Lancelot: The Adventures of King Arthur's Most Celebrated Knight
The Right St. John's
The Chivalrous Fifth
Bunty of the Blackbirds
The Madcap of the School
Christine Chaundler (5 September 1887 – 15 December 1972) was a prolific English children's author, who also wrote stories for boys as Peter Martin.[1] Some of her hundreds of short stories were broadcast by the BBC.
Apart from a brief period in the Land Army during the First World War, Chaundler worked in editorial jobs as she built her writing career. By 1920, her earnings had allowed her to build a house on the Sussex Downs, where she lived until her death in 1972. She never married.[2]
1n 1910, Chaundler adapted Sleeping Beauty as a children's play that was performed at the Biggleswade Town Hall.[4] In 1912, she received 10s 6d, her first earnings, for a prize poem published in Girls' Realm, Chaundler's first earnings as a writer came in 1912, when she won 10s 6d in a Prize Poem competition run by Girls' Realm. From then on she made a growing income from writing girls' and boys' stories and books.[2] She was a sub-editor for Little Folks from 1914 to 1917, before serving briefly in the Land Army. After the war, she edited juvenile books for James Nisbet and Company until 1922. During the 1930s, she reviewed children's books for The Quiver.[5] She continued to write and became a prolific author of children's novels, for boys under her pseudonym "Peter Martin" and for girls under her own name. A census of young girls conducted by the Western Mail in 1927 ranked Chaundler sixth among popular authors. Although she was bested by Dickens, Shakespeare, and Kipling, she was listed above Alcott and Stevenson.[6] She wrote hundreds of short stories for magazines and children's annuals, some of which were broadcast over the BBC'sChildren's Hour.[2][7] However, the market for these types of children's books had changed by the late 1940s and Chaundler turned to reviewing books, reading books for publishers, and marketing her short stories to the BBC.[2]