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Dodie Smith (1896–1990)

Author of I Capture the Castle

47+ Works 15,176 Members 427 Reviews 48 Favorited
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About the Author

Series

Works by Dodie Smith

I Capture the Castle (1948) 10,135 copies, 322 reviews
The 101 Dalmatians (1956) 2,699 copies, 59 reviews
The Starlight Barking (1967) 549 copies, 12 reviews
The New Moon with the Old (1963) 229 copies, 8 reviews
The Town in Bloom (1965) 210 copies, 4 reviews
It Ends with Revelations (1967) 137 copies, 3 reviews
The Uninvited [1944 film] (1944) — Screenwriter — 85 copies, 2 reviews
Look Back with Love (1974) 83 copies, 1 review
The Midnight Kittens (1978) 82 copies, 2 reviews
A Tale of Two Families (1970) 80 copies, 3 reviews
Disney 101 Dalmatians (2011) 19 copies
Dear Octopus (1938) 15 copies, 2 reviews
Look Back with Gratitude (1985) 12 copies
101 Dalmatians [adapted by Peter Bently] (1979) 8 copies, 1 review
Call it a Day (1935) 7 copies, 1 review
Autumn Crocus (1931) 6 copies
101 dalmācietis (1995) 2 copies
Zdobywam zamek (2014) 1 copy
HLa Icarica dei 101 (1997) 1 copy

Associated Works

101 Dalmatians (Disney's Wonderful World of Reading) (1977) — Original story — 1,554 copies, 5 reviews
101 Dalmatians [1961 film] (1961) — Original novel — 886 copies, 7 reviews
101 Dalmatians (Mouseworks Classic Storybook) (1986) — Original story — 418 copies, 3 reviews
101 Dalmatians [1996 film] (1996) — Original story — 204 copies, 6 reviews
Walt Disney's 101 Dalmatians with Pictures From The Movie (1960) — Original story — 151 copies, 3 reviews
102 Dalmatians [2000 film] (2000) — Original story — 138 copies
101 Dalmatians (Junior Novelization) (1996) — Original story — 101 copies, 2 reviews
Hundred and One Dalmatians (Ladybird Disney Easy Reader) (1985) — Original story — 70 copies
101 Dalmatians (Disney 101 Dalmatians) (Step into Reading) (1996) — Original characters — 69 copies, 2 reviews
I Capture the Castle [2003 film] (2003) — Original book — 51 copies, 1 review
The Hundred and One Dalmatians: Cruella and Cadpig (2017) — Original characters — 41 copies, 1 review
Adventure Stories for Girls (1978) 38 copies
Disney's 101 Dalmatians (A Golden Sight 'N' Sound Book) (1991) — Original story — 35 copies, 1 review
The Hundred and One Dalmatians (Penguin Young Readers, Level 3) (2001) — Original characters — 22 copies
Hundred and One Dalmatians (Ladybird Book of the Film) (1996) — Original story — 11 copies
Disney's 101 Dalmatians (Mouse Works Six-in-One Set) (1997) — Original book — 10 copies
101 Dalmatians (Disney Landscape Picture Books) (1994) — Original characters — 8 copies
101 Dalmatians (Ladybird Book of the Film) (1993) — Original story — 7 copies
Hundred and One Dalmatians: The Puppies' Story (1996) — Original story — 6 copies
Famous Plays of 1931 (1932) — Contributor — 6 copies
101 Dalmatians Storyette (Disney's Storyteller Series) (2004) — Orginal story — 4 copies
Hundred and One Dalmatians (First Disney Picture Books) (1998) — Original story — 2 copies
Disney's 101 Dalmatians : Finger Puppet Puppy House (2001) — Based on characters by — 1 copy
101 Dalmatian Street [2019 TV series] (2019) — Original characters — 1 copy
101 Dalmatians: The Series [1997 TV series] (1997) — Original characters — 1 copy
102 Dalmatians (Disney's Storyteller Series) (2004) — Original story — 1 copy
102 Dalmatians Storyette (Disney's Storyteller Series) (2004) — Original story — 1 copy

Tagged

1930s (73) 20th century (164) animals (152) British (211) British literature (103) castles (132) children (124) children's (297) children's fiction (84) children's literature (86) classic (170) classics (213) coming of age (312) Disney (66) dogs (217) England (402) family (127) fantasy (103) favorites (65) fiction (1,750) Folio Society (103) historical fiction (108) literature (97) novel (189) own (69) read (221) romance (316) to-read (804) YA (149) young adult (282)

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Smith, Dodie
Legal name
Smith, Dorothy Gladys Beesley
Other names
Anthony, C. L. (pseudonym)
Percy, Charles Henry (pseudonym)
Birthdate
1896-05-03
Date of death
1990-11-24
Gender
female
Education
Academy of Dramatic Art
St. Paul's Girls' School
Occupations
children's book author
playwright
novelist
autobiographer
actor
Agent
Laurence Fitch (estate agent)
Relationships
Heal, Ambrose (lover)
Barnes, Julian (literary executor)
Short biography
Dorothy "Dodie" Smith was born in Whitefield, Lancashire, England. Her father died when she was 18 months old, and her mother took her to live with her grandparents, aunts, and uncles in Manchester. Influenced by an uncle who was an amateur actor, Dodie went on the stage by age 13, playing boy's parts. Her mother remarried in 1910 and the family moved to London. Dodie enrolled in the Academy of Dramatic Art and pursued a career as an actress for several years, with little success. In 1923, she gave up acting and took a job as a toy buyer for a department store. In 1929, she went to Leipzig, Germany for the annual toy fair, and spent some time with a friend at an inn in a small German village. On her return to England, she wrote a play, Autumn Crocus (1931), which became a hit. The "girl playwright," as the newspapers called her, then had five successful plays in a row on the London stage. In 1938, she moved to the USA with her companion and business manager, Alec Beesley, who was a pacifist. They married the following year. She began working as a screenwriter in Hollywood in 1941. In 1948, she published her first novel, I Capture the Castle, which was an immediate success. She returned to Britain in 1951 and had another major success with The Hundred and One Dalmatians (1956), later adapted into the hugely popular animated film by Disney. She continued to write books for adults and children into the 1980s, including her four volumes of autobiography, Look Back With Love: A Manchester Childhood (1974) followed by Look Back With Mixed Feelings, Look Back With Astonishment, and Look Back With Gratitude.
Nationality
UK
Birthplace
Whitefield, Lancashire, England, UK
Places of residence
Whitefield, Lancashire, England, UK
Manchester, England, UK
London, Middlesex, England, UK
Doylestown, Pennsylvania, USA
Place of death
Uttlesford, Essex, England, UK
Burial location
cremated, ashes scattered
Map Location
England, UK

Members

Discussions

British Author Challenge July 2025: Dodie Smith & Mervyn Peake in 75 Books Challenge for 2025 (July 2025)

Reviews

447 reviews
This is a lovely, lovely book, and it has every ounce of the charm for which it gets praised, but what struck me is the acute sadness that seems to underlie it all. I wonder if I would give it such weight if I'd read it when younger, since a lot of it is quite comic, but it seems to me there's quite a serious grown-up novel quite close to the surface of the charming, amusing romance, and its dogged and wholly admirable refusal to tie things up neatly is merely the most obvious sign. The show more death of Cassandra's mother, the monstrous egotism and violent temper of her father, for which she never once properly upbraids him even in the privacy of her own thoughts - but locking him in the tower is a kind of justice and the long overdue kick in the pants, so she and Thomas punish him without poisoning themselves with a trace of bitterness, and in a sense, that's what keeps the book so charming and Cassandra so innocent, in spite of everything: the complete absence of bitterness - not to mention the tangled Jacob's ladder of love that causes so much pain. Cassandra's voice at first is so sweet and innocent, but that gets undercut quite early on when she overhears herself being described as 'consciously naive' and thereafter her voice becomes considerably less arch. She is, after all, a child becoming a woman and at the end is left in an adult's dilemma, and as teenagers may not realise, but hopefully most adults are aware, many of those never get truly resolved. show less
Teenage Cassandra writes in her diary like a typical girl. She makes observations about not-so typical situations, like the fact her family lives in poverty in a rundown English castle. Her dream is to become a famous author so to practice she recounts the lives of her family with sharp and witty commentary. As she says, "contemplation seems to be about the only luxury that costs nothing" (p 25). At the onset, the name of the game seems to be to marry off sister Rose to the highest bidder; show more and that man seems to be American Simon Cotton. Poor Rose cannot even find a suitable dress for dinner let alone charm her future husband over a decent meal. I Capture the Castle is more than a dating game, it is the story of society's opinion of a woman's place. It says something about the attitudes about feminine decorum.
One of my favorite moments was when Simon and his brother Neil spotted Rose and Cassandra in ratty fur coats. To avoid anyone seeing them in such shambles Neil pretends they are a bear and "kills" it before mother can see. How perfectly ridiculous yet, there is an air of social grace in the midst of destitution.
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I'm using the word "delightful" a lot lately to describe the books I've liked; that's mostly because I've been in the mood to read things which would delight one these last few days. I Capture the Castle is a perfect Delightful Read: it has a young, cheerful narrator; a sense that while there are real problems in life nothing too terribly dreadful could ever happen; gemmy insights into life, family, and love which ring true; and just enough slightly zany adventures to make the book feel a show more lark. My only complaint is that the romance thread (which is important, but very much as part of a larger fabric) is left dangling a bit in the end. Recommended. show less
What a wonderful novel! Following the eccentricities and struggles of these characters in their crumbling English castle is everything -- touching, insightful, inspirational, philosophical and, in many, many scenes, hilarious. Through the viewpoint of Cassandra, telling the story in her journal, we get a great coming of age story with descriptions of the characters around her that remain as fresh today as when they were written decades ago. I was glad to be home alone to read one particular show more scene, because it made me roar with laughter. I am not sure I've ever had such a hearty laugh from the written word before! I may have to make reading this one an annual event. show less

Lists

1950s (1)
1940s (1)
1960s (1)

Awards

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Associated Authors

Statistics

Works
47
Also by
32
Members
15,176
Popularity
#1,507
Rating
4.0
Reviews
427
ISBNs
293
Languages
19
Favorited
48

Charts & Graphs