To help celebrate the
start of the 2023 Summer Reading Challenge, Ready Set Read, we are
delighted to welcome Robin Bennett
to the blog to discuss his own relationship with books, libraries, reading and
sports. Robin is the author of the wickedly
witty Stupendous Sports
series filled with fantastic facts published by Firefly Press.
I once went on a mini
pilgrimage to Hull University – to the library, to be precise … or to the
librarian, to be preciser.
‘I really like your work,
Mr Larkin.’ I said – a little more formally than intended – all at once hoping
I was addressing the poet himself and not some other tallish man in glasses.
He peered at me owlishly for a few moments then said, ‘Thank you … shhhh.’
As meeting your heroes
goes, this is not quite as exciting as the time Alexi Sayle and I stopped a
woman being attacked in a phone box in Soho but, still, I’m very fond of the
library encounter. Not least because his reaction was completely in character,
but also because it marked a time in my life when I finally started to fall in
love with reading.
When I was younger, I had stoutly resisted all overtures to get me to pick up a
book. This had mainly consisted of well-meaning relatives shoving copies of The Borrowers or Hornblower under my nose and
saying things along the lines of, ‘try this, Robin, it’s really good.’
Nothing wrong with that
approach but, between the ages of nought and eleven I couldn’t sit still, so
the thought of sitting still AND reading for more than a few minutes was
torture for me. I had nothing against being indoors, but I found that if I was
outside, I was much less likely to get shouted at for being annoying, so
outside it was.
This meant sport was my
thing, long before reading.
When reading did take hold
– a combination of moving to France, being friendless and French TV, which
sucked in the 80’s – I was disappointed to discover that there was very little
out there to read on sport. As in really read, not just dip into for tips and
stats. So, I moved on to more literary sorts of literature, which is how I
found myself standing about awkwardly in Hull Uni library a few years later.
Taking all this into
consideration, when I grew up and became a writer, one of my goals, alongside
finding a career that kept me out of trouble and (hopefully) not starving in a
ditch, was to write books for children who don’t necessarily like reading.
Funny helps, as does
short, as does illustrated. What is also effective are books that tell kids
about other things they also like doing – and might even help them do it better.
This is why I wanted to write the Stupendous
Sports and why I’m so grateful to Firefly Press for making it possible – and
to Matt Cherry for illustrating the books in the spirit they were intended.
We all know that in
fiction children want to see a version of themselves and this is also very much
the case with non-fiction.
The Summer Reading
Challenge and the decision to make it about sports and activities this year is
inspired: summer holidays and being outside – reading or running after a ball –
go hand in hand. And sporty kids rise to a challenge.
Well, not just the kids, because
I fully intend to get involved. For the launch of Cracking Cricket in August, I’m climbing up a mountain in
the Pyrenees so I can hopefully bowl a ball in Spain, so someone can hit it in
France and catch it in Andorra.
This summer there’s a lot to look forward to!
So
happy reading and happy playing.
A big thank you to Robin Bennett for the blog and to Graeme Williams for the opportunity.