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Posted By Jacob Hope,
05 March 2021
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N
M Browne was born in Burnley, Lancashire where she lived not far from the
shadow of Pendle Hill. She worked as a
teacher briefly before teaching creative writing to all age groups and
abilities from children in schools to BA, MA and MFA students. N M Browne recently completed a PhD in
creative writing. To discover more about
N M Browne, visit her website here. We are delighted to welcome N M Browne to the
blog to talk about her tenth novel Bad
Water.
Bad Water is my tenth novel
and is very much of a piece with my other stories.
My
two Carnegie nominated books: Shadow Web
and Basilisk are about crossing from
one world to another, about injustice and revolution set in alternate or
distorted versions of our own world. My historical fiction is always set in
times of change when one civilisation is under threat and a new world order
threatens everything: I have written about the Roman invasion of Britain, the
sixth century Saxon incursions and the ninth century tribulations of Alfred of
Wessex. I like a good clash of values, ideological as well as physical
conflict. I am intrigued by the complexity of political power, the significance
of belief. Don’t be misled though, above all else I love a good story.
Bad Water takes place after
‘The Chaos.’ Our civilisation has largely been destroyed by climate change,
disease, collapsing infrastructure and civil disobedience. What is left is the
Isles of Britain, small communities clinging to islands of habitable, farmable
land when most of what we know is underwater. The City of London is a crumbling
network of high towers swathed in greenery from vertical farms and linked by
swaying rope bridges covered in vegetation. There, the murky waters of the
Thames, the Great River, are rumoured to be rife with pollution and disease. The
people themselves are brutal and violent locked in an endless cycle of gang
warfare. This is ‘Bad Water’ and it is best avoided.
In
this world almost all the technologies which link our world are gone. ipads and
phones are displayed as wealth signifiers, but very little actually works: all
networks are down and the world has shrunk. Few people leave the settlement of
their birth.
Ollu,
my heroine, is a barger, part of a clan who make a living trading. They recycle
and repair old technology, pass messages and gossip among the largely illiterate villages and
settlements of a drowned England. Ollu’s
craft, the Ark, a matriarch boat, was built before the Chaos and has a measure
of ‘preeker’ ( pre chaos) technology. Ollu can read and write and the Ark has
an ancient ‘aye eye’, a computer hidden beneath its boards. Like everything
else it is barely functioning, and the bargers have resorted to old messaging
systems: notes written on scraps of paper,
hidden in old waterproof plastic, marked with the warning colour ‘red’
to signify danger.
When
Ollu’s mother become sick after giving birth to twins, Ollu negotiates with one
of their trading partners: her care in return for a terrible trade. She has to find a cache of Preeker weapons
rumoured to be stashed in Bad Water.
Like all my books, this is primarily an adventure
story. Until Ollu teams up with two boys, Buzz and Ratter, she is alone as few young
people today are alone. She has no peers, no friends as such. As a little child
she had seen films and heard recorded music, they had a radio, but all of that is
now gone . She has to make her own decisions and the stakes are high. Just as
for the children of today, her present is unlike her mother’s past. What
happens in the future is up to her.
The
first draft of this book was written long ago when neither the reality of
climate change nor the potential damage of plague was quite so prominent in the
national consciousness.
My
rewrites improved the plot, but never altered the world: that has always
been vivid to me. When I close my eyes I
can see the rotting spires of the Old Parley ( The Palace of Westminster)
emerging from the Great River, a monument to a whole history lost.
Bad
Water is another story about revolution and the power of young people to change
their world. Ollu’s post Chaos drowned
Britain looks broken, but to her it is a place of hope and fresh potential. She
forges new trading partnerships, mends broken connections, sows the seeds of
civilisation.
I
didn’t write this book for a pandemic, but it is curiously apt. Post-pandemic
or Post-Chaos new relationships can be forged, new connections made.
All
our young people have travelled alone through Bad Water, and just as with Ollu,
what happens in the future is up to them.

Tags:
Dystopia
Reading
Reading for Pleasure
Young Adult
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Posted By Jacob Hope,
04 March 2021
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We are delighted to welcome Anne Fine to the blog to celebrate World Book Day and the publication of her latest novel Shades of Scarlet. Anne has won the CILIP Carnegie Medal twice,
once with Goggle-Eyes (1989) and again with Flour Babies
(1992). Anne is known for her astute
observation of complex family dynamics and self-exploration and her pithy wit and sage musings. Anne writes
picturebooks for the youngest readers (Ruggles), right up to darkly
comic novels for adults (Taking the Devil’s Advice, In Cold Domain). Anne was the first novelist for children to
be honoured as the UK Children’s Laureate (2001-2003), to learn more about Anne
and her work visit www.annefine.co.uk
Could you introduce us to Scarlet.
When Scarlet woke as a
toddler, her father would often try to guess her mood: “I wonder what shade of Scarlet we
will have today.” Now she’s a teenager, she’s even more mercurial. And
too sharp to be fooled or fobbed off. So when Mum moves out of the family home
at almost no notice, and Dad just seems feebly to let it happen, she’s furious
with them both. We follow Scarlet for only a few weeks, but in her
account of that time we get to know exactly what she thinks and feels at every
moment, and how she judges each of her parents for what they do, or don’t do.
And that’s not always pretty.
You shine a light on a very clear
stage in the development of young people. Was this the aim?
Oh, absolutely. ‘Mummy and Daddy know
best’ can’t last for ever. And those times when the teenager can be more
clear-sighted than the adult – know who is fooling themselves for their own
purposes, or blinding themselves to inconvenient truths – can cause massive
upheaval in the family. Naturally, the parents resist the discomfort and
inconvenience such overt criticism brings. In this book, both Mum and Dad have
to come to see and respect Scarlet in a very different way, and
realise they’re no longer always in the right, and Scarlet has to
start to learn the supposedly adult skills of forbearance and understanding.
The dysfunction and disorderliness of families is a
major theme in the book, but it is often balanced with humour. Is this an
effective technique for exploring and unpicking big and sometimes emotionally
challenging issues?
I don’t deliberately use humour as a
technique. But I write about the sort of families we see around us, and day to
day lives in most homes and schools have plenty of light moments. Since amusing
things happen all the time, to everyone, why not weave them into a story?
Scarlet's mum gives her a beautiful
blank book. Is this a ploy for her to reflect on her life?
We never are quite sure whether Mum
gives her the book simply as a gift, or in hopes of nosing through it
later. But we all know it’s almost impossible to write lies in a private
diary. It’s what you really think that just pours out. And
that’s a lot of why people read and write in the first place. Good stories
mirror aspects of our own lives, and help us both make sense of them, and live
them more sensibly. At one point Mum defends her choice by saying, “Everyone
only gets one life. Just one. And it's so difficult if you come to
realize that you're not living it in the right way. Or with the right
person." Books do encourage self-knowledge, and self-knowledge
serves to help people not make huge mistakes in life.
There is a story within a story in Shades of Scarlet. This
is a structure you've used into great effect in your Carnegie winning
books Goggle-Eyes, and Flour Babies. What appeals about this
form of storytelling and does it present any challenges?
When I was young, on the cover of my
favourite Christmas ‘Annual' was a girl reading the very same annual with the
same cover, showing smaller and smaller till you could no longer make it out.
And I always adored stories within stories, like Scheherazade’s 1001
Nights. But I think the way I write these books comes pretty
well naturally. Remember T S Eliot: ‘But set down this. Set down this.’ Once
you start on any emotionally true-to-life story, the layers will start peeling
off like layers of an onion, down and down.
Scarlet is determined and
headstrong and as is consistent with your books for young people there is no
condescension or dumbing down the agency and thinking of young
people. As an author who writes across the ages, what different
approaches do you employ for different age groups and how conscious are you of
audience when writing?
I’ve said before that I write only
for the reader inside myself. Myself at five, at ten, at fifteen, at fifty. I
write the books I would have wanted to have come across at that age. Susan
Sontag said that a novel is ‘a piece of the world seen through a temperament’
and I doubt that my personality and temperament have changed much over the
years. So, though I do have to make an effort to envisage, or take on board,
how various aspects of life are very, very different for a young person now, I
still come at each novel with my perfect reader in mind. And that perfect
reader will, I suspect, always remain myself.
We wish you every success with Shades of Scarlet, and wonder whether you can tell us a
little about what you are working upon next?
Unusually for me, I’ve stayed with
this same age level. The novel I’m finishing now is called Aftershocks.
We recently had the death of a child in my extended family, and I had been
thinking a lot about grief, and how it can affect, not just individuals, but
communities at large. Of course, like almost all my work it went off in strange
– not to say ghostly - directions. And though it remains at heart a
realistic coming-of-age family novel, most of the story takes place in a
setting that’s not just unusual, it’s deeply unsettling.
A big thank you to Anne Fine for the interview.
Image of Anne Fine copyright Carsten Murawski

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Tags:
Carnegie Medal
Families
Interview
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Reading for Pleasure
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Posted By Jacob Hope,
27 February 2021
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We are delighted to
welcome Nansubuga Isdahl and Nicole Miles, author and illustrator of
First Names: Nelson Mandela published by David Fickling Books
to the blog to talk about the book, Nelson Mandela and their work and
research!
1)
Please can you introduce yourselves and tell us a little about your
background and interests in children’s books?
Nansubuga
Isdahl, author: Thanks! I’m Nansu. In short, I was born in the US
and am of Ugandan heritage. My family and I currently live in
Tanzania, but I’m typing this from Florida (US), where we’ve been
taking cover for the past year. I write for international NGOs and UN
agencies during the day, and I work on children’s books by night.
I’ve always loved books, but became particularly interested in
children’s books when I had my daughter and realized that the range
of voices telling stories was severely limited and the industry was
skewed towards certain perspectives.
Nicole
Miles, illustrator: My name is Nicole and I’m from The Bahamas. I
came to the UK for university and lived here since then. I find it
difficult to explain my interest in children’s books because it’s
so hard to imagine why anyone wouldn’t love children’s books!
Haha I actually find the category to just be really engaging and
accessible and there is a sincerity in kids’ books that can often
get replaced by a cooler cynicism in books for older readers and,
although that’s sometimes what I’m in the mood for, that
sincerity in books for younger readers is just really lovely to me.
(2)
How did the commission come about?
NI: My agent brought it
to me after DFB had seen a travel series manuscript of mine. I had a
call with the editor and they introduced the series. Serendipitously,
I had been living in South Africa for years and the opportunity to
write about Nelson Mandela fit perfectly with my interests.
NM:This
story is maybe not so exciting, but David Fickling Books contacted me
and asked if I would be interested in working with them on the series
and I was available and interested.
(3)
What kind of research was involved in planning the book?
NI:
On my end, I read widely. This included Nelson Mandela’s
autobiography, The Long Walk to Freedom, and other texts. I
also did extensive on-line research, watched many movies, listened to
the freedom songs from that time period, etc. I had already visited
the Apartheid Museum in Johannesburg, so felt I had a grasp of that.
Also, simply by living in Johannesburg, I was afforded a considerable
amount of perspective about Nelson Mandela because his legacy is
reflected throughout the city.
NM:
On my part, there was a lot of visual research
and, because photos of Black South Africans and their living and
working spaces and so on at that time are likely very rare, there was
a fair bit of sleuthing involved too. For anyone mentioned in the
book I obviously would have to look up as many photos of them as I
could find to draw them, but if Nelson is ever driving a car, for
example, and the make and model are not named, I was looking up which
cars of the time were popular and accessible, whether he would have
had the newest model or a car that had been in circulation for a few
years, which side of the road they drive on in South Africa and which
side is the steering wheel on, and so on. I looked up police uniforms
versus other official authorities’ uniforms and the political
parties’ flags but made sure I got the emblems from the right era,
and what kinds of casual clothing Nelson would have worn at
university when he wasn’t in traditional dress or a suit. Basically
a lot of time was spent searching online historical photo archives!
(4)
What did you learn about Nelson Mandela that you didn’t previously
know?
NI: I didn’t know that he had such a tremendous
sense of humour. He was very charming, it seems, and I think his
sense of humour was part of that charm.
NM:Maybe
I should be embarrassed to admit it but, prior to reading Nansu’s
manuscript, for me it was as though Nelson Mandela’s life started
in middle age when he was sent to Robben Island in 1964, then there
was another big gap in my knowledge spanning 27 years, after which he
simply existed as a hero because of some vague ideas about fighting
apartheid here and there. I respected him before coming to this book
and understood that he was an important person, but it is truly an
understatement to say I learned a lot working on this project.
-
How
important do you feel biographies are for children and young people,
and what can we learn from them?
NI: I think biographies,
especially those about people who are lesser known or who live in
different parts of the world, are particularly important. Historical
texts, including biographies, shape how we view the past and the
present. I think biographies can help expand young people’s
worldview and hopefully allow them to realize that not everything
we’re taught reflects the totality of an experience or event.
Rather, what we're taught often reflects an interpretation
or one side of a story. I think it’s very important for
children to learn that distinction early and to gain those critical
analysis skills. Biographies are a great way to do this.
Biographies can also put a personal face to historical events, which
I think makes them far more engaging for children. Learning about
apartheid in history class is one thing. Learning about it from
Nelson’s life, and the impact it had on him and the people around
him, adds a richness that is invaluable. It also helps children to
develop empathy – another critically important life skill.
NM:I
am not someone who is disinterested in history or global civil
rights movements and yet here was a huge oversight on my part about
a man who made big waves globally and was the face of a massive
movement. I imagine many people, especially anyone (like me) who was
too young to have been aware of the events surrounding Mandela as
“current affairs” as it was all unfolding, are similarly
ignorant (or even less aware) than I was about him (and others in
the movement who are also mentioned in the book). That ignorance is
an important thing to correct because, as the saying goes “those
who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it” and a
past with so much avoidable cruelty and discrimination and pain for
so many people would be a horrible thing to senselessly repeat.
Biographies for young people are not simply a warning though.
Historical biographies can serve as a source of inspiration to
children to see that, even with so much against you, it is possible
to overcome and that is not just pretty words; it happens. People do
great things and overcome great difficulty. I think that’s
important.
(6)
It feels as though schooling was a very important point in Nelson
Mandela’s life, how formative do you think being educated in a
British-style school was for him and what changes did he have to
make because of this?
NI: I think Nelson’s formal
education helped to widen his perspective about the world. It also
gave him access to jobs (i.e., being a lawyer) that would have been
unlikely otherwise. I think given that he was a country boy, as he
put it, he certainly had to acclimate to a more formal
environment during his schooling. He also learned through
his formal education that what was being taught in school differed
greatly from what he was learning at home (e.g., about South African
history). That tension was formative in helping develop his
views about equality and justice. So, Nelson essentially
gained the skill of living in two worlds--the Western one through
his schooling and the South African one. His ability to “cross
over” worlds, if you will, was critically important in building
bridges when he came President.
NM:
This is a fantastic and complex question. My
understanding is that, while it benefitted him and made certain
opportunities available to him that may not have been otherwise, the
colonial school system also took from him his culture, his history
and even his name — one could fairly say much of his sense of
identity… There’s a part in the book where this confusion is
expressed as he compares what he is learning in formal lessons with
what he is learning from elders in his village. It’s interesting
because, as someone who grew up and was educated in an ex-British
colony (The Bahamas), I found this particularly interesting. It
speaks a lot to colonisation and whether the benefits outweigh the
many damages and how those subjected to the system can use it to
their advantage (and, I would hope, to help those who didn’t
benefit from it as Nelson did). When talking about the ills of
colonisation, there is often a knee-jerk reaction from descendants
of colonisers (and the pro-establishment colonised) that the meagre
benefits (roads, education, etc.) were worth it in exchange for
subjugation and being second-class citizens. I personally disagree,
but I don’t think it’s a topic around which anyone need feel
defensive. It will always be of huge benefit to be able to conform
to the established norms (whether those established norms set by
colonial powers, class expectations, gender expectations, etc), but
I think it’s vital that people keep hold of who they are as well
because no one story is more valid than another. I guess that’s
what “code-switching” is essentially.
(7) How
easy was it showing the growth and maturation of Nelson through the
book?
NI: I was working from an outline that I had
developed before I started writing and so once I charted the
decisive moments at each stage of his life, this became easier.
NM:
I think around middle age was the trickiest
and I started to sneak a little greying in his hair to show that but
I didn’t want him to read as being suddenly quite a lot older,
especially since elderly-Nelson was narrating the book and that
might get confusing towards the end. It was very helpful having my
Art Director Katie pointing to when he needed to be older or younger
in certain illustrations.
(8) Did you use any
photos or source materials as background for characters and indeed
for the village of Qunu and the Xhosa people?
NI: I’m
quite sure that Nicole did as I remember sending through some images
that I thought might help.
NM: Definitely!
As many photos as I could find haha! In some instances, it was just
hard to find examples that seemed to match up to time, place and
description, but I was always looking up images before I started
sketching anything.
(9) The book could easily feel
very serious but the illustrations play a wonderful role in infusing
warmth and humour, how did the collaboration work?
NI:
Working with Nicole (via the series editor) was lovely. I’m not
sure how many rounds of the illustrations she did before they got to
me, but the editor would send through roughs and final versions at
various stages and I could provide my feedback or comments, based on
what I understood of the context and Nelson’s life. I felt very
fortunate to have been able to contribute in some small way to
Nicole’s really brilliant interpretation of the book.
NM:
When I first started the project I was
initially a little nervous that it needed to be serious, almost a
little distant in tone. So, even though I probably enjoy being
playful and humorous in my work more often, when I submitted my
first samples they were all pretty stiff and serious. The feedback
was that the team wasn’t keen on that direction and actually
wanted the lighter tone that I preferred.
After a conversation with Katie to talk things over and her pointing
to some things in my portfolio that she felt had a closer tone to
the one they were going for, I was much clearer on (and happier
with) the direction and sent over a sample that employed more of the
humour you see in the book now. I was very relieved that we were
actually on the same page. I feel it’s much more engaging than a
more classically “educational” approach would be, without being
disrespectful where a more sombre tone is required.
(10)
What is next for you both?
NI:
I’m currently working on (writing, drafting, brainstorming) more
middle grade novels than anyone should
be at one time!
NM: I’ve
got a few books coming out this year including Walking
for Waterby
Susan Hughes which is based on the true story of a little boy
in Malawi who realises the world is quite different for him and his
twin sister and that is coming out 1 June. Then in autumn of this
year the first book in Joel Ross’ funny Alley
& Rex middle
grade series is coming out. I’m illustrating Viviane Elbee’s I
Want My Book Back about
a dinosaur-obsessed kid who wants his library book about dinosaurs
back, which is out in spring 2022. Then autumn of that year
sees Groundhog
Gets It Wrong hitting
shelves.
It’s
a real joy for me to be able to work on so many great book projects
and I’ve got a few exciting non-publishing projects popping up
this year too. My Instagram is probably the best place to keep up
with what I’m up to.
A big thank you to Nansubuga and Nicole for the interview and to David Fickling Books for the opportunity.

Tags:
Biography
History
Illustration
Information
Interview
Reading
Reading for Pleasure
Writing
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Posted By Jacob Hope,
08 February 2021
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Ifeoma Onyefulu has written over twenty
children’s books including the seminal A
is for Africa. Many of Ifeoma’s
books are published by Frances Lincoln Ltd.
Here Comes Our Bride and Ikenna Goes to Nigeria won the Children's Africana Book Award in the United States.
Ifeoma’s play No Water in the
Jungle was performed in London. Ifeoma loves telling stories to school
children and comes from a family of storytellers. Here Ifeoma introduces us to her new poetry
collection Sing Me a Song Ma.
If anyone had told me I would be writing poems in 2020, I would have laughed at
them. But in January last year something strange happened, I began to get
requests from schools to do poetry workshops, and no sooner had I said no to one
school another one would pop up like a jack-in-box toy. I had never written a
poem in my life, and that was the strangest thing. Then, two days before I was
due to travel to Scotland to do a writing workshop for a school, I was asked again.
I would gladly have done a workshop on
writing plays, if such a thing exists in schools, because of No Water in The Jungle, one of my
plays, staged in London in 2019.
Anyway, I had a decision to make pretty
fast, and it was not going to be easy to say no to the school, with two days to
go. What’s more, we, the school, and I had spent months corresponding, and setting
up the timetable, and I was to do the assembly, too.
Finally, I rang a friend for some moral
support, and she chuckled, ‘But when I read your books, I think of poetry… it
is the way you write,’ she said breezily.
Poetry - that word again.
I decided to stick with the timetable and do
the workshop as initially planned.
So, as I was wondering how I was going to compose
an upbeat email to the school about my decision, my eyes somehow wandered off
and settled on a photograph on the far end of the wall. It was a picture of a
Fulani woman I took years ago in northern Nigeria; she was dressed in bright
clothes and had beads on her hair. After staring at it for what seemed like hours
but was only a few seconds, I heard a voice in my head about a girl who liked many
colours but would only wear blue when she went to see her grandma. Why? Was it
because she liked blue or because her grandma liked blue?
I grabbed a pencil and paper and began writing.
I didn’t know if it was going to be a short story or not, but I remember reading
it back, and it felt like a poem with sprinkles of intensity and imagery, which
surprised me a lot.
So, I wrote and wrote, I was very thankful
I had something to do during the first Lockdown, and that was how I came to write
my first poem titled What are Colours to
Adaora!
Then, I wanted to write more poems children
would enjoy, as much as I enjoyed the stories our mother and sometimes our grandfather
told my siblings and me when we were children in Nigeria.
In December 2020, I published some of the poems
online, as a collection, titled Sing Me a
Song, Ma.
Two of the poems, especially Grandma’s Tree, are about nature, and
the way we treat our trees. It was inspired by a conversation I had with our
late mother about her favourite avocado tree, which didn’t produce any fruits
for a long time.
Another poem, Rain, is about water shortage, people in low-income countries often
struggle to get enough water. During the dry season, when rainfall was rare, we
bought water from a well, but in the rainy season, we saved enough rainwater for
cooking and washing, which lasted for several days.
However, some of the poems are lighthearted,
for example, Sing Me a Song, Ma, is
about a child who doesn’t want to go to sleep, so she comes up with a brilliant
way of staying awake by getting her mother to sing her song, “A song that will
make my eyes wake up and…. A song that will make me dance.”
Finally, I hope Sing Me a Song, Ma, will be an e-book for children and their
families to read aloud together.
A big thank you to Ifeoma Onyefulu for writing this blog and introducing us to Sing Me a Song, Ma which is available via Smashwords

Tags:
Diversity
Poetry
Raising Voices
Reading
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Schools
Storytelling
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Posted By Jacob Hope,
04 February 2021
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We are excited to welcome Alison Brumwell, Chair of the Youth Libraries Group, to reflect on the work of illustrator Jon Agee, whose The Incredible Painting of Felix Clousseau publishes today (4 February 2021).
One
of my personal highlights of In the
Frame: Putting Readers in the Picture, YLG’s virtual conference in November
2020, was the opportunity to host a live Q & A session with acclaimed U.S.
author and illustrator Jon Agee from his
home base in San Francisco. While I have admired Jon’s work for several years -
and he has won several awards during his substantial career - he has been less
well-known in the UK until recently, courtesy of independent publisher
Scallywag Press.
Scallywag Press, founded in 2018 by
Sarah Pakenham, has introduced five of Jon Agee’s works to UK readers,
including the publication of The Incredible Painting of
Felix Clousseau. This witty, inventive picture book was originally
published in 1988 and was named a New York Times Book Review Notable Children’s
Book of the Year. It features Jon’s trademark visual humour and word play, with
the reader definitely privy to the joke and able to fully interact with the
narrative. As Sarah says, “[Jon’s] is masterful storytelling with very simple
words and pictures, full of the surreal, the hilarious and the poignant.”
I
first encountered the magic and artistry of Jon Agee at Mabel’s Fables, an independent
bookseller in Toronto, and was immediately hooked by his humour, sense of the
absurd and impeccable visual timing. Art has always been a central part of
Jon’s life; as a young student he loved drawing cartoons and comic strips and
was heavily influenced by the English illustrator and poet Edward Lear. This
passion is clearly evident in his books for children. He has an ability to
convey emotion and cleverly pace his stories through drawing clear, bold lines.
There’s also a very clever use of comic book layout (the panels, spotlight
effect and speech bubbles in Lion Lessons are one example of
this).
Sarah’s own relationship with Jon’s books began when
she met Charlene Lai, a Taiwanese bookseller and blogger, who had invited Jon
to the Taipei BookFair. After investigating them all, Sarah says “each was more of a delight
than the last!” As only two of Jon’s picture books had ever been published in
the UK (coincidentally by Sarah’s editor, Janice Thompson, who was Children’s
Book Editor at Faber in the 1980’s) she soon acquired the rights to Lion
Lessons and made an offer on The Wall in the Middle of the Book
on the basis of a half-finished book. In the latter, there is an inventive
exploration of the fourth wall – the space which separates Jon’s characters
from their reader – and a strong sense of the three-dimensional, which is what
also makes Felix Clousseau such a timeless, remarkable picture book.
The reader is in the front row of the audience, watching the narrative unfold
and experiencing a thoroughly satisfying (if unexpected) ending. A twist to the
tale is something at which Jon Agee excels!
Prior to interviewing Jon last year, I re-read American
writer Paul Auster’s novel The Book of Illusions, in which he describes one of
his character’s silent film performances: “It wasn’t slapstick and anarchy so
much as character and pace, a smoothly orchestrated mixture of objects, bodies
and minds.” The same could be said of Jon Agee, which is what makes him such a
remarkable writer and illustrator. His illustrated narratives are entertaining,
nuanced and perfectly balanced, with a visual challenge in every spread.
Thank you to Alison Brumwell for the blog. Why not check out the YLG interview with Jon Agee here?

Tags:
Humour
Illustration
Reading
Reading for Pleasure
Visual Literacy
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Posted By Jacob Hope,
03 February 2021
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The month of February is Black History Month in the United
States of America. The month was chosen
to coincide with National Freedom Day (February 1st), the anniversary
of the 13th Amendment which saw the abolition of slavery and with the
birthday of abolitionist and writer, Frederick Douglass. The month offers an opportunity to celebrate
the contributions African Americans have made to society and a point to reflect
upon the continuing need and struggle for racial justice. We are delighted to welcome Lauren Burke to
the blog. Lauren is a writer and editor
from Chicago, Illinois. Her work focuses on women’s history, travel, and
classic literature. Lauren’s book
It’s Her Story: Rosa Parks is a
graphic novel exploring the life and achievements of Rosa Parks, courageous
thinker, leader and social justice activist.
We are delighted to feature a preview on the blog exploring some of
Lauren’s influences and thoughts on writing an incredibly important book which
deserves a place on every bookshelf, whether in homes or libraries…
I remember learning about Rosa Parks in elementary school. It was Black History
Month, and I could feel my cheeks burning in response to our lesson on Jim Crow
laws and segregation. It’s not easy being one of the few students of colour in
class, especially when your teacher wants to make an example of you. That day,
she needed volunteers to reenact that infamous moment in 1955 when Rosa Parks
was arrested for refusing to give up her seat on a Montgomery bus to a white
passenger. Her gaze was pointed when she asked who would play Rosa.
The
scene was brief. No more than three minutes. The lecture following was even
shorter. Our teacher explained that this simple act of defiance inspired the
Montgomery Bus Boycott, which kicked off a movement to end segregation in the
United States. No time for reflection or questions, we then moved on to maths.
Black literature and history were not integrated into the regular curriculum.
Instead, we hurdled through the key figures and moments at breakneck speed
during the month of February. At school, I received a disjointed and broad view
of African American history, with a focus on moments of inspiration rather than
struggle. At home, I received a very different sort of education.
“They won’t tell
you this in school…” is how my parents, grandparents, aunts, and uncles began a
lot of sentences. What usually followed was an uncomfortable truth, a painful
memory, or lesson. In my experience, Black history is mostly an oral history
passed down in the community via elders. Once, at a National Association for
the Advancement of Coloured People (NAACP) event, my father instructed me to
pay close attention to a speaker who began their talk by saying, “They won’t
tell you this in school, but Rosa Parks was a radical.”
Twelve years before arrest, Rosa Parks became the Montgomery branch secretary of
the NAACP. Amongst many other things, Parks was in charge of documenting and
investigating acts of violence committed against Black women. She painstakingly
collected statements and evidence to put pressure on law enforcement, who in
turn, dismissed her. Parks campaigned for anti-lynching laws, and created the
NAACP Youth Council, which she ran out of her own home. She was also the Stacey Abrams of her day.
Parks was passionate about battling voter suppression and ran multiple
campaigns to register as many new voters as possible. The hours were long and
unpaid. She worked nights and weekends, received death threats, and saw very
little success. Rosa Parks had many low moments, she was often discouraged and
overwhelmed. And yet, she persisted.
Two
years ago, I began writing a graphic novel for children about the life of Rosa
Parks. At first, I struggled. It was a daunting task to reduce a life to 44
pages. For every line you write, there are 10,000 left unsaid. To tell the
story of Rosa Parks, you have to tell the story of America’s dark and complex
relationship with racial inequality and that story is bigger than one book.
It’s larger than one lesson plan. And it deserves more than one month. Early
on, I decided that It’s Her Story: Rosa Parks would
celebrate a lifetime of activism verses a single moment. And that we would
depict late nights, setbacks, and moments of doubt so that children like my
daughter learn that while change is possible, it doesn’t happen overnight. You
have to put in the work.
On
inauguration day, I found myself thinking about Rosa Parks while Amanda Gorman
recited her poem The Hill We Climb. I was particularly moved by the line,
“Somehow we’ve weathered and witnessed a nation that isn’t broken, but simply
unfinished.” For me, it serves as a reminder that we are not honoring the
legacy of people like Rosa Parks, unless we step in to finish what they
started. I sincerely hope that it means the same for President Biden, who had a
bust of Rosa Parks placed in his office on his first day of work.
The book is illustrated by Shane Clester and
publishes with Sunbird Books on 7 May 2021.
For further information visit www.sunbirdkidsbooks.com ISBN 978-1-5037-5294-8
A
big thank you to Lauren Burke for the blog piece and to Sunbird Books and Nicky
Potter for the opportunity.

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Tags:
History
Raising Voices
Reading
Reading for Pleasure
Representation
Social Justice
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Posted By Jacob Hope,
02 February 2021
|
We are delighted to welcome Joan Haig to the
blog. Joan is the author of Tiger Skin Rug and lives in the
Scottish Borders but grew up in Zimbabwe and has lived and travelled all around
the world. Joan editing Stay at Home! a collection of poetry
and prose that provide different takes on life in lockdown and which contains
the work of 40 different contributors.
In this post Joan introduces us to Tiger
Skin Rug and the ways in which her academic researched have influenced
this.
I have just moved further into the countryside, meriting access to a mobile
library – a jolly bus filled with books. I’m looking forward to using this
service: when I lived in the city, aside from toddler read-and-sing-along
sessions and volunteering for my local school, my library usage had been utilitarian,
in support of my part-time work in academia.
A few years ago I
started writing for children. If I’m lucky, this will bring many more visits to
libraries for events and book borrowing. To be a writer, after all, you have to
read, read and read some more. While writing a novel for 8-12 year-olds, I read
stacks of kids’ books, but I also drew heavily on academic literature and my
own ethnographic research into migration and ideas of home and belonging.
Tiger Skin Rug (Cranachan Publishing) is the story of two boys who move
from India to Scotland. The values and cultural references coursing through the
book stem from many years’ worth of research in the form of archival digs, conversations,
data gathering and time spent engaging in daily lives and customs of Hindu
families in Zambia. Writing an ethnography is, by definition, ‘writing culture’
and the process demands a degree of immersion within a group, of which the
ethnographer is most likely an outsider. It also demands ‘self reflexivity’:
this is an awareness of the affect of one’s self as an outside researcher on
the situation, and a sensitivity towards all those within that situation. An
ethnographer is not objective but will seek to provide an authentic narrative.
A good ethnography will therefore never be reductive, and will embrace
complexity.
Tiger Skin Rug confronts the same big issues tackled in my research
(migration, identity, ideas of home, the intersections of privilege and
prejudice), but for a different, younger and distinctly more important,
readership. I didn’t want to shy away from tricky ideas for children, but rather
wanted to invite in lots of different ways of thinking about one thing – the meaning
of home. My interest in home, particularly relating to migration and how
children experience migration, reflects my own life experiences. It also
reflects my deep concern that people in all manner of contexts continue to
exclude others based on ideas and perceptions of place, authenticity and
belonging – ideas and perceptions that often confuse or conflate ethnicity and
nationality, race and class.
My current academic remit strongly resists attitudes that hinder cultural
exchange and understanding. I am part of a global study abroad college where I sit
on a working group for the college JEDI team. JEDI here stands for Justice,
Equity, Diversity and Inclusion. The ‘Empire’ we are fighting is not, however,
in a galaxy far, far away: we are plotting to decolonise the curriculum and revamp
training to ensure fairness and representation for all. My next book is a
nonfiction title coauthored with Joan Lennon. Talking History: 150 Years of
Speeches (Templar Publishing, out July 2021) offers children a range
of voices and political stories from around the world.
Writing for children, in turn, has influenced the way I think about my academic
work. It has opened up teaching possibilities and allowed me to make new
literary and theoretical connections. Supporting students’ learning and
independent research projects often involves directing them to relevant books
and articles. Increasingly, I find myself recommending fiction, too – which provides
me with the perfect excuse to visit that mobile library.
A big thank you to Joan Haig for a fascinating blog and to Cranachan Publishing for the opportunity.

Tags:
Diversity
Reading
Reading for Pleasure
Representation
Research
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Posted By Jacob Hope,
28 January 2021
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We are delighted to welcome Bethany Walker to the
blog for a special guest post about letters.
Bethany’s debut novel Chocolate Milk, X-Ray Specs and Me published with Scholastic this January and is a wonderfully witty and whimsical
story told that will appeal to fans of Liz Pichon’s Tom Gates books and Jeff
Kinney’s Diary of a Wimpy Kid titles. The book is fantastically illustrated by Jack Noel. Here Bethany talks with us about letter writing and includes some
fascinating facts in this not-to-be-missed blog post.
I don’t think I’m creating any spoilers when I write
that the main fun of Chocolate Milk, X-Ray Specs and Me
is that Freddy Spicer, its main character, has NO IDEA what’s going on. In
my spy story, Freddy’s parents are international secret agents but their cover
story is that they’re sprout farmers - and sweet, naive Freddy believes it,
even when all evidence around him points to the contrary. One of the key rules
for children’s writing is: get rid of the adults. Sending Freddy’s parents off
on some undercover mission was the ideal way to get rid of them and leave
Freddy behind to get into plenty of trouble – but it also gave me the
opportunity to write this book in a different way, with the story being told through
the letters Freddy writes to his absent parents. By doing this, Freddy’s is the
main voice of the book and his letters allow us to get to know him. The letters
provide a personal insight into his hopes and fears but also, vitally, tell us what
he does and doesn’t understand. Jack Noel’s excellent doodle illustrations also
give a further dimension to Freddy’s letters too, almost making them real,
tactile artefacts.
Even though (and I hope this doesn’t come as a shock to readers) I am not a ten-year-old
boy, writing Freddy’s letters reminded me of how important a role letters
played in my life – and made me sad for their continuing demise. Thinking back
to my own childhood, so many key events were somehow related to letters, from
the obligatory post-Christmas Thank You cards to the annual holiday postcards. Towards
the end of primary school, I remember the ‘correspondence’ I had with a boy
from the next village – our brothers, at secondary school, acted as postmen,
and our letters passed back and forth for months. Unfortunately, when we
started secondary school together the following year, our fervent letter
writing was not matched by our ability to make conversation and that was that! It
was also through letters that I heard about not getting into a certain
university and how I applied for my first few jobs.
Of course, there are good reasons why letters have been superseded by other
forms of communication, particularly email. However, I couldn’t have Freddy
sending emails, or anything else modern and speedy, because the problems and
dangers in the story would have been too quickly identified and solved by the
adults. And even though Freddy’s letters don’t necessarily reach their intended
recipients, I made sure it was not the fault of the postal service. I certainly
didn’t want to poke fun at that, although it’s not hard to set up jokes about
the postal service. It’s all about the delivery*! (*Sorry, that’s my favourite
letter-based joke.)
Reading Freddy’s letters, and the other documents included in the book
(newspaper cuttings, communication transcripts etc), the reader is put in the
role of historian – using sources to work out what is actually going on. I
studied History at university and as a historian, letters are basically the
holy grail of primary sources. To get real information from a key historical
figure’s hand is amazing; not only does it give you direct information about a
situation, but it can also help build up your understanding of the person’s
opinion of it – and, hopefully, give you an insight into their personality. Letters
recorded the key moments in history, capturing moments of development and
discovery. Some letters could even make history – for example, it was
through finding letter-based evidence of Mary Queen of Scots’ involvement in a
plot against Elizabeth I that Mary ended up being executed. Conversely, even
though Elizabeth was suspected of plotting against her half-sister several
years before, no written evidence was ever found and so Elizabeth survived to
go on to be monarch.
Though generally written on flimsy pieces of paper, some letters can be
incredibly valuable. The most expensive letter ever sold at auction was a beautiful
piece of calligraphy written by a legendary Chinese scholar to a friend in
1080. The staggering age of this letter was equalled by the staggering $30
million it was bought for. Second to that is the $5.3 million spent on the
letter Francis Crick wrote to his son, Michael, in 1953, regarding his
discovery of the double helix of DNA, arguably one of the greatest discoveries
of the last century. The letter is the first record of the discovery and includes
a sketch of the DNA model, but the fact that it was written by a father to his
son means that it is not some incomprehensible piece of peer-to-peer scientific
terminology. By being written in a language a child could understand, it is
made all the more valuable.
While most letters will never reach the value of those cited above, all letters
have a value in that everyone appreciates receiving a thoughtful note. Over
lockdown, feel-good stories have come out over new letter-based friendships
that have been developing, such as the six-year-old girl becoming pen-pal to a
94-year-old care home resident, or the woman who discovered a child’s fairy
garden and started writing little notes as the resident fairy for the child to
discover. Out of everyone I have known, my mum was the most fervent letter writer
and, when I left home, not a week went by without receiving some kind of lovely
missive from her. She died seven years ago and I still miss her letters landing
on my doormat – but, occasionally, I find an old one she sent me, in her
illegible scrawl, and it makes me happy.
Chocolate Milk, X-Ray Specs & Me
by Bethany Walker and Jack Noel is out now, published by Scholastic.

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Tags:
Humour
Letters
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Reading for Pleasure
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Posted By Jacob Hope,
18 January 2021
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We are delighted to
welcome Wibke Brueggemann to the blog on Blue Monday to talk about writing
humour in young adult fiction. Wibke
grew up in northern Germany and the United States but lives in London. She studied acting before deciding to become
a writer. Wibke’s debut novel Love is for Losers publishes on 21
January.
I believe humour is
a force to be reckoned with as we write and read and live. It can open the door to uncomfortable
conversations, it can diffuse difficult situations, and it will illuminate and
magnify the truth.
Humans seek
laughter. It makes us feel good, physically as well as emotionally. It’s also a
language we all understand, and it therefore connects us on a very honest and deeply
emotional level.
When you read up on the effects of laughter on the body, you’ll find that it is
proven to boost the immune system, that it can lower blood pressure, and even
relieve pain from chronic illness.
The origins of the saying about laughter being the best medicine apparently go
back to the Bible, to the book of Proverbs, chapter 17, verse 22 which reads
"A merry heart doeth good like a medicine". It’s no wonder that we
crave it, that we turn to it in times of peril.
An article on the website theconversation.com suggests that the origins of
human laughter can be traces back to between ten and sixteen million years ago,
and that its main purpose was to tighten social bonds which, in turn, enhanced
chances of survival.
And isn’t it interesting how millions of years
later, laughter still feels so vital? I can only speak for myself, but I certainly
feel its ancient pull as I go through my life and choose my friends and
acquaintances.
When I wrote Love is for Losers, I never consciously
planned for it to be a funny book. All I wanted was to write a story about a
girl who volunteers at a charity shop, falls in love with another girl, and
freaks out about it for the most bizarre reasons.
I also wanted to write about the importance of family and community, and it’s
very interesting to me that humour snuck in so naturally and became the glue
that held everything together.
The facilitator of this humour is my fifteen-year-old protagonist, Phoebe.
She’s intelligent, she’s observant, and she’s hilarious, which enables me, the
author, to very easily, openly, and honestly talk about the big subjects I want
to talk about in the context of this book: sex, love, death.
When I thought: I
really want to talk about the importance of young women being able to have
positive and satisfying sexual experiences, all I needed to do was for Phoebe
to browse the internet, and then tell her best friend Polly: “You need to talk
to your boyfriend about the clitoris, because he’s clearly literally missing
it.”
It’s amazing what a pinch of humour can achieve.
One of my favourite YA books of all time, and a masterclass in humour as a
rhetorical device, is The Absolute True
Diary of a Part-Time Indian by Sherman Alexie.
I’ve never read anything that’s as LOL funny and gut-wrenchingly heart-breaking
at the same time. Alexie’s protagonist has to deal with unimaginable issues,
and the fact that he makes us laugh so very much almost feels wrong.
It’s the same with Phoebe, although the stakes aren’t quite as high for her, but
underneath her bravado and hilarity, there’s a very normal and lonely and
insecure human being, but we’re not uncomfortable seeing that.
I think from an audience’s point of view, it’s a lot easier to look at difficult
subjects through humour than through drama, and we’re more inclined to let
humour take us to those dark places. And I don’t think this is anything that
applies specifically to the YA genre, although you may argue that it is applied
easier here because young people live in emotional extremes that can certainly
heighten highs and lows.
I’m very grateful Love is for Losers turned out to be
such a funny read, and that we’re sending it into the world during what is a very
difficult time for all of us.
I hope that Phoebe
will bring you much needed hope, courage, and laughter.
Love Is For Losers by Wibke Brueggemann, is out on 21st
January 2021, published by Macmillan Children’s Books. Thank you to Wibke Brueggemann for the blog
article and to Macmillan Children’s Books for the opportunity.

Tags:
Blue Monday
Funny
Humour
Reading for Pleasure
Romance
Young Adult
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Posted By Jacob Hope,
22 December 2020
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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.

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