We
are delighted to welcome Mini Grey to the blog to discuss her hugely exciting
and ambitious new picture book The Greatest Show On Earth. Mini is a multi award winning author and
illustrator. Biscuit Boy won the Smarties
Book Prize, Traction Man is Here won the Boston Globe Horn Book Award,
and The Adventures of the Dish and the Spoon won the Kate Greenaway
Medal. You can find out more about Mini
by visiting her website.
Please
can you introduce us to ‘The Greatest Show on Earth’?
It’s
the entire 4.6 billion year story of life on Earth, brought to you in the form
of a performance by Rod the Roach and his insect Troupe in a Shoebox Theatre.
[See photo one in picture gallery]
What
was the reaction from your agent and/or publisher to such an unusual and big
book idea?
The
idea for the Greatest Show actually began around 10 years ago, and to begin
with the book was small and very long! It was a little zigzag book that pulled
out into a 4.6 billion year tape measure (which was on the back.) The lovely
people at Penguin tried to find a way to publish it, but the zigzag format was
difficult, and the little pages didn’t do justice to the story that Rod was
trying to tell. For some years it drifted around, in search of the right
format. And then I realised it could be a big book, rather than a little one,
with space to delve into Earth’s story, and my editors Joe Marriott and Emily
Lunn at Puffin decided we could make this happen!
You
say the idea for ‘The Greatest Show on Earth’ started with a trip to the Oxford
Natural History Museum, can you explain how the idea grew?
When
my son Herbie was about 5 years old, we spent a lot of time hanging out in the
Oxford Museum of Natural History. Gazing at the dinosaur skeletons, I realised there
were enormous gaps in my knowledge of prehistoric life, and I didn’t even know
how old the Earth actually is. Well, it’s 4.6 billions years old – and I just
wanted to see what all that time looked like, and hold it in my hands. Later, when
Herbie was at primary school, they would do projects on the Ancient Greeks, the
Egyptians; how did those timelines fit with the dinosaurs? Could it be possible
to tell the whole history of Earth as a story? We humans are uniquely good at absorbing information through
stories. Before writing, story was how information was passed down generations.
Stories are memorable. Story makes us want to know what happens, makes us pay
attention.
It seizes our imaginations and curiosity.
[See
Photo Two in Picture Gallery]
Could
this be a first story-scaffold to hang subsequent knowledge about life on Earth
upon? I think once you have a mental framework
you start to collect new knowledge, and you see things that could be added to
your scaffold everywhere – you see more, just in your ordinary everyday world.
[See Photo Three in Picture Gallery]
There’s
a wonderful sense of drama and theatricality in the presentation of the book;
how did the idea for this develop as the central conceit for the book?
I
have a mild obsession with toy theatres, and at one point long ago I worked as
a theatre designer. Making a picture book is a bit like making a theatre
performance: – both in how you make them, but also how you perform them (every
reading is a new performance). But also the theatre was the answer to how to
present my story – especially the Victorian-style Pollocks toy cardboard
theatre. Modelling my book page on a Victorian theatre meant that I could
organise the information into areas. The main stage is where you look first, to
see at a glance THE MAIN STORY.
But then to be able to delve deeper in, if you want to, you can peruse the wings
and also see what's going on down at the Tape Measure of Time.
[See Photo Four and Five
in Picture Gallery]
How
much research was involved with the book and did you have any support with
that?
When
I’m making picture books, sometimes I am creating artwork, and have worked out
most of the story-telling and the layouts. At these times the listening-and-words
part of my brain is at liberty to listen to things – in fact sometimes I really
NEED to listen to things to keep on persisting at making pictures. I developed a
massive thirst for all online lectures, podcasts, radio broadcasts– about
things prehistoric. (In Our time on Radio 4 has brilliant prehistoric
broadcasts in its archive!) So I had an overview of what my ‘scenes’ could be.
I took a copy of Richard Fortey’s LIFE – An Unauthorised Biography on
holiday & scribbled on it. Making the final storyboard – I had to be sure I
was telling the right story. But places to find information are infinite, it
wouldn’t be possible to read up everything there is to know. I ended up with a
shortlist of my go-to books: about 5 books for adults, and also about three
go-to children’s illustrated information books. And lots and lots of Wikipedia.
At the next stage, when I thought I’d worked out what to say: a few friendly
expert fact checker professors helped, and another level of Puffin in-house
fact checkers. But you can never get everything right and the science changes,
as we see deeper in, as it should.
Were
there any facts which particularly surprised and stuck with you?
[See
Photo Six in Picture Gallery]
So
many! It’s amazing and terrifying that life on Earth has been REALLY close to
being snuffed out (the worst: 251 MYA). How the Earth has often been a TERRIBLE
place to live in the past – (possibly even trying to get rid of life, you could
suspect…) There have been huge volcanic lava outpourings, there have been
tremendous freezes, there have been times when the ocean became anoxic and
hostile to life. There’s also just how extremely bizarre animals of even not so
long ago are: for example, the chalicotherium was an unholy mammal mash-up of a
horse and a gorilla – it just looks all wrong! There is the almost accidental
way one animal group takes over from another after a mass extinction: mammal-relatives (therapsids) were poised to
dominate Earth 270 million years ago, but it was ultimately dinosaurs who kept
the mammals small and in the shadows until that fateful asteroid impact 66
million years ago. But also dizzying is the incredible recentness of humans,
and the extremely nice climate we happen to find ourselves in (compared to a
lot of the past), and that our happy Holocene times (the last 10,000 years), on
my tape measure of time, is just the last one-tenth of the last millimetre.
[See
Photo Seven in Picture Gallery]
It’s
a huge and very exciting topic, do you think picture books are a useful means
for explaining big and complex ideas and if so what helps with that?
The
secret power of picture books – is to tell with pictures as well as words, and
pictures can tell big and complex ideas. But actually they show, not tell! I
hope with very visual pages, picture books can reach ‘reluctant readers’ and also
children excited by prehistoric content, who have a thirst for science. I think
giving children big numbers, long names, the actual facts – is something they
can handle. Picture books can make things visible and tangible.
Can
you tell us a bit about your technique for creating the book and the media you
used?
When
I was making the pages, I was building each scene as if it was a theatre set,
with actors, scenery and backdrops in layers. I’d work out the layouts with
loads of layers of tracing paper cut-outs that I could move around. I’d make
artwork for all my actors and scenery pieces separately, and then layer them up
in Photoshop in my theatre page framework. The fun challenge was inventing what
sort of puppetry Rod & Co might be using; there was quite a thrill in
making insects manipulate giant puppet insects (in the Carboniferous era). I
was also trying to hide jokes maybe for grown ups: eg in the Cambrian explosion
page, Brunhilda (beetle) and Edna (earwig) are trying to work out which way up
a creature goes: that creature is Hallucigenia. When it was discovered in the
Burgess Shale, it was so odd-looking that palaeontologists couldn’t work out
which appendages it walked on, and which were (maybe) for defence, and its name
reflected its very mind-bending puzzlingness.
[See
Photo Eight and Nine in Picture Gallery]
The
tape measure is a clever way to create a time, what was involved in mapping
events across such a huge span of time?
[See
Photo Ten in Picture Gallery]
There
were massive problems with mapping the entire 4.6 billion years. For the first
4 billion years, there’s no complex animal life. But on my scale of 1 million
years to 1 centimetre, this bit would be 40 metres long – right down the
street! But very luckily, after the dawning of complex animal life, about 600
million years ago, time becomes more mappable. The International Stratigraphy Chart
was invaluable! I discovered a lot of geological time periods last about 50
million years. (There’s usually some sort of extinction event that
differentiates the rock layers of different geological periods.) This was
incredibly useful and lucky, because my open book was going to be about 50cm
wide – so each spread I’d have 50 million years of timeline to play with. I had
to be careful not to overload the tape measure – so that meant a lot of thought
& research to work out what climate ‘story’ to tell on each spread. With
the Tape Measure I was trying to show: the date/time, earth’s changing climate,
earth’s changing continents, and snippets of the animals that were around at
the time, and introduce the geological eras. The Time Team use cocktail stick
animals and teeny road signs to mark out what’s going on.
[See
Photo Eleven and Twelve in Picture Gallery]
Are
there any other ideas for information topics which you’d love to approach?
How
there are so many amazing animals that didn’t get to appear enough in The
Greatest Show – for example: dimetrodon, therapsids, mad palaeocene mammals.
What would happen if Rod and the Troupe had a time machine instead of a tape
measure?
A
huge thank you to Mini Grey for a fascinating interview and to Puffin Book for
the opportunity. If you have enjoyed
reading about The Greatest Show on Earth, you may also be interested to
attend the YLG annual conference this year, Reading the Planet follow the link
for more information.
Picture
Gallery:
One: The Greatest Show on Earth
Two: Oxford Natural History Museum
Three: First Zig-Zag version of The Greatest
Show on Earth showing the
Timeline.
Four: A Pollocks Toy Theatre
Five: This page explains how to read the
book
Six: 251 million years ago – the End
Permian mass extinction
Seven: A chalicotherium – from the DK
Encyclopedia of Dinosaurs
Eight: Some of the pieces for making the Age
of Fish page
Nine: Hallucigenia
Ten: International Chronostratagraphic
Chart
Eleven: Tape Measure research
Twelve: Tape Measure