Formerly a Fellow of New College, Oxford, John Batchelor is an emeritus professor of Newcastle University. His previous books include The Edwardian Novelists and biographies of Joseph Conrad, John Ruskin, Pauline, Lady Trevelyan, and the great Victorian Poet Laureate Alfred Tennyson.
A scrupulous and poignant account of how love and loss inspired the Just So Stories -Kathryn Hughes, The Guardian In this concise and remarkable book...Batchelor guides us expertly...drawing on multiple sources and making intriguing connections between Kipling's stories for children and for adults. -John Carey, The Sunday Times Fluent, engaging and gently erudite -Boyd Tonkin, The Economist Intelligent, balanced, finely-written...John Batchelor, an academic whose own head teems with Edwardian history and books, opens [Kipling] up like a splayed tangerine, each segment of which is tagged to a Just So story. -Nicola Shulman, The Oldie Reading Kipling through the lens of his best-loved book makes a good introduction to his work. -Janet Montefiore, Times Literary Supplement 'Batchelor's achievement is to interweave a close reading of Kipling's Just so Stories and their illustrations with a richly suggestive exploration of Kipling's complexity as a man and his protean genius as a writer.'-Phillip Mallett, author of Rudyard Kipling: A Literary Life 'Beautiful ... How the Just so Stories Were Made cracks through the imperial crustiness that many detest to reach into the warm heart and cool art of the great craftsman that so many admire. Batchelor movingly illuminates how personal grief and sorrow were integral to Kipling's finest and most enduring work.'-Nicholas Rankin, author of Dead Man's Chest: Travels after Robert Louis Stevenson 'John Batchelor is the perfect commentator on the Just so Stories: unobtrusive, knowledgeable, striking just the right balance between literary gossip and erudite illumination. He renews the delight of reading Kipling at his best.'-Alberto Manguel