Olga da Polga

Olga da Polga is a fictional character and heroine of Michael Bond's The Tales of Olga da Polga (ISBN 0-19-275130-1) series. Unlike his more famous character Paddington Bear, Olga (a guinea pig) is a teller of tall tales in the style of Baron Munchausen. The rough frame work of the stories is something like this: Something fairly ordinary will happen to Olga, she will tell her animal friends a wildly exaggerated version of events, which are often revealed to be untrue by what the humans say later on. Olga was named after the Bond family's real guinea pig; in 2014, Guardian journalist Michelle Pauli met Olga number six.[1]

Bond's books were memorably illustrated by Danish artist Hans Helweg, who was also well known for his 'pulp fiction' covers for Pan paperbacks.[2] His illustrations are still strongly associated with Olga, although later imprints have used different imagery including artwork by Catherine Raynor for Usborne.[3]

Friends

Chapter Books

Picture Books

See also

References

  1. Pauli, Michelle (28 November 2014). "Michael Bond: 'Paddington stands up for things, he's not afraid of going to the top and giving them a hard stare'". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 3 December 2014.
  2. http://displayhca.blogspot.co.uk/2011/03/widow-of-illustrator-hans-helweg-sue.html
  3. https://new.myubam.com/p/5293/olga-da-polga
  4. Gurney specialised in the treatment of guinea pigs, and treated Bond's guinea pig who was the inspiration for Olga. Daily telegraph
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