Ian Serraillier (24
September 1912 – 28 November 1994) was a British novelist and poet. He was also
appreciated by children for being a storyteller retelling legends from Rome,
Greece and England. Serraillier was best known for his children's books,
especially The Silver Sword (1956),
a wartime adventure story which was adapted for television by the BBC in
1957 and again in 1971.
He was born in London, the
eldest of four children. His father died as a result of the 1918
flu pandemic when he was only six years old. He was educated at Brighton
College, and took his degree at St Edmund
Hall, Oxford and became an English teacher. He taught at Wycliffe
College in Gloucestershire from 1936 to 1939; at Dudley Grammar
School in Worcestershire from 1939 to 1946; and at Midhurst
Grammar School in West Sussex from 1946 to 1961. As a Quaker,
he was granted conscientious objector status
in World War II.
In 1946, his first children’s
novel was published. It was followed by several more adventure stories of treasure
and spies. His best known work, The Silver Sword, was published in 1956 and has become a classic, bringing to life the
story of four refugee children. Three of the children are siblings: Ruth, Edek
and Bronia. Jan is another of the many Warsaw war orphans who somehow had met
their father, and then fainted near the bombed out basement which served as
home for the siblings, and was taken in by them. The four joined together in
their search for the siblings' parents in the chaos of Europe immediately after
the Second World War. In the United States the book was published under the
title Escape from Warsaw.
As well as children’s
novels and poetry, Serraillier produced his own retellings of classic tales in
prose and verse, including Beowulf, Chaucer and
Greek myths. Together with his wife, Anne Margaret Rogers, he founded the New
Windmill Series in 1948, by Heinemann Educational Books, which set
out to provide inexpensive editions of good stories. He continued as co-editor of the series until the onset of Alzheimer's
disease in the early 1990s. The illness finally contributed
towards his death in November 1994 at the age of 82.
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