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{{infoboxinfobox1
|title=Paddington Takes the Test
|author=Michael Bond and Peggy Fortnum (illustrator)
|publisher=Harper Collins Children's Books
|date=July 2014
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0006753787</amazonuk>
|amazonus=<amazonus>0006753787</amazonus>
|website=
|video=
|summary=Another variety pack - and indeed the last original one - of stories from the creator of the world's most accident-prone bear.
|cover=0006753787
|aznuk=0006753787
|aznus=0006753787
}}
In the eyes of those who write proverbs, giving is as good as receiving. Similarly in the eyes of Paddington Bear, taking a test is as good as giving a test, for he is without equal in giving tests – to the patience of the Brown family who adopted him many years ago, principally. Other people he meets on a temporary basis in the course of his adventures – pantomime magicians, art school bosses, country house owners – have varying degrees of luck and ability in dealing with him, but it's the family he returns to each night that is put through a worrying mill so often, and still comes out loving him. But when he himself takes a test – well, the kind it actually is is best for you to discover yourself…
Patchily taking in the [[The Classic Adventures of Paddington by Michael Bondand Peggy Fortnum (Illustrator)|complete oeuvre]] of Bond's bear I come to a collection from the late 1970s, again with seven stories, and again showing how well suited to the matter both creator and subject are. While keeping his bear within the small environs of his family and the Portobello Market area of London, the imagination of the writer keeps PB consistently engaged in mischief, misfortune and misunderstanding. And always the bear is up to it – making so much right for the reader by getting so much wrong, eagerly volunteering for anything that comes his way – especially, that is, if there is the price of a bun or a marmalade sandwich on offer at the end of it.
There is a slight sense of things being stretched a little – certainly the regular scenario here is made a little less realistic when a sauna is constructed in the back garden for a certain shenanigan. And there is a howling mistake when a joke is completely missed out, when we're told the bear had been in neither the Scouts nor the Cubs. And while we're at it, the modern reader will still fail to get every reference, such as when the panto proves to be so hip and trendy it plays the 'Tritsch Tratsch Polka' for one. But the joy Paddington has brought to so many generations is still evident. His world is brought to life in simply pleasurable ways, his mindset is always that of the innocent abroad, creating much sympathy for him and his family, and there's no way to not love him, whether he's just trying to do the ironing (and mending clothes with a mushroom, for another antiquated reference) or, er, trying to get in a hammock.
You can always start at the beginning, and meet Paddington, for the first time or otherwise, [[A Bear Called Paddington by Michael Bond|here]].
 
[[Michael Bond's Original Paddington Bear Books in Chronological Order]]
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[[Category:Michael Bond]]
[[Category:Peggy Fortnum]]