Point Based On Books How to Be Topp (Molesworth #2)

Title:How to Be Topp (Molesworth #2)
Author:Geoffrey Willans
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:Special Edition
Pages:Pages: 116 pages
Published:September 3rd 1992 by Chrysalis Children's Books (first published 1954)
Categories:Humor. Childrens. Fiction. Comedy
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How to Be Topp (Molesworth #2) Paperback | Pages: 116 pages
Rating: 4.28 | 194 Users | 19 Reviews

Interpretation During Books How to Be Topp (Molesworth #2)

All skools make some sort at teaching the pupils things and the headmaster pin up a huge timetable of lessons ect. which make the heart sink when you look at it.

Nigel Molesworth is back, this time taking the tinies in hand and showing that they can survive the first term - as long as you avoid the prefects and show all due respect to Molesworth 1. Back to Skool might be particularly hard on Mater and Pater, but think of those poor new bugs, forced to be their best at Latin, English, foopball and French (Armand in his striped shirt and feeble questions). Just follow his timeless advice, however, and you too could be Topp.

Identify Books In Favor Of How to Be Topp (Molesworth #2)

Original Title: How to Be Topp
ISBN: 1851459650 (ISBN13: 9781851459650)
Edition Language: English
Series: Molesworth #2


Rating Based On Books How to Be Topp (Molesworth #2)
Ratings: 4.28 From 194 Users | 19 Reviews

Article Based On Books How to Be Topp (Molesworth #2)
Every ten years or so, I re-read this, and the older I am the funnier it gets. This is the kind of humour that makes Monty Python look conventional. Nigel Molesworth, who as any fule kno is the curse of st custards, fights a non-stop battle against mad maths masters, combative maters, his younger brother and the vagaries of the skool curriculum (I admit that I am still no more convinced of the importance of Latin than Sir N. Molesworth, QC.) And for a bonus: the first use of the name 'Hogwarts'

This is the second book in the Molesworth tetralogy and its as wonderful as the first. As well as more insights into the world of St Custards school we get amusing tales of Christmas at the Molesworth residence. Molesworth opines that Dickens A Christmas Carol isnt anywhere near as good as stories about space. The fascination with space is a lovely feature of these books, highlighting that they were written in the nineteen-fifties. Nowadays Molesworths tips for success in lessons would be called



More words of wisdom [sic] from Nigel Molesworth, this time offering tips on how to be "topp" [sic] in various school subjects. My advice is not to follow N. Molesworth's advice.Not quite as funny as "Down with School!" (N. Molesworth's first opus) in my opinion, it still has some topping stuff, e.g. how to be topp in french, a discussion of Xmas, and an obsession with space.

Every ten years or so, I re-read this, and the older I am the funnier it gets. This is the kind of humour that makes Monty Python look conventional. Nigel Molesworth, who as any fule kno is the curse of st custards, fights a non-stop battle against mad maths masters, combative maters, his younger brother and the vagaries of the skool curriculum (I admit that I am still no more convinced of the importance of Latin than Sir N. Molesworth, QC.) And for a bonus: the first use of the name 'Hogwarts'

Entertaining, but not as much as down with skool.

Yar boo sucks to new bugs and BEST EVER: Ronald Searle's illustrations of the Private Life of the Gerund. Social snobery. A gerund 'cuts' a gerundive