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Posted By Jacob Hope,
03 July 2025
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We are
delighted to welcome George Kirk to the blog to discuss her exciting debut
picture book Bessie’s Bees.
George is a teacher, librarian and author living in East Lancashire with
a passion for creating normative representation of neurodiverse characters
in books for young readers. Her first picture book Bessie’s Bees published
by Templar, is a neurodiverse picture book with an ADHD girl at its centre.
You know
the saying …
“We
lose ourselves in books. We find ourselves there too.”
I bet you
do. I bet you love it.
But I don’t
agree with it!
Now don’t
get in a fluster and certainly don’t flap. Let me explain, and to do that let’s
start at the beginning…
‘George’s
head was full of bees, absolutely buzzing with them …”
I didn’t
know when I wrote my first draft of Bessie’s Bees that it was a
neurodiverse picture book- I suspected, but I wasn’t sure.
Having a
head full of bees was something I just used to say. One of those things I
thought that everyone felt sometimes like ‘having your head in the clouds’.
Only for me it wasn’t just some of the time, it was all the time.
I was that girl who grew up covered in bruises
and scabs, whose laces were always undone and whose hair was always in
knots. The girl who could never sit
still, ever be quiet and certainly didn’t fit in, apart from one place… the
library.
I grew up so
close to my local library I wasn’t very old before I was allowed to start
taking myself. It was my first taste of
freedom, walking in by myself, choosing whichever books I wanted and escaping
into them. I could write you a long list of which books I chose right here,
right now, but there just isn’t time, so let’s skip ahead to…
My
secondary school, an old-fashioned pile something like Hogwarts that sadly
didn’t have the library to match. Just a little room of books that had been
long forgotten about so long you needed Indiana Jones to find it, or my friend
Oggy. Oggy offered to revamp and run it
for the lower years and quickly roped me and a few others in. Before long we
transformed it into a vibrant hub of activity and creativity. We raised funds to
buy fresh stock so now I wasn’t just choosing books for myself, I was doing it
for others too.
It was the
first time I felt really connected to a group of like-minded people and it
inspired my first attempt at a serious novel. ‘Og the Librarian’ followed the
misadventures of Og, pupil librarian driven to madness by overdue books who
took on a life of human cannibalism… I never did find a publisher for it.
Aren’t
words brilliant? In just a few I can transport you 15 years into my future,
through university, quite frankly dodgy early lessons of a career in primary
teaching and propel you to my days as a parent of babies and toddlers. It was
isolating, I was trying and failing to connect again so where did I go?
The
library! But now I wasn’t satisfied with
just reading stories, I wanted to tell my own too. And the library let me,
encouraged me, they even let me be… GASP… LOUD!
Now, if you
have been keeping count you’ll know there’s one more to go. I left teaching, I
loved it, but it didn’t love me. My mental health was suffering, and I was
struggling to do the one thing I felt driven to do, write. So, when 8 years ago
the job of Library Manager came up at my local Grammar School I jumped at it,
and thankfully they seemed pretty happy to catch.
Yet again I
found myself building up a lively community of young people, creating a space
where anyone and everyone who wanted could fit. Many of them had neurodiversions,
and I was recognising my younger self in them more and more. I was beginning to
suspect that maybe not everybody did have bees in their head after all. So, as
I poured this idea into a story, I put myself forward for assessment and
discovered I didn’t just have bees, I had ADHBEES! Or coexisting Autism and
ADHD to be precise.
I was now
sure beyond a doubt that Bessie’s Bees was a neurodiverse story. In fact
it was the one that I had needed to read when I first stepped into the local
library by myself all those years ago.
So,
remember that saying? The one you love?
This is how
I think it really should go…
‘We lose ourselves in books and we find
ourselves in the library.’
A big thank
you to George for a fascinating guest blog!
You can follow George on Instagram @GeorgeKirkTales.

Tags:
diversity
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neurodiversity
Picture books
picturebooks
reading
reading for pleasure
representation
school libraries
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Posted By Jacob Hope,
30 May 2025
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We are delighted to welcome talented and
versatile author-illustrator Yasmeen Ismail to the blog to introduce the books she
and her fellow judges chose to shortlist for this year’s Klaus Flugge Prize, and explains why the
award, which highlights debut illustrators, is so important.
I am always excited to be judging anything for a
variety of reasons. First up, there’s the fact that I get to have an opinion.
Then there’s the excitement of knowing the winners before anyone else does; the
look on the winners’ faces when they find out they’ve won; the awards ceremony;
the catering… Oh my!
The whole ritual around awards is so much fun, and it’s wonderful to be a part
of it, especially one as prestigious as the Klaus
Flugge Prize, because this award champions debut illustrators. There is
something particularly rewarding when you are celebrating a new talent.
As a judge I looked for several things in the illustrations. I wanted to see
how the illustrator handled the subject matter, how the pictures flowed and whether
the images added anything to the story or lifted the story to a different
level. I was, of course, also looking for illustrations that were aesthetically
pleasing. I was looking for something new and fresh in the illustration style.
For me it is not enough to just draw the pictures to match the story, I want to
see the pictures working with the story, looking beautiful and interesting, but
providing a depth of feeling, and being imaginative, playful, and
relatable.
I am always cheered when I receive books in the post and when I received this
longlist it was great to see such a variety from these new illustrators. Some
books were tackling very tough subject matter, others were more playful. It was
heartening to see so many different styles in all the debut books. This certainly
did make it trickier to judge, but there were some stand out winners whose
illustrations filled all my criteria and made my heart skip to boot.
When we did sit around the table to judge together, I think we all had some
favourites in mind. There were five of us on the judging panel - last year’s winner Kate Winter, my fellow
illustrator Bruce Ingman, early years expert Rachna Joshi and chair, Julia
Eccleshare, and we were all, thankfully, pretty much in agreement.
Mikey Please’s book, The Café at the Edge of the Woods, is so funny. The
illustrations of the ogre and Glumfoot made me laugh out loud. There was a real
atmosphere to the style of the illustrations, but most of all it was the humour
in the pictures that won me over. The whole thing feels very new and original.
Emma Farraron’s illustrations for Charlie Castles’ My Hair is as Long as a
River are so fresh. A real treat to see her loose style used with such
imagination. I really enjoyed her endpapers too, the use of colour is lovely. There’s
real imagination and fun in this book.
Finally, Rhian Stone’s illustrations for Frances Tosdevin’s book, Grandad’s
Star, are so moving and well executed. Not only are the illustrations
incredibly beautiful and well thought out, but they are also full of
emotion.
It’s so important to support new illustrators. Illustrating is a pretty
solitary endeavour, and it’s difficult to look objectively at the work you are
doing when you are doing it. Once a book is out there it’s sort of gone, and
unless you walk outside of your home or studio and demand an opinion (which has
its own perils), there’s no real way of knowing if your work holds any value in
the outside world. Awards provide that validation. Validation that your work
has been seen, looked at, considered, and enjoyed. Not only that, they
celebrate different books. Books that children may not have heard about, in a
world where only a handful of authors and illustrators are promoted. Awards
like the Klaus Flugge Prize give space to showcase something new, fresh,
exciting, and different. Books that we may not have noticed, but which deserve
to be in the spotlight.
Irish-born, Bristol-based Yasmeen
Ismail is an award-winning author, illustrator and animator. After
co-founding a successful animation production company, Yasmeen changed her
focus to writing and illustrating picture books. Her first picture book ‘Time
for Bed, Fred’ with Bloomsbury Publishing, won the V&A Best Illustrated
Book Award and The New York Times Best Illustrated Book award. It was
shortlisted for the Waterstones Children’s Book Prize, longlisted for the CILIP
Kate Greenaway Medal, and nominated for the National Cartoonists Society “Silver
Reuben” Award. Following the success of her debut picture book she has been
nominated for her other works many times since and has been selected by the
Society of Illustrators to have her work shown in the Original Art Exhibition
in New York six years in a row. Her most recent book is Meena’s Saturday
(Puffin), written by Kusum Mepani.
The books shortlisted for this year’s Klaus Flugge Prize are:
My Hair is as Long as a River illustrated by Emma
Farrarons, written by Charlie Castle (Macmillan)
The Café at the Edge of the Woods by Mikey Please
(HarperCollins Children’s Books)
Grandad’s Star illustrated by Rhian Stone, written by
Frances Tosdevin (Rocket Bird Books)
The winner will be announced on 11 September 2025. klausfluggeprize.co.uk
Image below shows Yasmeen Ismail, taken by Jake Green.
Big thanks to Yasmeen Ismail for such a
terrific blog and to Andrea Reece and the Klaus Flugge Prize for the
opportunity.

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Tags:
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Posted By Jacob Hope,
18 October 2023
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We are delighted to welcome author and illustrator David Barrow to our blog. David is the winner of the Sebastian Walker Award and his first book Have You Seen Elephant? Was shortlisted for the Waterstone’s Children’s Book Prize. In this lively, thought-provoking blog, David discusses the art of picture books and introduces his brilliant new book Have You Seen Dinosaur?
I love poring over a picture book, reading and rereading a story, constantly noticing new things. People sometimes think picture books are simple things, easy to write and easy to read. But with a picture book you only have 14 or so spreads to create a whole believable environment, with well-rounded engaging characters. It’s get in and get out. Bang!
Picture book makers use many tips and tricks to cram in unspoken details, to expand the world of the narrative, to create this illusion of a fully formed world in a short space of time. Readers may not notice, but the brain does – and children surely do.
Within the simple stories of a picture book, other more tacit storylines are taking place.
In my first book Have You Seen Elephant? I had no time to introduce my characters, the action needed to start immediately! But I was able to provide somewhat of a backstory through family portraits and photos presented in the background on the front and back endpapers. These give the reader insight into our protagonist and his family, so we may feel some connection to him from the get-go.
In The Liszts, a book by Kyo Maclear and illustrated by Júlia Sardà, each family member has their own page and one line of description. But the illustrations wholly elaborate on their characters, giving us a visual description of their psyche that transcends the text.
As a child I was captivated by the books of David McKee and Richard Scarry. So much is happening as we traverse Richard Scarry’s Busy, Busy Town. In David McKee’s Charlotte’s Piggy Bank, there are numerous visual subplots that run alongside the main story. Punks buy shoes, two people fall in love. None of this is important to the reader’s understanding of the tale being told. But their inclusion creates a viable, vibrant world, full of excitement and activity – it’s a world we can believe our characters actually live in.
Picture book makers direct readers’ emotions using colour, texture and composition. In The Hidden House (written by Martin Waddell and illustrated by Angela Barrett), three beautiful dolls are abandoned in a cottage in the woods when their maker passes away. As the house deteriorates, the colours shift from warm browns to cold blues to mirror the despondency of the dolls. Then when they are rediscovered by a new family, the images burst into vivid yellows and pinks and fill the page. These changes are subtle yet exponentially heighten the emotional impact of the story.
The concept of being aware of what is happening around us was a major consideration when I was writing Have You Seen Elephant? The protagonist’s implied obliviousness to the massive elephant in the room perhaps served to reward the reader for noticing the very big elephant.
It was an absurd exaggeration of the idea that you see more if you pay close attention (the dog always knows where to look).
In Have You Seen Dinosaur?, the new adventure for the main characters of child, elephant, and dog, I attempted to take this to the next level. This time, a whole city refuses to acknowledge the giant dinosaur roaming their streets. I guess it’s a metaphor for our inclination to get wrapped up in our own existence and miss what is happening all around us.
When we look at images in picture books it pays to recognise all the minutiae. The more we take notice, the more we get.
So, let’s start looking! Let’s get to meet the inhabitants and dive into the worlds that picture book makers create. Picture book makers love building these universes that exist within a small number of pages. We love providing readers with context, however subtle, to make readers’ many visits more enjoyable. The elephant – and now, the dinosaur – is right there to spot!
And they both love to be noticed.
Image Gallery
Image One: The Lizsts, Júlia Sardà
Image Two: Busy, Busy Town, Richard Scarry
Image Three: Charlotte's Piggy Bank, David McKee
Image Four: The Hidden House, illustrated by Angela Barrett, written by Martin Waddell
A big thank you to David Barrow for the guest blog and to Gecko Press for the opportunity

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Tags:
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Picture Books
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Posted By Jacob Hope,
01 July 2022
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We are hugely excited to welcome the incredibly talented
authors and illustrators James Mayhew and Jackie Morris to the blog to talk about their new
collaboration Mrs Noah’s Song, illustration, influences, music and
nature in a far-reaching and wide-ranging interview.
Please could you introduce us to Mrs Noah?
Jackie:
Mrs
Noah is a woman of few words, but great action. She is kind and gentle and
thinks for herself. She’s also a wise woman. She is a mother first and her
family mean the world to her, but/and her family includes all that is living,
from stone to tree to bird to bee to mythical creatures whose blood are stories.
James:
I
love the connection Mrs Noah has to nature, and her strength and
resourcefulness. What I love about her in this story is her vulnerability,
which we haven’t seen much of before. This story explores sadness, memory, and
what you leave behind when you migrate. At the same time, Mrs Noah is a
positive force, and through song she connects her family deeply in their new
land.
What was involved in building out the character of Mrs Noah?
Jackie:
There
are parallels between the story of Noah and Mrs Noah and the story in the
Bible, but they are most certainly not the same thing. Mrs Noah is a story of
migration, whilst the Bible story is one of apocalyptic vengeance, involving
the death of all life, except for the one chosen family. As a child I could
never understand why this story of extreme horror was told to children as a
cute ‘look at all the animals, two by two’. I saw all that was left out, all
who were drowned, punished and wiped from the face of the earth. Horror. Mrs
Noah may have an ark, a husband and lots of animals. The roots may have
sprouted from the Bible, but they all come from a place of love, not vengeance.
James:
I’m
always amused when people complain that this doesn’t follow the bible story! In
fact, Jackie was initially prompted to write the story after seeing my designs
for Benjamin Britten’s children’s opera Noye’s Fludde. This has a rather
irreverent Mrs Noah, who gets drunk, gossips and in one scene slaps Mr Noah -
and the text is from the Chester Miracle Plays, written down in the 13th
century! So the idea that Mrs Noah can only be one thing is absurd and has been
for centuries. Jackie version is the best of the lot, of course!
In this book Mrs Noah is teaching the children to sing.
How important do you think it is for children to sing and what benefits do you
think this brings?
Jackie:
Singing
it a beautiful thing, and the rights of the child to sing, to be heard, to
learn how music fits together and to find their own voice is of fundamental
importance to me. Through music children can learn so much about listening and
sharing.
James:
Children
are naturally musical. This fundamental means of communication seems incredibly
important to me, and I really don’t understand while music (and all the arts) are
sidelined in education. The benefits are huge: language, memory, collaboration,
confidence, storytelling, history, cultural differences, celebration, mourning,
joy and sorrow - and humour! It’s all there in song.
You’ve
both been involved with projects that bring music, stories and art together,
can you tell us about this and the impact of music on children?
James:
I’ve
been painting with musicians and orchestras for 15 years. It’s grown to become
a huge part of my professional practice and inspired my book Once Upon A
Tune. I work mostly in the classical world, restoring original tales to
music inspired by myths and legends, and illustrating live to underpin the
meaning of the music. It’s had a hugely response with family audiences who come
back year after year. But also, as an art/music workshop in the classroom, I’ve
been moved to see how many of the quiet, under confident children start to
shine. Autistic children, elective mutes, Down’s Syndrome children too, they
see to respond deeply to the music, and create and join in. It’s been
exceptionally rewarding.
I
was fortunate enough to see Jackie painting to music at the World premiere of Spell
Songs at Snape in Suffolk. This concert of folk music is inspired by her
collaboration with Robert McFarlane, The Lost Words (for which Jackie
won the Kate Greenaway medal). It was very special to be in the audience and
witness how art, words and music can intertwine so powerfully, so gracefully.
Jackie has gone on to tour all over the country, painting in beautiful inks and
casting her own spell. It’s funny we’ve both ended up enchanted and bewitched
by music, and song.
Are
there any particular pieces of music which especially resonate with you and do
you listen to music when writing and illustrating?
James:
When
I’m writing I need silence. When I’m illustrating I listen to all sorts of
music. I love any music that tells a story. I tend to listen to mostly
classical music, but I also have a big long of traditional folk songs from
other countries. I especially love
Spanish folk music - I have many records by a Spanish/Catalan soprano Victoria
de Los Angeles. Although she was best known as an opera singer, she was also
the first to record many traditional songs of Spain. What fascinates me is the
Arabic, Indian or Jewish influences on the songs, many written during the time
the Moors ruled Spain. The Arabesques in the music remind us that these are
songs that travelled from other cultures. Like Mrs Noah and her family, songs
migrate too!
In
the classical world, my biggest loves are Sibelius and Rimsky-Korsakov - they
were both “musical illustrators” creating wonderful images and stories in
sound.
Jackie,
how does it feel to write stories that are illustrated by somebody else?
I love writing for other illustrators, and it is always a
delight to see my words come to life in the paintings and collages. I would
love to do more. I would so love to write for Petr Horacek and Angela Barrett,
but then would have loved to have written for Brian Wildsmith and Pauline
Baynes.
James,
please can you tell us about the process and media you used for illustrating
Mrs Noah’s song?
This
is a technique I developed especially for the first Mrs Noah book. Essentially
it is collage, but it involves lots of printmaking too. I love printing and
lino-cutting, so I create often abstract linocuts and print them to create
interesting textures. These linos can be printed on all sorts of paper,
including music scores. other papers are painted, scribbled on, rubbed with
crayons etc. I them cut these up the create the images. Often an unexpected
decision is made - sometimes a paper will suggest something different to what
I’d intended. There is a huge amount of experiment and play, which I love.
Ultimately, my eye, my *vision* guides it all, but I constantly surprise
myself. Some small details are fiddly and difficult (and I may resort to
drawing for those), and it’s a time-consuming (all- consuming!) practice. It is
hard work. But I love that until every bit is glued, it can continually change.
The
depiction of nature and of light is beautiful and there’s a real sense of joy
and wonder in how children connect with nature and the environment around
them. Was nature important to you growing up and has it continued to be?
Jackie:
This seems like so strange a question. Without Nature we do
not exist, so, yes, it was important to my basic life support. It’s not a theme
park, it is life support. We are all connected, and humans are so small a part
of the natural, wild world. We just happen to be a very badly behaved part, who
need to take a good look at our place in the universe and re-establish our
focus on what is important. EVERY LIVING THING.
James:
One Spring, when I was about ten years old, I woke up in the
night, and decided to creep downstairs. I tiptoed through the kitchen and
unlocked the door. The sky was almost green, and the grass in the garden was
wet with dew. In our garden was a very old apple tree, big enough for a
hammock. There is a special magic about being somewhere you shouldn’t,
especially when the rest of the world is asleep. I lay in the hammock and
watched the sky change. One by one the birds awoke, singing their little hearts
out, louder and louder! A thrilling sound, bursting with life and music; an
exultation. It was transcendent and never forgotten: my first drawn chorus.
When I first chatted to Jackie Morris about her ideas for Mrs
Noah’s Song, I described this memory. She very generously wove it into the
story. When she first read it, I cried. It touched on something very deep
inside - obviously my memory, but also something more - the beauty of the
natural world, so often smothered in mankind’s noise, or threatened with
environmental damage. But it also spoke of the power of music, of the arts, and
of communication, and sharing.
I grew up in the country, in a tiny village in Suffolk. There
was nothing else there *except* Nature. Perhaps I take that immersion in the
natural world for granted? I don’t know. It was a very simple, very ordinary
childhood in many ways. It wasn’t an idyll. But I learned huge respect for
nature, for weather. In Suffolk, the skies and sunsets were astonishing. As an
adult, going out into the world, it’s been quite demoralising to see what the
human race has done to the planet - the roads, the cities, the trashing of
Nature. Five years ago, I moved back to Suffolk. It called me home, and I
couldn’t be happier. I need to be near woodland, river and birdsong.
A big thank you to James Mayhew and
Jackie Morris for the interview and to Tatti de Jersey and Otter-Barry Books
for the opportunity. The Youth Libraries
Group annual conference this year focuses around nature and the environment, Reading
the Planet. To find out more visit here.
Photos: James Mayhew by respira fotografia; Jackie Morris by Elly Lucas

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Posted By Jacob Hope,
12 August 2021
|
We are delighted to welcome author and illustrator Debi
Gliori to the blog to introduce her new picturebook A Cat Called Waverley. Debi studied illustration at Edinburgh
College of Art and has been awarded an honorary Doctor of Letters by
Strathclyde University. Debi has won the
Red House Children’s Book Award and has twice been shortlisted for the Kate
Greenaway Medal. Debi will be talking more about the highly affecting and important picturebook A Cat Called Waverley at the Youth Libraries Group annual conference
this year – Representations
of Place: New Lands and New Ways of Looking.
Some years ago, I visited a library in Glasgow to lead
a storytelling session with an invited primary school class. Before the
children arrived, the librarian showed me to the staffroom to drop my bags, and
apologised in advance for the smell which, she said, was particularly
noticeable in the ladies’ bathroom. She explained that in the colder parts of
the year, the library was much prized by the local homeless population. She
tilted her head to indicate where a few people sat slumped in forgotten corners
of the library, dozing behind newspapers in the quiet warmth of the reading
room. The librarian added in a whisper, they sleep here all day, waiting for
their laundry to dry. Seeing my puzzled expression, the librarian continued;
they wash their underclothes in the bathroom sinks, then drape them across the
large Victorian radiators to dry. Imagine.
Indeed. Imagine that your life underwent an unforeseen
and catastrophic shift. Imagine having to rely on the kindness of strangers for
your survival. Imagine being blamed or shamed for allowing such a fate to
befall you. Imagine having no agency, no voice, no vote and no sanctuary for
when the winter comes. Back then, all those years ago in Glasgow, I chose not
to imagine how appalling such a life would be. I had children to raise, books
to write and, heavens, a class of seven-year-olds trooping into the library,
wrinkling up their noses and loudly complaining about the smell.
Many years later, in an older and hopefully more
empathetic version of myself, I met the human subject of my book A Cat
Called Waverley; a homeless war veteran called Darren Greenfield. In my
desire to devise a way to help him off the streets of Edinburgh without turning
him into the subject of some well-intentioned children’s writer’s charity, I
wove Darren’s life into a fictional tale of a war veteran and his faithful cat,
Waverley. I hoped not only to highlight how easy it is to fall into
homelessness, but also to begin a conversation with children, to shed light on
this grotesque state of affairs that wilfully allows our fellow-humans to live
without shelter on the streets of our cities. I also wanted to say to Darren -
you matter. Your life story matters. It is wrong and unjust that you live on
the streets while we live in houses, and hopefully this book will help ensure
that such inequality becomes a thing of the past.
For many of us, the main point of contact we have with
our homeless fellow-citizens is when we see them asking passing strangers for
money on the streets of towns and cities around the UK. Or, when leafing
through the broadsheet press, we encounter an advert exhorting us to give
generously to one of the charities set up to support homeless people. Sadly,
when most of us hear the word ‘homeless’ it doesn’t prompt a surge of empathy
or engender more than the faintest wisp of fellow-feeling. Most of us have no
direct experience of what it means to have nowhere to call ‘home’.
Whether this lack of empathy is a failure of
imagination or a deliberate turning away is immaterial; it results in the same
thing. We place a few coins in the outstretched hand and walk on by. We take a
deep breath and turn the page. We blank out this unpleasant part of the reality
of 21stC life. Moreover, we continue to vote for political parties that not
only allow our fellow humans to live on the streets, but whose policies appear
to actively encourage a moral climate where homelessness is commonplace. We are
encouraged to demonise the unfortunate, to categorise people into strivers and
shirkers and thus avoid any responsibility for our common weal. It’s an all-too
common story, our collective blindness to inequalities and our morally
deficient reluctance to step in to rewrite this potentially disastrous story
arc.
Darren Greenfield’s story ended on the streets of
Edinburgh. After several years he slipped through the inadequate net of social
provisions we extend to our homeless fellow-humans. The news cycle paid brief
attention. One more homeless person died on the streets of a first world city.
Next?
With the ability to turn the world around me into a
story, I’d managed to make over seventy books without once touching on the
subject of homelessness. Until Darren. Mainly, I suspect, because I correctly
guessed that such a book might not only be difficult to conceive and
illustrate, but also that it could be tricky to find a publisher for such a
project. I am delighted that not only did A Cat Called Waverley find an
empathetic and principled publisher, but it also found the best home imaginable
with Otter-Barry Books. Some stories do have a happy ending.
A big thank you to Debi Gliori for the blog
and to Otter-Barry Books for the opportunity.

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Tags:
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Kate Greenaway
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Visual Literacy
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Posted By Jacob Hope,
26 May 2021
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Eva
Eland grew up in Delft, Netherlands. She studied at the School of Visual Arts
in New York as well as at the Cambridge School of Art, where she received a
distinction in children’s book illustration. Eva won the 2020 Klaus Flugge
Prize with When Sadness Comes to Call, which also won a V&A
award, book cover category. Where
Happiness Begins was published in 2020.
With
such a broad range of illustrations and all the different approaches to
storytelling in the longlist of this year’s Klaus Flugge Prize - the prize for
the most exciting newcomer in picture books - it has been very inspiring for me
to delve into and analyse the books. The shortlist contains five very
distinctive books, that feel fresh, original and demonstrate a high standard of
work. Parents, children and book lovers in general are lucky with all the new picture
books they can choose from these days.
The
fact that the books and illustrations are very different from each other in how
they look and what they accomplish, reminds me of just how many functions a
book can have. Picture books can be these beautiful and rich objects we can
share with each other, talk about, enjoy and be comforted by. They can invite
us to reflect on our life, our relationships and put our feelings into words
and images, giving us the vocabulary we might need to deal with some of the
more complicated issues in life. They can offer an escape and stir our
imagination, make us wonder and test our own understanding of the world and our
preconceived ideas. Some might even encourage us to be brave, as they remind us
of the things that truly matter and that we can always return home.
Illustration,
and especially the space between text and image and how they relate to each
other, has such a vital importance to bring all these elements out in a book.
It can build worlds for the words to live in. For children, a picture book can
be their first encounter with art and art, in turn, I think, can help stimulate
an appreciation for the beauty that can be found all around us. An appreciation
that will enrich our lives and help to cultivate a sense of childlike wonder.
To
have a prize that is focused on illustration alone, and that encourages new
talent by celebrating their work and giving them more visibility, is hugely
important in a time where so many new books get published every year, and new makers
might otherwise get lost.
The
longlist for the Klaus Flugge Prize is well worth perusing, as each of the
books has their own story to tell and there are some exceptional and original
new voices in illustration that I’m sure we will see more of in the future.
From
these books, five of them stood out in particular, and make up this year's
shortlist.
My
Red Hat by
Rachel Stubbs is a tender tale, full of love, showing the relationship
between a grandfather and child. They share stories, adventures and dreams
together and we get a sense of all the things that a grandparent might want to
pass down to their grandchild, and the encouragement they can offer to go and
discover the world on their own. This story unfolds in a very organic way and at
a gentle pace, from spread to spread, with the red hat as a visual and thematic
thread holding the words and images together. The unusual landscape format and
the hand drawn typography fit the story and the illustrations perfectly.
Rachel
Stubbs cleverly depicts childhood, with all its ups and downs, and the moments when
you might get lost but are found again and return home, ‘to where you belong’.
The looseness of the marks and the delicate lines add to the gentle and
imaginative atmosphere and the limited colour palette gives it that extra
nostalgic flavour, cherishing the innocence of childhood and the special bond
that can exist between child and grandparent.
A
book that stands out for its very original approach to the illustrations is While
You’re Sleeping, illustrated by John Broadley and written by Mick
Jackson. The book takes us through a night and its creatures, workers and
wanderers. With its absence of a story arch or protagonist, there is a
consistency and rhythm to the words and images that could work like the perfect
bedtime lullaby.
The
bold lines, limited colour palette and collage of patterns are reminiscent of the great English
print-makers of the thirties and forties like Eric Ravilious and Edward Bawden,
yet it feels utterly unique and there is an otherworldly quality to the
artwork, with its wonky perspectives and stiff characters, adding a layer of
mystery to this whole different world that seems to emerge at night.
The
way the light is depicted in this book caught my eye - for the dark nighttime
spreads we see beams of yellow light, with the indoor spaces like the hospital
using the white of the page to indicate brightly lit spaces. Time passes slowly
in this busy night, with clever transitions from the left hand to the right
hand page, some compositions framed by walls and lamp posts, and other spreads
bleeding off the borders creating a sense of vastness and timelessness. Though
this book doesn’t tell a conventional story, it leaves you with a lot of
threads of little narratives and a diverse range of characters you could make
your own stories for. The illustrations are so rich with detail, that you will
have plenty of room to meander through this book, and its night, and wonder
about all the different lives that people are living simultaneously, and maybe
in doing so, one might slowly drift away to sleep.
I was
immediately drawn to the painterly and colourful illustrations by Charlotte
Ager for Child of Galaxies, written by Blake Nuto. I was already
familiar with her work, and it was interesting to see how she managed to bring
her world and visual vocabulary to this text, and give a lot of abstract and
big ideas a sense of place to simmer, allowing them to expand their meaning
further. The fluid quality of the textures, marks and sketchy pencil lines,
combined with a changing colour palette that help shift moods and meaning, fit
the poetic text perfectly. Sometimes the words are paired with bold
compositions, using what looks like collage with painted paper, or using the
very spacious white of the paper itself, creating a lot of room for
interpretation. Other times the text is accompanied by a more sensitive and
emotive image, with shades of a limited colour palette and directional painted
marks, or, for example, looming tree figures that frame a child. Scale,
colours, textures and mark making are used to great effect by Charlotte Ager.
The meditation on nature and the beauty all around in the illustrations, even
when ‘shadows persist’, will offer the reader a lot of opportunities to reflect
on the abstract ideas the text offers.The diverse range of characters makes
this book feel inclusive and directed to all of us, just like the text reminds
us we’re all made ‘from the stuff of the stars’.
Gustavo,
the Shy Ghost is
a classic story in its essence, about a shy little ghost wanting to make
friends, who overcomes his own fear and reaches out. A story that will be
relatable and comforting for those who experience similar shyness and
insecurities (though I bet at times we all have a little bit of Gustavo in us
and will recognise the universal fear of not being seen and invited to play).
It’s hard not to like this character or not identify with the moments of
longing and hesitation (oh, just imagine the anguish of missing a good
opportunity like getting ‘eye-scream’ because you were too shy! Or wanting
to get close to the girl you love but not knowing how to make yourself
noticed).
This
book is filled with details, textures, references and full of the strangest,
yet adorable, creatures, that reappear throughout the book, with a lot to
discover on each spread, making this book a joy to read and I imagine one to
read again and again, reminding little ones that they are not alone.
The
structure of the story and the pairing of text and image are very well crafted,
there is not a word too much, and though the images are full of details to be
enjoyed, it never feels cluttered or distracting, which is a remarkable feat.
There is a strong sense of place, grounded in warm and muted colours, with
Mexican influences and many references to The Day of the Dead, classic horror
films and monsters. The palette of muted colours contrasted with warm orange
and Mexican pink, and clever use of negative space as well, are integral to the
storytelling and add to the sense of drama, and calm, where needed. Everything
in this book, from cover to the final end papers, appears to be very
considered, yet there is a light and playful touch that feels very generous and
authentic, and Flavia Z Drago, not unlike Gustavo playing the violin, seems to
reach out to us, the reader, by sharing her passion for illustration,
storytelling and monsters, uncovering some of our deepest fears and longings
with this very universal story.
I’m
Sticking with You,
illustrated by Steve Small and written by Smriti Halls is a character
driven story, exploring friendship and the push and pull we can sometimes
experience within relationships, especially with those people that are so very
different to ourselves.
Bear
and squirrel are very loveable characters, and Steve Small has allowed himself
to zoom in on them, using only minimal background elements and props to nudge
the story along, on otherwise crisp, white pages. The disparity between text
and image is where the story is told and where the deadpan humour lays. The timing, scale and
body language of the characters are always spot on, adding to the comedy and
betraying Steve Small’s background in animation. There is a lovely twist in the
book, emphasised by using a black background, and a change of direction to
where the characters are going. Here we finally get to see and read the
perspective of squirrel, who, after announcing he needs more space, actually
misses his overBEARing friend a lot. An almost empty page shows his sudden
understanding, and creates a very effective pause before he rushes back and we
near the end of this story.
Looking
at all these shortlisted books and seeing the different ways in which they
excel and exemplify what illustration can do, reassures me that there are so many
ways to tell a story, and so many stories to tell still. But also just how
important it is to cultivate your own, unique (visual) storytelling voice as a
picture book maker. The essence of the stories might not be new in any way -
but the ways they are told feel original and personal, and give the reader the
possibility to connect with the story, ideas and characters. I can’t wait to
see what Steve Small, Flavia Z Drago, Charlotte Ager, John Broadly and Rachel
Stubbs have in store for us in the future.
Find
out more about the Klaus Flugge Prize on the website.
Do check out the picture gallery below showing:
Cover illustration and spreads for My Red Hat
Cover illustration and spreads for While You Are Sleeping
Cover illustration and spreads for Gustavo the Ghost
Cover illustration and spreads for I'm Sticking with You
Photograph of Eva Eland, copyright Signefotar
A big thank you to Eva Eland for a fantastic blog overview and to the Klaus Flugge Prize for the opportunity.

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Posted By Jacob Hope,
11 May 2021
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It’s a privilege to be joined on the blog
by Nicola Davies,
Jackie Morris
and Cathy Fisher to talk about their books and, in
particular, their stunning illustrations. Later this month, they will be
discussing their creative practices and the importance of the natural world as
part of two exciting free events, live from Jackie’s kitchen: ‘Picture Perfect’ and ‘Marking the Page’.
Nicola, Jackie and Cathy – welcome and
thank you for taking the time to join us on the blog.
Your books are
absolutely stunning, not only in terms of the illustrations, but also the
perceptive use of vocabulary and the additional imagery they conjure in the
mind of the reader. In your opinion, what makes picture books so special?
Nicola:
SOOO many things! Picture books are a unique art
form very undervalued and underestimated by most adults. They can speak about
the most complex and difficult issues in ways that reach out across barriers of
age and culture. The subtle marriage of picture and words communicates through
mind and heart and makes a sum much greater than its two parts. We focus so
much on literacy that we forget about that other very important kind, visual
literacy, and the way information and emotion can be carried pictorially. I
would argue very strongly for schools and parents to keep reading picture books
to children - and adults - across all ages.
Cathy: Picture books are absolutely vital. I’ve been very lucky
to illustrate Nicola’s stories as all her stories are fabulous, inspiring, beautifully
written, thoughtful and have important messages. Good pictures add layers of
visual narrative and meaning to a story and can make it more accessible. Good
picture books for young children are the beginning of a love for stories, a
growing imagination, a love for reading and appreciation for art - all vital
for our well-being.
Jackie:
It’s the space between the images and words, where the reader lives, with their
imagination. That’s what makes the picture book a special country to visit.
As a society, we view picture books as being
predominantly for young children yet your work seems to challenge this concept.
Are picture books just for children or are they as equally important across all
generations?
Jackie: Picture books are
for anyone who wishes to read them. They can deal with challenging subjects,
leaving space for conversations to arise around them. In many ways they are art
books, or the best of them are anyway.
Nicola:
Picture books speak across ages. They cut out the noise and get to the heart of
what really matters. The Day War Came was used to lobby MPs who
had voted against the Dubs Amendment; just as children’s clear sense of
fairness sometimes calls adult morality to account, so picture books can offer
a clear lens through which we can all see the world as it is and how it could
and should be.
Cathy: It’s my belief that picture books should be for all
ages. I wish there were more good picture books for young and old. As an
illustrator I don’t think pictures for a story should be trivialised or over
simplified for young children - ’dumbing down’ an illustration is an insult to
their intelligence.
Nicola, as an author, many of your
books include sensitive and important messages, not just about the natural
world but also about emotional experiences. Perfect addresses
disability, The Pond focuses on the loss of a loved one, The New Girl
depicts exclusion and acceptance, whilst Last awakens readers to the
importance of extinction and conservation. Why has it been so important to you
to utilise the picture book format to portray these stories?
Children are often
excluded from conversations about big things, things that affect their lives.
Adults exclude them to protect children from the darkness of the world, but
also to protect themselves from having to explain and discuss uncomfortable
things. I experienced this as a small child and it was incredibly distressing. So,
I’m passionate about openness and inclusion for children. I hope what my books
do is open up conversations, support adults to talk with their children and
support children to understand and to ask questions. All things can be talked
about if you have the right context, framework and language - fears, shames,
terrors, monsters, mysteries – they are all better brought into the light and
looked at, especially if you have a story to hold your hand.
When you
get the first seed of an idea, how do you nurture and develop it into a
finished project? Does your creative process focus entirely on the book and the
message you want to convey or do you have external influences on the direction
of the piece?
Nicola: Sometimes it just
comes. I cook it quietly, almost sub consciously, and then the finished text
arrives in a very short time; The Promise, Last, The
Day War Came, The Pond and Perfect all came that way. But
with others like Grow and Lots, where complex
science has to be distilled, the process is much longer. The hardest thing with
those books is finding the thread, the single most important message that the
books must deliver and the idea, image or concept that delivers it. Sometimes
that takes weeks and lots of very, very careful word by word construction. As
for external influences - well the problem with non-fiction is that everybody
has an opinion so the editorial process can be excruciating!
Jackie:
All my writing and painting revolves around either trying to tell a story or
trying to understand something. It’s my way of investigating things, from the
shape of a kingfisher, it’s colour, its flight, to the
meaning of death and loss; apart from Can You See a Little Bear?
and the Classic Nursery Rhymes book, which are both just fun.
Cathy, your
illustrations are so full of emotion and understanding for the experiences of
the characters. I was particularly drawn to the illustration of anger and grief
in The Pond when the young boy ran upstairs screaming at his Dad for
dying. Similarly, in Perfect there is the sense of frustration in the
imagery when the boy realises the new baby isn’t as he expected. What
techniques do you use in your illustrative process to achieve this?
I am only interested in illustrating pictures
for stories that are beautifully written and inclusive, which open minds and
hearts and offer shared conversation for children, adults, parents, and teachers.
Books that bring comfort, are supportive, give insight and help readers to express
emotions that are often hard to talk about - books that inspire. I pour my own emotions
into the pictures. I use colour, layers of tone and texture and the body
language of characters in the stories to express emotion and atmosphere.
Jackie, The Lost Words was awarded the Kate Greenaway medal in 2019 and was
also recognised as the most beautiful book of the year by UK
booksellers. It is a collaboration with Robert Macfarlane about the loss of
nature words from the lives of children, but has become a much larger
discussion on the loss of nature to the whole of society. The large-format and
style of the book is exquisite and emphasises not only the spell-like qualities of the poetry inside but also that
books like this should be on proud display. What techniques did you use in your
illustrative process when developing the book and why do you think it has been
so successfully received, not just by the Greenaway judging panel, booksellers
and children but by society as a whole?
The illustrations are
worked in watercolour and gold leaf. Each piece was
worked as a soul song to the very best of my ability at the time. A soul song.
Why it caught in the minds and imaginations of others I can’t say but it is an honour to have one’s work recognised and our readers have
taught us many things and told us many stories about our book. The only thing I
can do is to continue trying to do the best that I can. I learn from each
painting and hope to improve each time. I love to play with different ideas and
materials.
The
mission of the Carnegie and Greenaway awards is to ‘inspire and empower the
next generation to create a better world through books and reading’,
something which all of your books do through intricate illustration and
powerful, yet accessible narrative. By creating connections to the natural
environment in young children, what impact do you hope to have on the future?
Nicola: Well
of course I want to bring down the patriarchy and bring about a green
revolution! What I hope is that my work is quietly but significantly
subversive, strengthening children’s innate fascination with nature, giving
them a connection that offers them personal solace and perhaps, just perhaps,
inspiring them to become advocates for the natural world. I need to do more. I
feel I can never do enough. I have a new novel for older children coming out in
November that I hope will more directly inspire green action and change through
approaching the subject of capitalism’s assaults on the natural world in clear
allegory.
Jackie: It’s an influence on
the now that I am after, not the future. I hope that children will show their
parents the books, spend time in the pages, then go out into the world and realise what we stand to lose if we continue to live the way we do.
As well
as a shared passion for creating beautiful and profound works of art, you are
all very good friends. How does your friendship contribute to the work you
produce?
Cathy:
I met Nicola because she asked me to
illustrate Perfect after seeing one of my pictures. I loved her
straight away. I met Jackie through Nicola and loved her straight away too.
They are incredible women - deeply imaginative, creative, skilled,
knowledgeable, thoughtful, supportive, perceptive, brilliant women.
Illustrating their stories, working with them, being in a bubble during
lockdown, has influenced my artwork and makes me feel very blessed.
Nicola: Jackie and Cathy
are my first audience for things, nearly always. Cathy’s work directly inspires
the words I write for her and Jackie’s clear divergent thinking often sparks
new thoughts and ideas. We support each other. Publishing is no bed of roses,
especially for women and especially for women who are older, who don’t live in
London and who do not have sharp elbows. So, we fight for each other when we
are not able to fight for ourselves. And we laugh and walk and talk – it’s
wonderful to have such friends, such colleagues, such soul mates.
Jackie: We might get more
work done if we weren’t such good friends, but it wouldn’t have the heart that
it does. The support of friends is what you need in life, in work, always.
I know
you are all busy working on lots of incredible projects – what can we look forward
to next?
Nicola: I
have a new novel The Song That Sings Us (with Jackie’s cover!)
coming out in the Autumn. I’m going to work hard to publicise it because it
delivers a message about our need to prioritise nature that I really want
people to hear. I’m also starting work on an opera based on The Promise.
I have a collection of poems three quarters finished for Petr Horacek – I’m
writing to his pictures which is a fabulous way to work. The book is going to
be wonderful and will really show off Petr's extraordinary art.
Jackie: I’m working on a Book
of Birds with Robert Macfarlane and working with Spellsongs
on the next album, with a tour coming up in January, all things being well. I
have two backlisted titles coming out in October - East of the Sun, West
of the Moon and The Wild Swans. I am also still finishing
Feather, Leaf Bark & Stone and James (Mayhew) is illustrating
Mrs Noah’s Garden. Meanwhile, I have a few illustrations to do
for Nicola’s The Song that Sings Us, and a two-book contract with
Cathy.
Join Nicola, Jackie and Cathy for ‘Picture Perfect’ and ‘Marking the Page’.
Presented by Lancaster LitFest
in partnership with Graffeg Books, and hosted by Jake Hope,
these events will delight those with an interest in illustration, nature and
children’s books, whilst being of particular interest to the Kate Greenaway
shadowing groups.
‘Picture Perfect’ is on Thursday 20 May at 12.30pm, whilst ‘Marking the Page’ is on Friday 21 May at 7.30pm.
A big thank you to Nicola Davies, Cathy Fisher and Jackie Morris for the interview, to Graffeg for the opportunity and to Laura Jones for conducting this.

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Posted By Jacob Hope,
07 May 2021
|
We are delighted to welcome Laura Mucha to the blog. Laura is an ex-lawyer turned award-winning poet, writer and advocate for children. Laura's debut poetry collection, Dear Ugly Sisters, was named as one of the Independent's top ten poetry books for children. Rita's Rabbit is her first picturebook. Here Laura reflects on parenthood in and outside of books.
As
a child it was hard not to compare myself to people with two parents – EVERYONE
else seemed to have them. It wasn't just the people around me, it was the
adverts, books, films, TV programs, French classes where, for years, we were
asked to describe what our mother and father did. (I lied. Not least because my
French wasn’t good enough age 11 to say “Actually
I haven’t met my father, so I cannot confirm what his current profession is –
or if he is even alive. But I can tell you about my grandfather, who I call Dad?”)
It
made me feel like an outsider, inferior, shameful. While that undoubtedly helped
me develop empathy for others, it could also be uncomfortable and sad.
I
remember one of my teachers telling the entire class that single parent
families were inferior to those with two – hers is a common view. But it’s not
backed up by evidence. While single parents can fare worse than double parent
families, when you account for the impact of poverty, this difference dwindles. Given single parents are far
more likely to be poor, it’s unsurprising we
conflate the two.
In
fact, staying single can be a hugely positive choice. I interviewed a father
from Sri Lanka who decided to stay single after his wife died in her 40s,
leaving him with three children under twelve. “I could have settled with somebody,” Kumar explained, ”but I needed to do something for my
children: I had to show fatherly and motherly love because they wouldn’t know
their mother’s love. Love contributes a lot in life… it’s what you take on
board to your future.”
Swathes
of research across multiple disciplines show Kumar was right – it is love that
we take with us. And sometimes choosing to stay single is the best way to ensure
that children feel that love. In some circumstances, children in step-families are psychologically
worse off than children with single parents. And in the Harvard Bereavement Study
(which followed parents and children for years following their loss), children
whose parents dated in the first year after losing their partner had more
emotional or behavioural problems (among other difficulties) than those whose
parents stayed single.
So
why, then, is single parenthood, or any deviation from the two parent family stigmatised?
Why don’t we see single parents more frequently and, crucially, more positively
in children’s literature? It’s easier to understand why writers like Judith
Kerr featured families with two parents and two children because of the time in
which she was writing. But surely we are wiser now?
Maybe
not.
As
far as I’m aware, there’s no research exploring whether children see their
family situation reflected in the books they read. But in 2020, 58,346
children and young people were asked by the National Literacy Trust whether
they saw themselves in the books they read. 37.3% of those that received free
school meals didn’t. (The number was slightly lower for those who do pay for
meals, at 31.9%.)
I’m
not surprised. Taking picture books as an example – whenever they include any
sort of caregiver, there are two parents, usually white and living in a house with
a garden. Yet this doesn’t represent 20% of people in England who live in flats
(more likely to be those from ethnic minorities and/or living in poverty), and 14.7% of single parent
families in the UK.
Given
single parent families are significantly more likely to live in poverty and poverty is linked with
lower levels of literacy, children in these
households are precisely the demographic that we need to support. Surely being
able to see themselves in the books they’re reading is fundamental to that?
So,
as well as ranting in blogposts, I make a point of writing about growing-up in non-traditional
family structures. Sometimes that means being explicit and exploring what that felt
like as a child (as in my poem, Everyone[10]),
sometimes it means depicting everyday scenes where a mother and/or father
aren’t part of the household. In Rita’s
Rabbit, for example, the two main (human) characters are Rita and her
grandfather.
But
when I shared Rita’s Rabbit with a
number of brilliant and intelligent people, their feedback was, “Isn’t it weird that her parents aren’t there?
What, are they on holiday?”
No.
Not everyone grows up with two parents. Some only have one. Some have two but one
is highly abusive and it’s not safe to stay in touch. Some have none and live
with family members. Some live in foster care or institutions.
We
know this. We have robust stats that show this represents a significant percentage
of children – both here and around the world. And yet, how often do these
children see the two parent family portrayed as the norm, to which they and
everyone should aspire? How often do they compare themselves to this norm and
find themselves lacking?
How
often do they see themselves in the books they read?
A big thank you to Laura for the blog and to Faber for the opportunity.
Amato PR, Keith B. Parental divorce
and the well-being of children: a meta-analysis. Psychol Bull. 1991
Jul;110(1):26-46.

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Posted By Jacob Hope,
15 April 2021
|
We are delighted to welcome Rachel Ip, author of The Last Garden to the blog to talk about the horticultural inspirations behind the book.
I wrote The Last Garden after reading about real gardens made in
wartime and conflict. By their very nature, these gardens are not
always documented or recorded, and I hope The Last Garden can shine a
light on the incredible true stories behind them.
The Last Garden follows the story of a little girl who tends the last garden in a
war-torn city. As the city breaks, everyone is forced to leave and soon
the girl must leave her beautiful garden behind. Though the garden is empty and
alone, its seeds scatter throughout the city and roots begin to take hold.
Slowly, as people return, the city begins to bloom again, and the girl
comes home to her garden.
The research
War gardens (or conflict gardens as they’re
sometimes called) have existed all over the world, some created by individuals,
some bringing whole communities together. Initially
inspired by news articles about gardens in Syria, I started researching
historical and contemporary conflict gardens.
I contacted the Imperial War Museum and spoke to their photography
archivists. I searched their online catalogues for historical photos and
trawled written records of photos that were yet to be digitised. I also
contacted the Royal Horticultural Society, and searched their incredible photography
archive in London.
I found gardens on rooftops and windowsills, in school grounds and in
bomb craters. From camp and prison gardens in Singapore to peacebuilding
gardens in Sudan, from the gardens in Polish and Lithuanian ghettos of WWII to victory
gardens across the UK, US and Canada, these gardens each have their own unique
story.
In Hong Kong, where I live, prisoners in WWII
planted gardens on the rooftop of Stanley prison, smuggling seeds from their
food rations. In the UK, “Open spaces
everywhere were transformed into allotments, from domestic gardens to public
parks – even the lawns outside the Tower of London were turned into vegetable
patches.”[1]
The Great
Escape
In a prison camp in Germany in WWII,
prisoners dug tunnels to escape the camp and concealed the tunnel dirt by
working it into the soil of the garden. “While providing a long-term source of
food and activity for prisoners, gardening also ironically cultivated the hope
of escape by providing a cover for those intent on tunnelling out.”[2] This
may sound like a familiar story, as it was later made into the film: The Great
Escape.
Hope and
optimism
Gardens are uniquely hopeful. The very act of
planting is hopeful. There is hope that something will grow, that someone will
be there to see it, to enjoy it, or to harvest it.
Gardens in conflict zones can have many
layers of meaning to those involved. They can
provide food security, where access to food may be limited. They can provide
refuge and solace; hope and optimism; a little bit of beauty.
The Last Garden,
beautifully illustrated by Anneli Bray, commemorates the many war gardens and
gardens for peace-building around the world. Anneli Bray was recently longlisted for the
Klaus Flugge Prize for her illustrations for The Last Garden: https://www.klausfluggeprize.co.uk/longlist-2021/
In
the words of Audrey Hepburn: “To plant a
garden is to believe in tomorrow.”
Find out more about the real gardens behind the story in the classroom
resources and in the blog about war gardens
on Rachel’s website.

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Posted By Jacob Hope,
22 December 2020
|
In our last bog post of the year we are delighted to welcome
author and illustrator Phoebe Swan to the blog.
Phoebe has a BA in Illustration from Camberwell College of Art and an MA
in Children’s Book Illustration from Cambridge School of Art. Phoebe’s first book, King Leonard’s Teddy was published by Child’s Play and has been
shortlisted for the Little Rebel Awards, the Cogan Biodiversity Award and the
Teach Early Years Award. To find out
more about Phoebe, visit her website here.
King
Leonard's Teddy was shortlisted for the Little Rebels Award. Can you tell us
what is rebellious about the book and what being shortlisted meant for you?
I was so honoured to be
recognised by Little Rebels Award because it celebrates books that handle big
ideas. As a previous winner of the award Viviane Schwarz said; “Picture books
are not just for putting tiny children to sleep, they are also for waking them
up!” This is not always an easy thing to do within a limited number of words
and pages, whilst also holding the attention and engagement of young kid. The
big ideas explored King Leonard’s Teddy are about repairing and reusing, and
valuing what we have instead of continuing the cycle of mass consumerism. Being
shortlisted was a recognition that I had succeeded in making a story that could
not only entertain young children, but also introduce them to these concepts
Can you tell us about how you wrote the story and made the
pictures?
I first wrote the story
after coming across a ‘Toy Hospital’ while on holiday in Lisbon. I wanted to
make a book that tackled the issue of how humans overuse the planet’s finite
resources. The attachment and care with which children look after a beloved toy
seemed a good way in to talking about how perhaps we should be applying that
care to more of the things that we discard so easily. I did a lot of drawing on
that trip and I based Leonard’s castle on a drawing of one of the castles of
Sintra, a town in the hills just outside Lisbon. In the book, I replaced the
hill with the pile of rubbish. As Annie Leonard in The Story of Stuff says;
“There is no such thing as ‘away’. When we throw anything away, it must go
somewhere.” The pile of trash surrounding Leonard’s castle helps us to
visualise what the accumulation of all that stuff would look like. Small
actions such as repairing an object instead of buying a new one might not seem
like they will make much difference to the environmental crisis the world is facing,
but the small actions of a lot of people do add up to a big impact, so
ultimately the message of the book is a hopeful one.
The
pictures were made with a mixture of lino print and digital editing in
photoshop. Lino printing involves carving out an image from a soft plastic and
printing the block, to achieve multiple colours you need to layer up the prints
with each colour. Because there was more detail and colour in this book than I
could print by hand, I scanned in lino-print texture and then ‘carved’ out the
images in different layers of colour on photoshop.
Who will enjoy reading this book?
It is a picture book that
works on different levels. Children from around 18 months and their parents can
relate to the universal story of an irreplaceable favourite toy. The main
character being a king makes his over-the-top behaviour, like throwing things
out the window funnier than if it was a child character, but his despair when
his teddy breaks makes him endearing to children who will instinctively understand
the significance of the event. Children from around age 3-7 will begin to grasp
the environmental message and early years and key stage one teachers will be
able to use the story, and the page of ideas and activities at the back, as a
starting point for topics on recycling, reusing and repairing. There are also
more activities and resources on Child’s Play’s website, http://www.childs-play.com/parent-zone/king_leonard_activities.html and
I’m always happy for teachers or librarians to get in touch, I’ve worked as an
early years/primary teacher in the past so I have plenty of activities up my
sleeve!
What can we expect next from you?
I’m working on a second
book with Child’s Play called The Welcome Blanket. Unlike King Leonard which
was set in a fantasy world, it is very much inspired by my everyday
surroundings and much of it has been drawn from observation in culturally
diverse area of London in which I grew up and still live in. It celebrates
themes of friendship, cooperation and diversity. You can follow me on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/phoebe.swan/ to
look out for updates about that coming soon!
Big thanks to Phoebe Swan for the interview and for so generously sharing her gallery of images, showcasing her work, illustration techniques and books. We look forward to the publication of The Welcome Blanket.

Attached Thumbnails:
Tags:
Illustration
Little Rebels
Picture Books
Reading
Reading for Pleasure
Visual Literacy
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