Enid Blyton Biography - Facts, Childhood, Family Life & Achievements
Emily Carr
Updated on January 17, 2026
Enid Blyton Biography
(Best Selling Children's Writer of the 20th Century Known for Her Works 'Malory Towers' & 'The Famous Five')Birthday: August 11, 1897 (Leo)
Born In: East Dulwich, London, England
Advanced SearchEnid Mary Blyton was an English writer of over 600 children’s books. She was famous for creating characters like ‘Noddy’ and created many adventurous, fantastical and magical books for little children. Her books are still popular amongst children all over the globe and her work has been translated into 90 languages. She was born in London and brought up in Kent. She had a close relationship with her father who used to inspire her towards art and writing and made her a nature lover but her relationship with her mother was turbulent and she never really came close to her. After her parents’ divorce, Blyton left to be a teacher and a governess and started writing short stories, verses and plays. Some of these were published in small time magazines but her big break came in 1924 when a famous publication called George Newness signed her up. It was here that she met her first husband Hugh Pollock. But her marriage could not survive and she married for the second time to a surgeon called Kenneth Waters. She wrote many famous books like: ‘The Enid Blyton Book of Bunnies’, ‘The Enid Blyton Book of Brownies’, ‘London Zoo- The Zoo Book’, etc. Her writings were considered to be immature, unrealistic and therefore not fit for young children by the critics of that time. But that did not stop her books from becoming famous amongst little children. She is considered to be instrumental in inculcating a habit of reading in young children through hundreds of her books.
Quick FactsBritish Celebrities Born In August
Also Known As: Enid Mary Blyton
Died At Age: 71
Family:Spouse/Ex-: Hugh Alexander Pollock (1924–42), Kenneth Fraser Darrell Waters (1943–67)
father: Thomas Carey Blyton
mother: Theresa Mary Harrison Blyton
siblings: Carey Blyton, Hanly Blyton
children: Gillian Baverstock, Imogen Mary Smallwood
Born Country: England
Quotes By Enid Blyton Novelists
Died on: November 28, 1968
place of death: Hampstead, London, England
City: London, England
Cause of Death: Alzheimer
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British CelebritiesChildren's AuthorsBritish WomenLeo WritersWomen Writers Childhood & Early YearsEnid Blyton was born in East Dulwich, London, to Thomas Carey Blyton, who was a salesman of cutlery, and Theresa Mary Harrison Blyton. After her birth, Blyton family moved to Beckenham in Kent and Enid spent most of her childhood there.It was in Beckenham that her younger brothers were born: Hanley Blyton and Carey Blyton. She was very close to her father and they both shared a loving relationship. They both had a zest for knowledge and enjoyed nature, art, theatre, music and literature.Her father taught her many great lessons that she carried with herself throughout her life. She developed a special love for gardening because her father was an ardent lover of the nature. But she was not very fond of her mother, though. Her mother was homely and domesticated who did not approve very much of Blyton’s bold expeditions of knowledge along with her father.The First school ever that Blyton attended was a small school in Kent run by a couple of sisters and it was called ‘Tresco’. It was situated opposite to the Blyton house. Later in life, she recalled her days at Tresco as happy and memorable. She was good at art and nature study but was not quite as clever at mathematics.In 1907, she was sent to a senior school in Beckenham called the St. Christopher’s School for Girls. She was a very dedicated pupil, full of life and enthusiasm for learning. She used to organize concerts, was a tennis champion and the captain of the lacrosse team. She received many awards for excellence in various fields, especially English composition. She was also appointed as the Head Girl of the school.These were the years when Blyton along with her two friends, Mary Attenborough and Mirabel Davis, started a magazine called ‘Dab’. The title of the magazine was formed out of the initials of their surnames. Blyton contributed stories to the magazine. In 1913 she took her first holiday to France to stay with her teacher Mlle. Louise Bertraine in Annecy.When she was 13, her father declared that he is leaving for good to live with another woman called Florence Agnes Delattre. Around that time it was considered a disgrace for someone’s marriage to breakdown, therefore the Blyton family kept it as a secret and told everyone that her father. This affected Blyton a great deal.After her father left the family, Blyton took to reading and writing profusely. It was like an escape from everything that was going around her, which her young mind could not really comprehend. She used to lock herself in the room for hours and write. She had already made up her mind that she will become a writer one day; her ambition drove her more and more towards writing.Her writings upset her mother a great deal, who did not support her creative pursuits and considered this to be a waste of time. Blyton started sending her poems and writings to various publications but she only received rejection from everywhere. At this time her friend Mary’s Aunt Mabel Attenborough was her only support.In 1916, Blyton got an offer to pursue music from Guildhall School of Music. She was a gifted pianist and everyone in her family was hoping very much for her to become a famous musician just like her father’s sister Mary Crossland. Although she liked to play piano when she was young but now all her dedication was towards writing and she did not want to pursue music.Blyton took up a Froebel-based teacher-training course at Ipswich High School. She broke all ties with her mother at this time and did not even come back home for holidays. She visited her father once or twice around this time, who by now had three children with Florence, but she did not feel as close to him anymore.