In the mid-1990s, Carey Blyton attempted to get a project off the ground involving children’s books, a TV series featuring Willie Rushton and a dog with a very big bark. The Doggy Tales of Arnold was projected to be a series of a dozen or so stories featuring the eponymous dog, and was intended as a collaboration between Carey (who wrote the stories and accompanying music) and the illustrator Maurice Stevens.
Carey completed ten initial stories under the collective heading of The Adventures of Arnold, though this series title had become The Doggy Tales of Arnold by the time the first (and only) TV episode was created. The stories are titled (in order) as follows:
(*originally Baits)
Sadly, for a variety of reasons, the project never came to fruition and nothing was actually released during Carey’s lifetime. However, one of the stories, Arnold and the Acorns, was indeed filmed, and can now be found and viewed in the Media section of this site.
In the end, however, something did eventually come of the Arnold stories. After a very long history, full of pitfalls and upsets, and thanks to the monumental efforts of Maurice Stevens, Peter Thompson and Richard Hallas (the latter two of Fand Music Press), two of the stories (Arnold Makes a New Friend and Arnold and the Acorns) were eventually published together in a single volume by Austin Macauley Publishers Ltd on 31st October 2018. The resulting book was made available in hardback, paperback and Kindle ebook formats. Finally, in 2024, the rights to the series returned to the Carey Blyton Estate; the physical books became available to buy through Fand Music Press and this Carey Blyton website, and the digital version was reissued as a PDF-format ebook.
[T]his is the first time any of the [ten Doggy Tales of Arnold] stories have appeared in print. And what makes them even more enjoyable are the illustrations, which adorn all of the pages, by Maurice Stevens.
I can only hope that this slim volume will be brilliantly successful and that Carey Blyton, with the wonderful aid of Maurice Stevens, will ride again and that the other adventures of Arnold, Apricot and their rivals will soon appear and become as popular as they surely deserve.
Grateful thanks are due to Maurice Stevens for providing access to all of his illustrations for Arnold and the Acorns, along with a few other resources and recollections. Maurice has played a significant role in the 2018 publication of two Arnold stories, and his memories of working with Carey on the first book and TV production make interesting reading.
In digging out his original Arnold and the Acorns material, Maurice Stevens recalled:
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The book, which was never properly published, had a rather sticky beginning, rather a long time ago now—started in 1994 through 1995/1996 (I’m a bit vague about actual dates). There were some irritating political problems that I won’t bore you with. However, Carey and I finally managed to disentangle ourselves from all that. [I created some] experimental cover designs as examples of future stories, if they were to be commissioned prior to publishing. That didn’t happen and so no further work was produced.
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I visited Carey and Mary at their home in Swanley, and we struck up a friendship which escalated into an exchange of correspondence. Not long after that, Carey and Mary moved house and I lost touch.
”
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When Carey died it was a sad loss; he still had so much to offer. Carey Blyton was a delightful chap with a wicked sense of humour. When he and I met we seemed to hit it off straight away on a personal and a creative level: we were tuned in on the same wavelength about many things. I have a file of correspondence between us that I recently read, which made me chuckle quite a lot. His letters had a surreal touch not unlike Spike Milligan. He wrote saucy limericks and I responded with cartoons, including a caricature portrait of him that he likened to Boris Karloff!
As noted, the exchange of letters involved limericks and cartoons, a few of which are reproduced here. Silly names were also employed, with Maurice signing himself Moritz von Teddington and Carey responding in the guise of Cynthia Fishnet-Stockings (Ms) (p.p. El Khasi bin Wadi of Timbucthree):
Carey Blyton
(or is it Boris Karloff?)
by Maurice Stevens
I will leave you with two limericks dashed off with a few days apart, as the amazing revelations revelated, viz.
The final line is proving tricky. Any ideas?
I kiss the hem of your paint-bestrewed jellaba, effendi.
Cynthia F-S
Cynthia Fishnet-Stockings (Ms)
p.p. El Khasi bin Wadi of Timbucthree
Maurice Stevens
by Maurice Stevens
These are Maurice Stevens’ original cover ideas for the book series, and are not directly related to the covers of the books finally published by Austin Macauley Publishers Ltd.
This picture was first submitted by Maurice Stevens as a taster for Carey’s opening Arnold story, Arnold Makes a New Friend. It was only a first ‘rough’, but it nevertheless captures the style that was subsequently used. Maurice had done some experimental character rough drawings of Arnold prior to this picture to develop his ultimate appearance, but this is the first colour illustration for an Arnold story, and the only one created for Arnold Makes a New Friend during the 1990s. (The illustrations in the version of the story that was finally published in 2018 were newly created for it in 2015, and in fact did not include this original rough or any direct equivalent of it.) Later, the producers of the TV programme changed their minds and went with Arnold and the Acorns as the first programme instead, despite its being the fourth story in the series.
These and other illustrations appear in the book finally published by Austin Macauley Publishers Ltd.
The Doggy Tales of Arnold
A series of ten children’s stories about a dog with an enormous bark
Words: Carey Blyton
Illustrations: Maurice Stevens
Stories 1 and 4 were published together in a single volume on 31st October 2018 by Austin Macauley Publishers Ltd