to make up for her mistake through misguided means! I do appreciate the story did show us some of Miss Sharpe’s thoughts throughout, showing that all the lies are causing her headaches and her genuine surprise  when Shefford tells her June feels unloved. It makes her a bit more sympathetic and that she started visiting June unseen, showing more affection. Though I still think June is a bit too happy with the revelations of all the lies!

It’s funny that Laing chose the name Miss Sharpe, as she does embody the name with her sharp and harsh demeanor.  The artist (in Slave of the Watch) does a good job  showing the change from her usual stern face to her softer affectionate face when she reveals the truth. June is a sympathetic character throughout, her isolation makes her all the more vulnerable. It is good to see when she gains a friend, she begins gaining confidence and is able to push back against Miss Sharpe’s methods more. Of course while Miss Sharpe has taught her a lot, in the end she wouldn’t have become a champion without encouragement, some affection and a life outside of swimming!

Updated: Reading through some old Judys I realised this is actually a reprint of The Gold Medal, reformatted into a picture story library size with new art. Surprisingly the story is pretty much word for word despite restrictions in the smaller size, a few small things may have been changed but otherwise a pretty straight forward reprint. It wasn’t a long serial but would have been nice to see a few things expanded on, like I mentioned above, perhaps the original story could have down with an extra episode to wrap it up.

Twins on Trial!

Plot

Twins Claire and Kelly Miller were being fostered with a view of adoption by a quiet kindly couple the Blakes. They had lost their own daughter Sharon in an accident. Claire a quiet girl herself was worried her tearaway sister would put the Blakes off adopting them.

Notes

  • Photo story
  • Reprinted and translated into Dutch (as “Tweeling op proef”) – Debbie #43 (1984)

Appeared

  • Twins on Trial! – Debbie: #499 (4 September 1982) – #504 (9 October 1982)

The Curse of Carlos

Plot

When a Spanish ship  was lured on to the rocks a curse was placed on anyone who tried to steal the gold she carried! Years later, Joan’s sister, Maggy, dived with three Americans to recover the gold, but two of the party were drowned. Maggy and the other American, Tim, returned but Maggy remained unconscious and icy cold!. The daughter of Juan Carlos then appeared to Joan in a dream and told her that her sister wouldn’t recover until the gold was returned to the wreck. So Joan followed Tim, who had the gold coins, to London, where she discovered that Tim had been mugged and the coins stolen!

Notes

  • Art:  Manuel Carmona Ruiz ?
  • Reprinted and translated into Dutch (as “De vloek van de Santa Perez”) – Debbie #35 (1983).

Appeared

  • The Curse of Carlos – Debbie: #499 (4 September 1982) – #504 (9 October 1982)

Forgotten Island

Plot

Alison Blair was spending holidays at her Gran’s cottage on the lonely Dunes island she was happy to meet a girl her own age but then she mysteriously hurried off.

In the sequel, Alison returns to the island with her friends Karen and Julie. They thought the island was deserted but then they hear some strange stories about ghosts haunting the island.

Notes

  • Photo story

Appeared

  • Forgotten Island – Debbie: #494 (31 July 1982) – #498 (28 August 1982)
  • Return to Forgotten Island – Debbie: #508 (6 November 1982) – #513 (11 December 1982)