Bunter, Billy (Fictitious character)

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Information for Authority record
Name (Latin)
Bunter, Billy (Fictitious character)
Other forms of name
Bunter, Billy (Fictitious character)
Billy Bunter (Fictitious character)
Bunter, William George (Fictitious character)
William George Bunter (Fictitious character)
Associated country
Great Britain
Gender
male
MARC
MARC
Other Identifiers
Wikidata: Q2638988
Library of congress: nb2017016245
Sources of Information
  • Andrews, V. Sherlock Holmes and the Greyfriars School mystery, 1997:back cover (Billy Bunter, schoolboy)
  • Carpenter, H. Ox. companion child. lit., 1984(Billy Bunter; full name: William George Bunter; created by Frank Richards; overweight and mischevious student of Greyfriars Public School; his stories featured in the magazine Magnet, 1908-1940)
  • Twentieth-century child. writers, 1989:p. 824 (Billy Bunter, the "Fat Owl" of Greyfriars Remove)
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Wikipedia description:

William George Bunter is a fictional schoolboy created by Charles Hamilton using the pen name Frank Richards. He features in stories set at Greyfriars School, a fictional English public school in Kent, originally published in the boys' weekly story paper The Magnet from 1908 to 1940. The character has appeared in novels, on television, in stage plays and in comic strips. He is in the Lower Fourth form of Greyfriars School, known as the Remove, whose members are 14–15 years of age. Time is frozen in the Greyfriars stories; although the reader sees the passing of the seasons, the characters' ages do not change and they remain in the same year groups. Originally a minor character, Bunter's role was expanded over the years with his antics being heavily used in the stories for comic relief and to advance the plots. Bunter's defining characteristics are his naive greed, self-indulgence, and overweight appearance. He is in many respects an obnoxious anti-hero. Besides his gluttony, he is obtuse, lazy, racist, nosy, deceitful, pompous, and conceited, but he is blissfully unaware of his defects. In his own mind, he is a handsome, talented, and naturally aristocratic young man surrounded by uncouth "beasts". His vices are offset by several redeeming features, including a sporadic but genuine courage in aid of others; his ability to be generous during his rare occasions of prosperity; and above all his very real love and concern for his mother. All these, along with Bunter's irrepressible optimism, and his comically transparent untruthfulness and inept attempts to conceal his antics from his schoolmasters and schoolfellows, combine to make the character highly entertaining, though hardly sympathetic.

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