Return to the Hundred Acre Wood is a Winnie-the-Pooh novel published on 5 October 2009. Written by David Benedictus and illustrated by Mark Burgess, it was the first such book since 1928 and introduced the character Lottie the Otter.[1]
In the mid-1990s, after completing an audio adaptation of A. A. Milne's Winnie-the-Pooh stories, Benedictus wrote two Pooh short stories of his own and submitted them to the trustees of the Milne estate. The trustees replied that they were unable to publish the stories because "Walt Disney owned all the rights." However, ten years later, Benedictus was contacted by the trustees, who explained that "the sequel rights had reverted to them" and asked Benedictus to make changes to one of the short stories and to submit some more. This collection of stories was published as Return to the Hundred Acre Wood.[2]
included the Winnie-the-Pooh novel ReturntotheHundredAcreWood (2009). It was the first such book in 81 years. Born on 16 September 1938 to chartered...
Winnie the Pooh in theHundredAcreWood is a single player adventure game created by Al Lowe for Sierra On-Line, originally released in 1984 for the Commodore...
The Fourth of June is the first novel by David Benedictus. The novel was considered controversial when published in 1962 as it describes scenes of violent...
novelist (The Fourth of June, This Animal Is Mischievous, Return to the HundredAcreWood). Wayne Comer, 79, American baseball player (Detroit Tigers, Milwaukee...
Benedictus, 85, English novelist (The Fourth of June, This Animal Is Mischievous, ReturntotheHundredAcreWood). Tommy Hoyland, 91, English professional...
12, 2020. Lego Group (4 March 2021). "RETURN TO THEHUNDREDACREWOOD WITH THE NEW LEGO IDEAS WINNIE THE POOH SET". Lego.com. Lego. Retrieved 4 March 2021...
Green Acres is an American sitcom starring Eddie Albert and Eva Gabor as a couple who move from New York City to a rural country farm. The series was first...
and a fascist group. According to Time, the author's "discursive, Edwardian elegance of style is amusingly suited to satirizing upper-class pretentiousness...
show) has hundreds of ferret, stoat, and weasel characters not listed here. Only a few key ones are listed from each. For the former see the books referenced...