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Posted By Jacob Hope,
07 October 2020
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We are delighted to welcome illustrator Diane Ewen to the blog during Libraries Week. Diane was born in Walsall in the West Midlands and has a life-long love of art. Diane graduated from the University of Wolverhampton with a B.A. Honours degree in illustration. Diane creates illustrations that are hand-drawn in pencil before painting with watercolour and acrylics. These are then embellished using Photoshop. Dinae also enjoys creating designs digitally and constantly develops her style as she progresses.
Diane loves the fact that illustrations are the first elements of a book to entice the reader to engage. She is inspired by the use of vibrant colour. The first book Diane illustrated was Pretty Poodle Parlour by Angela McAllister. Diane has also illustrated Rashmi Sirdeshpande's Never Show a T-Rex a Book! a brilliant celebration of libraries, books and reading! Diane has also created the illustrations for a picturebook version of Floella Benjamin's Coming to England.
We are tremendously grateful to Diane for creating and allowing us to share some special library illustrations which she has created! Thank you to Diane Ewen, to Penguin Random House for the support and to Rashmi Sirdeshpande for her brilliant book!

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Posted By Jacob Hope,
06 October 2020
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As part of Libraries Week, we have an illustration focus. We'll be talking with a number of illustrators about their thoughts and views about libraries and many have created special library doodles for us to share! We are thrilled to welcome Ehsan Abdollahi. Ehsan is an art teacher, illustrator and animator. He has illustrated several books including Thinker: My Puppy Poet and Me and A Bottle of Happiness.
Please can you introduce yourself and your
work?
I'm a lecturer of illustration at Tehran University
of Arts and an illustrator. Most of my illustrations are for children.
I always like to experiment with different
techniques in illustrating my books, such as collage, watercolor, acrylic, etc. In the last book I published in the UK The Secret of the Tattered Shoes (Tiny
Owl), I used a combination of paper dolls and collages.
This year's Libraries Week is themed around
books and reading, can you tell us about some of the books you enjoyed as a
child?
When I was a
child, I was very interested in The Little Mermaid storybook. My father always read this book to me or I
listened to his story tape and looked at the pictures in the book. The mysterious spaces under the sea have
always fascinated me. Although the characters had fish-like tails, they were
amazing and magical to me.
Sometimes I thought that maybe one day I would
have a tail like a mermaid
What do you feel is important about libraries?
In my opinion, the most important thing about
library spaces is their soothing atmosphere. This is where people, children,
and grown-ups can find peace. They are also points of knowledge and nothing can
replace them. A dreamy library for me is one with sunlight, green plants,
beechwood, and white walls.
Can you share details
of one of your favourite libraries please?
The most beautiful library for me is still the
library in my nursery school. This library was not large, only a few blue
shelves with a number of children's books. But it is still the most beautiful
library for me.
What are you working
on next?
Currently, I'm working on a book about the
lockdown. This book is an experience of group work, in which various
illustrators contribute their experiences during the lockdown in the form of an
illustration. Hopefully, this book will be published by Tiny Owl in March 2021.
The latest book published by me was a unique experience collaborating with
Jackie Morris, The Secret of the
Tattered Shoes, (Tiny Owl).
I'm going to write a story about mermaids. This is a good opportunity for me to
illustrate my own story.
A huge thank you to Ehsan for sharing his thoughts and creating such a special library inspired doodle!

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Posted By Jacob Hope,
05 October 2020
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We are delighted to welcome Sita Brahmachari to the blog with a very special guest blog about libraries and their role in her books. Throughout Libraries Week we will be posting special content each day so do check back!
Imagine a world in which libraries are closed, schools are
closed, and those without books at home or the tech to access ‘digital
libraries’ are denied access to books and learning. A world in which only
children from certain backgrounds can thrive.
Surely such a vision belongs only in the dystopia I explored
in Where The River Runs Gold? and yet…
Recently, when my local library building re-opened albeit
on a partial basis, one of the things that most gladdened my heart was seeing
the families waiting on the steps to enter the story hearth. In writing my
latest novel When Secrets Set Sail libraries and librarians have been once
again in my mind and heart.
When contemporary children Imtiaz and Usha hear the
whispers of history in their Hackney home and go in search of the identity of
the ghostly voice of a woman speaking to them through a conch shell, they head
to the library. Of course the first port
of call for many children today is the internet…. But in my story and in real
life not everything they need to discover about the voice in the conch that
belongs to an ayah (one of many Indian nannies who used to live in the house) can
be found online.
A satellite local
library at the end of their street, run by a professional retired librarian
from Hackney, holds many treasures including an archive of local history - old
photos and newspapers articles contributed over generations.
Charles and Dr Devi (the latter an archivist at V&A
Museum) like so many librarians I have worked with on my writing way, do so much more than most people will ever
know to engender in young people a lifelong love of reading for pleasure. The children
and families who are so eager to re-enter the beating heart of library
buildings after the long closure, know and feel this deeply.
School
and public libraries and librarians have been inspirations and helped me to
write these stories.
It was a librarian in an East London school who set up
a Somali girl’s writing group and invited me to work with them for a year as I wrote Red Leaves in
which Aisha, a Somali refugee survivor,
is a central character. These children are credited in the acknowledgements of
the story and it would not surprise me at all if some of that group become
writers one day. In publication week Imogen Russell Williams, then working in a
school library, kindly sent me a copy of how many times the book had been taken
out in one week. I keep this
well-thumbed one week old copy by my desk to remind myself of how hungry
children are for stories that can speak to them.
Similarly in Tender Earth, while Patron of Reading at
Archer Academy, I worked in the safe haven of the library with two children who
have cerebral palsy because they told me they wanted me to represent a
character in a wheelchair in my next story. Our work together led me to write the
character of Kezia. It is so often in the library the space can be created for
this precious work with young readers and potential authors of tomorrow. It can
be no coincidence that so many of us authors credit our love of reading and
writing to childhood libraries and librarians.
For my most recent novel When Secrets Set Sail, the
scope of a story exploring different kinds of oral history testimony was first
tested at Fortismere School when I was Patron of Reading there. I was working on a creative writing project encouraging
students to write ‘Letters to an Unknown Soldier’ – the nameless statue on
Liverpool Street Station. Librarian Gill
Ward and I were overwhelmed by the students’ response and the objects and
photos they brought in of their family histories. The experience led me to
understand the impact that a story focusing on oral history might have.
When visiting Sheffield Libraries with Empathy Lab a
librarian talked of how few depictions of Roma children there are in stories.
Later at an Amnesty Conference I was shocked to discover that Roma children have
a life expectancy on average of ten years less than any other group of children
and the lowest literacy rates too. The character of Cosmo and his storytelling
grandmother Valini began to grow… In homage to where the idea was seeded …. In
When Secrets Set Sail we meet Cosmo for the first time as he is taking out a
poetry book assisted by Charles at his library hearth!
In
search of Hearths
‘Close
the curtains. Good! Now imagine sitting there, plugging your earphones in and
listening to people telling you their local history stories while watching all
the photos and documents in those archive boxes
scrolling around the screen in front of you. Your very own personal
experience in the passport booth of history!
(Page
141 When Secrets Set Sail)
Charles has had ambitions to place the diverse oral
history of the area into an old passport photo booth he calls ‘The Passport to
History Booth.’ It’s a kind of ‘Doctor Who’ Tardis of an oral history project
through which he hopes to ignite the imagination of the community and creates a
hearth for many children and families to contribute their stories to and gather
around.
The library is one of several hearths in When Secrets
Set Sail. The Joseph family also run a drop-in refugee centre in the bottom of
the house they name ‘The Hearth’. I realise that in all the stories that I have
written, no matter what challenges, past, present or near future dangers the
children face, I am always seeking out free
creative – story hearths and hives - for
them to grow where hope seeds can be planted and their spirits and imaginations nurtured.
Brent
Library visit (2019) Shifa’s seed packets from Where The River Runs Gold have generated many more.
The refugee centre Hearth that forms the bottom layer
of the magical ‘Ship House’ in When Secrets Set Sail is homage to the art and writing class that
Jane Ray and myself run at Islington Centre For Refugees and Migrants work
together in. We have sometimes exhibited the work in Islington Libraries. People are very often stunned to know that this
book borrowing service is free to all. Sometimes one has to step outside one’s
own reality to see how miraculous a free library service can look like for
members of the centre. Through another lens it is moving to see how the local
community respond to the art and writing of newly arrived refugee people. The
library is the place where local meets global.
Public libraries and School Librarians have been
working hard over lockdown to keep their online offerings, orders and
collections open in this digital age and yet what is missing for the families
in my local library is the physical building. This is what the families I saw
sitting outside excitedly waiting to enter have been missing… the warm welcome
around the story Hearth that libraries and librarians should be able to offer
us all, whoever we are.
‘Culture
n’ Stuff’ – What treasure is to be found in the library?
Young people use the library in many different ways in
my stories. I think of Aisha and her friend Muna in Red Leaves using it as
the space where they explore ‘Culture n’ Stuff.’ I have a game that I play as I
write of imagining the child characters forward into adulthood and I pin point
who planted in them the seeds that make them grow into who they will become. For Aisha it will be the librarian who first
nurtures her poetry telling voice.
In Tender Earth Pari and Aisha debate the kind of
books that feed them. Laila finds in I
am Malala the most eye, heart and soul opening story she has ever read. By
contrast, her friend Pari, a refugee survivor from Iraq, is in search of fantasy.
In addition she resents being ‘a charity case’ for Laila’s hand me down stories.
Pari prefers the library because as she sees it, here all students have equal
access to books even if their parents don’t have bookshelves at home.
From
Corey’s Rock Illustrated by Jane Ray
In Corey’s Rock - Orkney Libraries provides the
dreaming space of soft cushions and beautiful children’s artwork. This story
corner or ‘Hearth’ has been lovingly created by the librarians. It’s here that Isla
finds solace and healing through reading.
Despite the fact that she has stories told to her and selected by her
parents --- it is here in the library space that she seeks independence and
solace. When Isla declares an interest in ‘Selkie Tales’ the librarian is able
to locate and offer her a choice from which she hones in on just the one she
needs. Here is where Isla’s own agency over her journey of recovery begins.
A
place to dream
If the bottom deck of the Ship House in When Secrets
Set Sail is is a hearth the ‘top deck’ is the place in which the children’s
imagination is given space to roam… the room ‘more of ship than a bedroom’
contains an anchor and an enormous porthole that Usha’s Pops Michael created from
old bits of wreckage collected from shipyards as he travelled around the world.
If only each piece could tell its story… Along with the anchor a central
feature is an enormous circular window named ‘The Globe Window,’ offering, Pop’s
Michael once said, ‘our very own porthole onto the world.’
The children in my stories are seeking these spaces to
dream, to explore their own histories and those of their globe-wide Diaspora
families, friends and neighbours … they’re looking to see how ‘culture n’stuff’
connects them and to read themselves into these spaces. Some might seek stories
to see how they are reflected through ‘The Globe Window’ and other readers and
writers like my young narrators Imtiaz and Usha, are keen to push the porthole wide
open to set sail on a quest to discover untold stories that will lead them from
their home and hearth right across the globe.
From
When Secrets Set Sail - a place to dream - The Globe window – illustrated by
Evan Hollingdale
Who knows! Maybe Charles’ ‘Passport to History Booth’ dream
to have an oral history project in ‘every library in the land!’ really can come
true! I have already seen many wonderful displays when visiting libraries.
I hope this story will be a catalyst for many more.
Invitation!
The actual house in Hackney in which When Secrets Set
Sail is set has been nominated for a Blue Plaque due to the work of Farahanah
Mamoojee @ayahshome and Hackney Libraries and Museum. Librarians are invited to
take part in an interactive project #WSSBluePlaqueProject and have readers and
students enter their own nominations of buildings and people they would like to
see commemorated. To find out more visit:
https://www.hachetteschools.co.uk/landing-page/when-secrets-set-sail-by-sita-brahmachari/
https://www.booktrust.org.uk/news-and-features/features/2020/september/why-sita-brahmachari-wants-you-to-discover-the-amazing-history-in-your-street/
Image gallery shows:
When Secrets Set Sail jacket image
Tender Earth back cover
Brent Library Visit (2019), Shifa's seed packets from Where the River Runs Gold
Illustration by Jane Ray from Corey's Rock
The Globe Window, illustration by Evan Hollingdale from When Secrets Set Sail
A huge thank you to Sita Brahmachari for this very special blog and for starting our Libraries Week week of content!

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Posted By Jacob Hope,
02 October 2020
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We are delighted to welcome illustrator Daisy Hirst to the blog for an interview about her work, influences and techniques. Daisy is the illustrator of numerous picturebooks and has two board books, Monster Clothes and Monster Fun publishing with Walker Books. Be sure to check through the gallery of images which Daisy has shared with us at the end of this post.
Can you tell
us a little about yourself - background, interest in illustration and how you
came into this.
Well I grew up in London, and I always loved drawing, stories, writing
and making things. For a long time I took my writing more seriously than my
drawing: poetry was my main thing as an older child and teenager and I went on to
study English and Creative Writing at Warwick. I think perhaps poetry became so
serious for me that it stopped being fun, and then I couldn’t do it anymore.
All the time I kept doodling – just because, or for birthday cards – and I
never saw any reason to stop reading children’s books. Gradually I found out
more about people who made picture books, and I became more and more envious of
them. I thought I’d probably missed the boat by choosing words over pictures at
18, so I was very excited to discover that the MA in Children’s Book
Illustration at Cambridge School of Art accepted people with all kinds of
backgrounds, and amazed when I got a place. It’s a fantastic course, and I’m
one of many people it’s been life-changing for.
Which
illustrators works do you admire and why - if possible it would be great to
look at examples where you feel there's a really interesting and successful
synergy between text and illustration, where you feel admire the illustrator's
technique or style etc.. Our readership is librarians and so it's really
useful for them to have other ways of looking at books and different
perspectives to bring to this!
How to choose?! There are so many illustrators whose work I couldn’t do
without. I could go on about John Burningham for days, he’s probably my
favourite picture-book-maker for his warmth, humour, honesty and imagination –
and he was incredibly inventive in the ways he used words and pictures. And Quentin
Blake was a huge influence on me. Of younger illustrators, I was very excited
to discover Beatrice Alemagna and Kitty Crowther when I first went to BolognaBookfair: both have some books published in English now, although Crowther less
so – which is a shame because she’s a fantastic storyteller. Her illustrations
are so atmospheric and alive and her characters are glorious, her books feel
timeless to me – original and unpretentious. It’s somehow freeing to know her work,
for instance because she seems to make picturebooks for a very wide age-range
and some of them have a lot of words, which seems to be very rare in the UK at
the moment. Alemagna’s example also feels liberating, both in the unusual kinds
of stories she tells and in her uncompromising and beautiful artwork. One more:
Alexis Deacon is brilliant at letting his (incredible) illustrations do a lot
of the storytelling, and at leaving gaps for the reader. His characters are
wonderful and his stories are thoughtful, moving and really funny.
Do you feel
your background in creative writing has helped with your picture books and if
so in what ways? There is definitely a tremendously strong sense of voice
in your work!
Thank you! Well I think the words are as important as the pictures in
picture books, so it certainly helped me to have spent all those years
obsessing about words. Writing (and reading) poems is perhaps especially useful
in some ways, because poems have a lot in common with picture book texts – the
importance of musicality and being economical for instance. Having said that,
maybe it’d be just as useful to have written lots of thrillers and be ace at
plot?
Your first
picture book was The Girl with the Parrot
on her Head can you tell us a little about how that came about?
I was in the middle of my MA when I first wrote The Girl with the Parrot on her Head (and drew it – words and
pictures developed together in my sketchbook) and although it wasn’t my first
picture book idea, it felt more personal and urgent. The process felt very
similar to the associative way my poems used to grow, which was a bit
frightening (was it a story? Would it ever make sense?) but exciting too. I’m
so glad Walker let me make this one first – I was surprised they did because
other publishers had seemed befuddled by or dismissive of the book, and I was
feeling quite hopeless about it. I suppose it deals with quite difficult
feelings and is also the kind of book where it’s not always clear how real/imaginary/metaphorical
things are. I think Walker first saw my work at Bologna bookfair, where the MA
course had a stand, then I kept badgering them for some months or a year, until
in the end we had a meeting just as I was about to graduate.
There's a
joyous loose quality to your illustrations, can you tell us about your
technique - preferred media, how you set about storyboarding and the
stages/processes you go through.
Thank you! It’s very important to me, that looseness, so I’ve spent
years finding ways to stop myself tightening up, or tidying up, too much. I do
most of my drawing in very black ink, with a (very badly-cared-for) dip-pen, so
there’s no possibility of rubbing anything out – I prefer to just draw things
very quickly and very small, again and again and again until they’re right. I
also draw almost everything in sketchbooks – rather than on beautifully
stretched expensive paper for instance – because I need to feel like it doesn’t
really matter if it’s pants. My Walker books are all illustrated with screenprints,
a process which has been brilliant for me in so many ways: it means I can make
my drawings out of lots of little bits stuck together, rather than trying to do
one perfect drawing of everything (I used to do this and the pictures were
horribly stiff). It also means I can draw at the scale that’s comfortable for
me (tiny) and that my inability to draw big things becomes a kind of strength –
making tiny thumbnail drawings and enlarging them, rather than working
full-size, makes it so much easier, for me at least, to think about page-design
and dynamic compositions.
I’ve jumped ahead though, to the artwork-making stage. My process almost
always begins with doodling in my sketchbook (which I do first thing, almost
every day). When I get interested in a character I keep drawing them, seeing
what they do, and I try to get them talking. The words and pictures develop
together and eventually, when I feel there’s a story emerging, I start trying
to storyboard it. But this is a dangerous step – often I’ll do something less
structured first, so as not to scare the story back under the hedge, like
scanning the doodles and cutting-and-sticking them into some kind of sequence.
Sometimes I’ll show my editor and art director these collages, or sometimes
they’ll first see the idea at the storyboard stage. My first storyboards are
always very rough, often an impossible length – they’re more about seeing if
this thing has the makings of a satisfying story. We work out things like
pacing, composition and page-turns through many redraftings. But my roughs stay
rough – I learnt from reading about Quentin Blake’s process that it helps to
leave things not quite fully-realised, so that when you do the final drawings you’re
still finding things out.
I
Do Not Like Books Anymore was
selected for the 2020 Read for Empathy Collection, what role do you feel
picture books can play in helping to promote empathic responses?
I was so pleased about that! I think all good stories probably help
develop or reinforce empathy, because it feels as if we experience being
someone else as we read or listen. I think picture books, especially when children
have an adult who talks with them about what they read, can help children think
about how other people feel. I’d guess that for very young children, books can
help them to think about and articulate their own experiences, to feel like
they are seen and understood and cared for – which are prerequisites for
understanding and caring for others.
Natalie and
Alphonse feel an incredibly fresh pairing, can you tell us a little about how
you created them? It feels very reassuring that Natalie does not find
reading easy.
I’ve been doodling monsters for a very long time: Natalie and Alphonse
grew out of some red and blue ones that I drew and screenprinted for the cover
of our MA catalogue in 2012, and which Walker then asked me to develop into a
picture book. The catalogue monsters were drawing each other and I thought of
them as drawing each other into existence. This isn’t what actually happens in
the stories, but the idea of children’s creativity being very powerful is there
in all the Natalie and Alphonse books. The books are about very small
children’s everyday lives and ordinary catastrophes – things like arguing with
your little brother or learning to read. I
DO NOT LIKE BOOKS ANYMORE!
grew out of doodles like my other books, but once I realised there was a story there
about Natalie learning to read, and what happens to her love of books and
stories when she struggles with reading, I knew I had to be very careful and
thoughtful about getting that story right and about how I told it. I didn’t
find learning to read easy myself, even though – like Natalie – I already loved
books and stories. I’ve also been a primary school TA so I was thinking about
some of the children I’ve worked with, too. I hoped it would be reassuring and
empowering, for children whose love of stories was being tested, to see that
experience represented in a book.
It’s lovely that you say they feel fresh – at first I was worried about
making a series (what if I just made the same book again and again? What if I
got bored or boring?), but actually it’s been wonderful to get to know these
characters so well.
You have
some boardbooks Monster Clothes and Monster Food publishing this year, can
you introduce us to these please and what differences were there working in the
board book format? What are you planning to work on next?
I’m
so excited about my monster babies! It’s a bit undignified. The thing is, I’ve
been waiting to make these for eight years! Like The Girl with the Parrot on her Head, they began as an MA project, and
right from the beginning they were so much fun. As the titles suggest, one is
about what little monsters eat (not always food) and the other tells us what
they like to wear (not always clothes). It’s lovely to do something where the
narrative is very simple and the pictures are graphically spare, but also:
these books are just so silly! And musicality seems particularly important in
writing for babies, so MONSTER FOOD rhymes and MONSTER CLOTHES is alliterative. The actual books are beautifully
produced – luxury board books really, but still highly chewable – and I’m happy
to say they’re very true to their original weirdness. The monsters have got a
bit sweeter and younger-looking but they still wear tomatoes and pants on their
heads and attempt to eat tractors. I can’t wait to see what some actual babies
think!
As
for what next, I’ve just finished a picture book that is (mostly) about HUMAN
BEINGS, which made a change – although now I feel more monsters coming on.
A
HUGE thank you to Daisy Hirst for this brilliantly insightful interview and for
sharing a wonderful gallery of images with us! Why not follow Daisy on instagram @Deenface or Twitter @Deenface?
(1) Daisy Laughing at her Desk
(2) First sketchbook doodle of The Girl
with the Parrot on her Head
(3) Storyboards, roughs and mini dummy-books
for The Girl with the Parrot on her Head
(4) My first book, The Girl with the Parrot on
her Head (Walker Books, 2015)
(5) Sketchbook page from when I was
developing I DO NOT LIKE BOOKS ANYMORE! (Walker Books, 2018)
(6) I DO NOT LIKE BOOKS ANYMORE! doodles
rearranged into a rough sequence before storyboarding
(7) Stages in a screenprint for I DO NOT
LIKE BOOKS ANYMORE!
(8) Natalie gets her first reading book, from I
DO NOT LIKE BOOKS ANYMORE!
(9) Red and blue monsters for MA show catalogue,
who grew into Natalie and Alphonse
(10) MONSTER FOOD and MONSTER
CLOTHES board books (Walker Books, 2020)
(11) Peaches: From MONSTER FOOD
(12) Chairs: From MONSTER FOOD

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Posted By Jacob Hope,
01 October 2020
|
To celebrate National Poetry Day we are honoured to welcome Charlotte Hacking from the Centre for Literacy in Primary Education to talk about the CLiPPA award and to introduce this year's shortlist. Established in 2003, the announcement of the 2020 winner will be made 9 October at a special event at Cheltenham Literature Festival.
The
CLPE Poetry Award, fondly known as the CLiPPA, is the only award in the country
dedicated to children’s published poetry.
In
our work with schools, teachers and children across the country, we know what
an important branch of literature poetry is, providing the gateway for so many
young readers and writers in their journey towards becoming literate.
The award exists to celebrate the best of children’s poetry in all its
forms, bringing prestige to the form and prominence to those shortlisted, as
well the winners.
It’s
an absolute privilege to be a judge on this award. Every year, I get to explore
the full range and breadth of children’s poetry that’s been published. Reading
through all the submitted titles is such a pleasurable experience, every title
offers something to delight and inspire. Coming up with a decision of which
titles rise above the rest to make the shortlist is the hard part!
For
me, I look through the eyes of all the children I’ve had the pleasure to know over
my career as a teacher. I’m looking for the best poetry, of course, but I’m
also looking for something that offers something new and special to children,
that will encourage them to read, to perform or to show them that poetry is a
medium they can use to make sense of or to share their own thoughts and
feelings, and that can give them a voice. One of my absolute highlights is to
judge the shadowing scheme alongside the award, where schools submit videos of
children performing poems from the shortlisted collections, as that’s where we
really get to see the impact of the titles we’ve selected.
This
year’s shortlist is comprised of books that universally stood out for all of
the judges on the panel. Choosing a winner was really difficult, but the
shortlisted titles were books that every single one of us agreed on. There’s a
really good range to delight children of all ages. Reflecting on it now, what
links all the titles is a sense of the experiential - engaging with the natural
world in The Proper Way to Meet a
Hedgehog and other How To Poems, Cherry
Moon and Poems the Wind Blew in;
experiencing the rich folklore of Scotland through fresh eyes in Wain and a deliciously visceral
experience of food in Midnight Feasts.
In a year where experiences have been limited for a great deal of the
population, but especially for children, this seems particularly important.
Over
the years that I’ve had the honour of judging the award, we’ve seen such a
positive shift in the quantity of collections and anthologies submitted, but
also in the quality. Back in 2014, when I started as a judge, many of the
submissions were standard 12.7 x 0.8 x 19.7 cm texts, with paper so thin that
the next poem could be seen through the poem you were reading. This isn’t to
say that the poems inside these collections weren’t of quality, but production
value adds a lot to the feel of the collection as a whole.
Now, we see collections like Michael Rosen and Chris Riddell’s A Great Big Cuddle and James Carter and
Nicola Colton’s Zim Zam Zoom!, which are beautifully produced to
engage the earliest readers. Texts like Eloise Greenfield and Ehsan Abdollahi’s
Thinker: My Puppy Poet and Me and Kate
Wakeling’s Moon Juice, offer richly
illustrated poems in hand-held size publications for developing readers. And
titles like John Agard’s The Rainmaker
Danced and Joseph Coelho’s Overheard
in a Tower Block offer older readers sophisticated illustrations alongside
expertly crafted poems, providing a greater depth of reading experience. This
quality of production makes poetry irresistible.
Key titles such as Allie Esiri’s A
Poem for Every Night of the Year winning the Independent Bookshop Week
award in 2017 and Fiona Waters and Frann Preston-Gannon’s I Am the Seed that Grew the Tree winning the Waterstones Children's
Gift of the Year award in 2018 have also raised the profile of poetry, showcasing
poetry as a pleasure to own and dip in and out of or to give as a gift.
Over the last six years, we’ve been really keen to raise the prominence
of the award with the children this poetry is published for. In 2015, we
launched the CLiPPA shadowing scheme. Each year since, we’ve seen a significant
increase in the number of schools taking part, from the first year where we had
just 42 schools involved to this year, where before the scheme has even
launched, we have nearly 500 schools signed up to take part from across the
country. This really does engage the children with poetry and its creators and
supports them in finding texts that they want to read and buy for themselves. Publishers
report a direct uplift in sales as the shortlist is announced and our dedicated
resources enable schools to use the shortlisted books in classrooms to inspire
children to listen to, perform, respond to and write poetry of their own. CLPE’s Poetryline website also contains a
wealth of videos from a range and breadth of children’s poets made up of
prominent poets who have been shortlisted for the CLiPPA.
One of the joys of poetry is that you don’t have to read a complete
collection all in one sitting. You can dip in and out, share a poem and let it
linger, talk about a poem, perform it and let it live within you. Poems shared
can also be an inspiration for children to share their own thoughts, in art in
response to a poem, in music, dance or drama to accompany a poem or as a
stimulus for children’s own poetry.
The
important thing is that we make time for poetry and don’t allow it to be
marginalised. If we, as adults, have negative attitudes or are hesitant or
fearful about poetry, this can be easily passed on to the children. Instead,
make time to get to know and read poetry yourself and listen to poets reading
and performing their work on sites like Poetryline and the Children’sPoetry Archive. Arrange a visit – virtually or in person – from a children’s
poet. Seeing a poet bring their own work to life is an inspirational experience
for children of all ages. Use the CLiPPA shortlistto
keep up to date on the best new children’s poetry, as well as recommendations
from organisations like National Poetry Day to
ensure you stock a range of poetry that will delight and inspire the young
readers you work with. Provide opportunities for children to perform publicly
at school events or as part of competitions like the CLiPPA shadowing scheme
or Poetry
by Heart.
A big thank you to Charlotte for the informative blog and to CLPE for running this special award.

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Posted By Jacob Hope,
30 September 2020
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We are delighted to welcome poet Mandy Coe to the blog to talk about the adventures of co-curating the Children's Collection with the brand new Manchester Poetry Library. Look out for Mandy's latest collection of poetry Belonging Street.
At
the opening of the first free lending library in Manchester in 1852, writer William
Thackeray said that people wanted
books, '…as much as we look to air, or as much as we look to light and water…' He was right, and the library proved to be so popular that day, a police
constable was placed at the librarian’s desk to help keep order. Today, Manchester is a UNESCO City of Literature, famous for its vibrant art, music and literature
scene, a perfect place for Manchester Poetry Library and its programme of cross-arts collaboration, translation
and recordings of new work.
So,
if Manchester is the right choice for this project, was I the right choice as co-curator?
I think so! My comprehensive school (think 1970s, bell-bottoms and strikes) owned
two poetry anthologies from Geoffrey Summerfield’s series, Voices.
Full of edgy poems and illustrations of their time, they were designed to
subvert. Like all school texts, the spines were cracked with being hurled about,
but as we scowled and licked pencils, poised to graffiti the pages, the poems
crept in. The door to literature, and in many cases, literacy, might have been closed
to us, yet these books represented a loose panel begging to be jimmied open. I
knew an invitation when I saw one, and took it.
The
co-curation commission arrived at the same time as Covid 19, and looking around
at my bookshelves, I was grateful that designing educational material for National Poetry Day and the Children’s Poetry Bookshelf had brought so many books my
way. The lovely Anne Fine, as children’s laureate, left My Home Library as her
legacy, and this inspired me to stock-take mine, and I set to: piling up new books
and blowing dust off old favourites. Here were cheap and cheerful paperbacks filled
with pen and ink drawings, plus huge books creaking open to full-colour spreads
that made you hold your breath. And of course (thanks Oxfam) one battered set
of Voices.
However, my library wasn’t this library… and it wasn’t as simple
as sizing up… or sizing down (surveying ‘Top Ten’ poetry book lists of the
great-and-good, confirmed a core list, but it also generated an infinite wish-list.
Is this what ‘curation’ means, I wondered? The capacity to cull combined with the
knack of cultivation? From my occasional stints as editor I knew the origins of
the word ‘anthology’ was from the Greek, anthologia, meaning ‘bouquet’. It
seemed that, like anthologised poems, each book must stand alone, yet resonate
with others to suggest what lies beyond. I sat in a circle of books and resolved
to borrow the three elements of Thackery’s speech:
Air:
the community is the library
First
goal… to support the Manchester Poetry Library’s commitment to reflect its community. Over 200 languages
are spoken in Manchester, making it one of the most language-diverse cities in
the UK. Guided by Poetry Projects Manager at MMU, Martin Kratz – a poet and passionate
advocate of poetry in translation – the collection will be rich with books in
translation and in first language. This celebration of both local and worldwide
poets will be developed through MPL’s programmes of festivals, readings,
mushairas and the commission of translation and new writing.
Light:
not nursery rhymes as an afterthought
Second goal… ensure a balanced selection for the three age-categories (0-5, 6-12,
13-17) with an equal representation of single-author collections v anthologies,
classic v contemporary, a multicultural range of writers, humour v reflective, small
press v larger publishers, plus a range of languages and audio. I was very happy
to include infants in the category, and thanks to the extremely experienced MPL’s
director, Becky Swain, we have a ‘young adult’ category for teens.
Water:
education
Third
goal… create a fourth category for educators and writers. In addition to my
work as a poet/illustrator and visiting teaching Fellow of MMU, I am a free-lance
literacy advocate working with schools and inner-city projects, so I know that
this category of teaching materials (including online resources) will be invaluable.
This category will support librarians, teachers, teacher-writers and writers
who visit schools, and help MPL develop a programme of children’s education events
sharing innovative ways of teaching poetry.
Opening up and opening out
With the library’s physical opening postponed due to Covid 19, my
final goal was to put on the ‘virtual kettle’ and open the co-curation up to the
champions of children’s books. We selected libraries, reading and literacy projects
throughout the UK, plus a few overseas, such as the Bookaroo Festival in Delhi
and the Writers & Teachers Collaborative, in New York. A named individual
in each organisation was asked to suggest one or two favourite children’s
poetry books. This not only got people discussing children’s poetry, but will enable
MPL to make these champions visible to young readers through, “This book is recommended
by….” bookplates. Responses from this amazing community were positive, considered
and generous. Anne Fine invited us to use bookplates from ‘My Home Library’
while Apples and Snakes even offered to send free audio CDs! What a pleasure
this ‘open co-curation project’ was. To all who responded during lock-down, thank
you, thank you.
In 2014, seeing children’s poetry categorised under ‘jokes and
horror’, MMU’s brilliant Writing School team and Kaye Tew at the Manchester Children’s Book Festival, transformed, for one year, the prestigious Manchester Prize into
a competition to support children’s poets. Judged by myself and poets, Imtiaz Dharker
and Philip Gross, the best poems formed, Let in the Stars. This beautiful anthology,
with a forward by Carol Ann Duffy, was nominated for the CLiPPA prize – testimony
to all the illustrators and poets such as Carole Bromley, Ashley Gill, Chrissie
Gittins, Matt Goodfellow, Louise Grieg, Sue Hardy-Dawson – to name but a few.
Imagine how wonderful it is now, to be ordering these writers’ books for the MPL
collection.
The
collection touches on so many topics, there’s no doubt it will reflect our
young reader’s lives. With books like Our Difficult Sunlight: A Guide to
Poetry, Literacy, & Social Justice in Classroom & Community, From
Medusa To The Sky: Teaching Writing To Children With Special Needs, and
Somos Como Las Nubes, (We Are Like The Clouds), Poems About Immigration,
we are confident that the collection relates to both the public and the
personal. Here, children and parents, all our readers, will have a safe, creative
place to explore the world through poetry – no longer simply a category within a
library, but a library within a category. I can’t wait to see you there.
A huge thank you to Mandy Coe for writing this far-reaching blog feature.

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Collections
National Poetry Day
Poetry
Reading
Reading for Pleasure
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Posted By Jacob Hope,
25 September 2020
|
We were delighted to have the opportunity to interview illustrator Colleen Lamour on the blog! Colleen studied on the MA in Children's Book Illustration at Cambridge Art School. Her first books were published by Little Tiger Press and her latest book is Making Friends, written by Amanda McCardie. Do check out the sketchbook pictures and artwork which Colleen has kindly shared with us.
Can
you tell us a little about yourself, how you became an illustrator and your
work to date?
I live in Lisburn, County Antrim with my husband and our two
daughters. I grew up nearby
and went to a local high school where the only subject I was interested in and
any good at was Art.
After
school I studied an Art & Design GNVQ and then went on to study Multimedia
Arts in Liverpool. For three years pen
and paper was replaced with brightly coloured Apple Mac computers. I made children’s animation, short films and
interactive games.
Leaving
with a digital portfolio I worked for a while in advertising and animation but
I felt like a bit of a jack-of-all-trades, not fully accomplished at any one
thing. What I really wanted to do was
draw traditionally again and make a children’s book. Luckily, I got a place on the Children’s Book
Illustration MA course in Cambridge. An
amazing two years spent mixing with wonderful people and being taught by the
best teachers.
After
I graduated from the course I was fortunate enough to get a book deal with
Little Tiger Press. They published my
first two books, Under the Silvery Moon and Little Friend. When I finished the second book I returned
home to Belfast and found it difficult to earn a full-time living from
illustration alone so I got a job in Waterstones running the children’s
section.
I
loved the job and for a few years it took over until I had children. On maternity leave with my youngest daughter
I set up my own online business, Little Carousel, selling my illustrated prints
and handmade soft toys, which I made using fabric printed with my
illustrations. Having the business was a
pivotal change for me. I had no briefs or
preconceived rules to follow so I explored, experimented and had fun with my
illustration in a way that I hadn’t really done before. I gained so much more confidence and
intuition with my work and built up a fresh illustration portfolio.
In
2018 I was signed to the Bright Agency and have since worked on a lot of great
projects.
Who
are some of the illustrators you admire and which of their books particularly
stand out for you and why?
A
nearly impossible question to answer as there are so many! I do enjoy and always take inspiration from
classic illustrators such as Tomi Ungerer, Dahlov
Ipcar, Jean-Jacques Sempé and
John Burningham - those stunning animal drawings in Mr. Gumpy’s Outing! Some
current illustrators that I love are Polly Dunbar, Helen Stephens, Isabelle Arsenault, Yasmeen Ismail and
Christian Robinson, who is a real favourite.
I was incredibly moved by the book Last
Stop on Market Street that he illustrated, written by Matt De La Pena. Robinson’s artwork for the book is
deceptively simple whilst conveying such rich feeling and storytelling. Something he makes look easy, which it most
definitely isn’t!
Your
first books 'Under the Silvery Moon' and 'Little Friend' were published by
Little Tiger Press after you graduated from Cambridge Art School, how did this
come about?
Our graduation show was in a gallery in London. Lots of publishers were invited along and
soon after I was approached by Little Tiger Press and another publisher who
were interested in publishing the two books I had made during the MA
course. I felt incredibly lucky to have
such interest in my work. I signed with
Little Tiger Press, who took great care of me while I worked through the
publication of my first books.
You've
just published Making Friends with
Amanda McCardie, can you introduce the book to us please?
Making
Friends is a non-fiction picture book that follows new girl at
school, Sukie. Shy and lonely at first,
she soon befriends Joe, Stan and Poppy and together they experience all the ups
and downs that friendships bring.
The book is full of kindness, empathy and helpful advice and
I loved making it. Having admired Amanda’s
previous books I was over the moon to be asked to illustrate this new one. The team at Walker made the whole experience
a pleasure and having the opportunity to work with such an amazing publisher
was incredible.
It’s nice to think that the book can be a help to children
starting or returning to school after what’s been a pretty strange and
unexpected year for them.
The
school that Sukie attends feels wonderfully inclusive, how important do you
feel visual representation is in picture books for the young and why?
I think it’s vital.
Having a diverse visual representation for many different experiences
can really help children feel seen and can normalise something that may be
making them upset or feeling out of place.
Race and culture but also class, wealth, abilities, family set-ups,
appearances. Even something as simple as
a character wearing glasses could mean the world to a child who is upset at
having to wear their new glasses.
It’s an important, simple and effective way to teach
acceptance, love and kindness towards differences from a very young age.
Can
you talk us through your approach to illustration - techniques, preferred
media, where you work, the processes and stages you go through…
I work from a spare bedroom in our home which I’ve turned
into my studio. It’s bright and airy
and I’ve made it a comfortable space that I love spending time in.
I’ve always kept a sketchbook and recently I’ve become a bit
addicted to drawing and experimenting in them.
It’s such a great way to relax. I
can really see the benefits of this experimental work feeding back into my
commissioned jobs and portfolio work.
I still largely use traditional media to illustrate and will
use photoshop to piece certain elements together for final art. I start projects with lots of drawings on
cheap paper. I’ve always found expensive
paper the quickest way to freeze up my drawing for fear of making a mistake and
wasting it!
I don’t really have a set technique. Sticking to one illustration style is not my
thing. I get bored easily this way and I’m
much happier mixing things up and doing what is needed for the project. I like to see it as creative evolution and
growth!
You've
also worked on t-shirt designs for MyKarma Klub, what did this involve?
This was fun. Chris at
My Karma Klub had some quirky ideas and slogans that he asked me to illustrate
for his new t.shirt and website launch.
I also designed the logo for the business. We worked together to settle on the right
designs, colourful and humorous, which he had printed on unisex t.shirts. He sells them across the UK and Ireland at
LGBTQ+ events and festivals.
What's
next for you?
I’m currently working on a non-fiction picture book with Kids
Can Press. It’s called Our Green City
and is written by the brilliant Tanya Lloyd Kyi. The book requires an approach to artwork that
is different to how I’ve worked before but I am loving the challenge. It’s an original concept so I was thrilled to
be asked to illustrate it.
Earlier this year I also began writing my own stories again
and have a few in development. I’m
enjoying the writing process and exercising that different part of my
brain. It can sometimes be the perfect
remedy when I need a break from illustrating!
Huge thanks to Colleen for the interview and for sharing her artwork with us!

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Diversity
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Posted By Jacob Hope,
22 September 2020
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We are delighted to welcome Colette Hiller to the blog to talk about The B on Your Thumb a collection of poetry published by Quarto which uses rhythm, humour and wordplay to help to develop a love of the English language. The book has been chosen as a recommended read for National Poetry Day.
Please can you tell us a little about yourself?
I began life as a dancer at NY’s High School of Performing Arts (as in the film Fame.) Interestingly, fame was not something any of us thought about. But yes, we really did dance on the desks ! I came to London with the original Broadway production of Annie and liked it so much I stayed. After years on the London stage – with the RSC (spear carrier on the right) and the National Theatre (spear carrier on the left) , I joined The BBC as a researcher and then producer. I loved it there and worked
across many departments, Education to Current Affairs. This led to my role as a cultural producer at Sing London, filling city streets with public pianos, ping pong tables and Talking Statues. I’ve also written a best selling children’s CD – Applehead – The B is my first book.
The oral nature of language and storytelling is such an important part of our literary culture and of our early introductions to reading. How much did this influence you?
Strawberry short cake cream on top. Tell me the name of your sweet heart is it A? B? C I was hugely influenced by the skipping rope and handclapping songs of my youth. The rhythm, internal meter and simplicity of these rhymes stuck in my head. Further influence came from A A Milne , Mother Goose and from Alligator Pie the Canadian classic by Dennis Lee. ( I was chuffed to bits when Dennis Lee wrote an endorsement for the book. And in rhyme!)
Are there any rhymes that are particular favourites and, if so, why?
These rhymes are like my children so I don’t like to show favouritism! That said...I especially like TION – which tells a funny story. The A in my Head – is wonderfully daft! And... I like A lot a lot. I’m actually a rotten speller myself, and so this rhyme reminds me how to spell the word!.
A Lot
A lot is not just one word ,
it’s always made of two
A lot of people don’t know that
From now on, you do!
How important do you think sharing and reading aloud is?
Reading aloud is particularly important with poetry . When a poem is words on the page, it’s only half formed. It comes alive when said aloud. My challenge when writing these was to create rhymes which felt easy to recite, and gratifying.
Some of the complexities and irregularities of the English language can make learning to read quite tricky? Do you have any experiences from working with BBC Education or through your work with early education about some of the challenges associated with this?
English is tricky and lots of things seem to make no sense. But that doesn’t mean these irregularities are s tricky to teach. You just have to explain that they are weird. For that matter, take my rhyme to explain the spelling of WEIRD
WEIRD
I before E
Except after C
And W too
On the odd occasion
(Which is wEIrd!)
What do you think of Tor's illustrations and did you have any interaction with him during the process of the book?
Tor ’s illustrations are lively, entertaining and imaginative. While a silent B may be painfully shy, a Bossy E is downright bolshie! But more than that, the illustrations reinforce the learning message of each rhyme. They are also filled with hidden things for children to find.
There is a real sense of play, fun and interaction in the book, how important do you feel these are to learning?
I think the process of learning to read should itself be enjoyable and entertaining. It shouldn’t be arduous or medicinal. And above all it shouldn’t be predictable!
All of these rhymes were created around a playful sense of fun.
Thank you to Colette for the interview and to Quarto for the opportunity.
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Spelling
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Posted By Jacob Hope,
18 September 2020
|
Oi readers! It is the Youth Libraries Group here, 'Y' on the alphabet blog tour for Kes GraY and Jim Field’s irresistible new picture book Oi Aardvark! We work with Youngsters, judge the Yearly CILIP Carnegie and Kate Greenaway medals and Yarns are our specialism! What will we be talking about as the ‘Y’ stop? We will be discussing our top five reasons whY the Oi books are so perfect for sharing!
WhY funnY books make reading a joY
SadlY research shows children and Young people’s reading enjoYment is currently in decline. Only 53% of children and young people said they enjoYed reading in 2019 (National Literacy Trust). This is the lowest level since 2013. If we can make reading fun and enjoYable from an earlY age it carries those associations. FunnY books are a brilliant waY to achieve this and there’s a delightfullY absurd qualitY to Kes GraY and Jim Field’s Oi books!
WhY rhYmes matter
RhYthm and rhYmes plaY an important role as part of children's early reading. TheY help children to get activelY involved, offering opportunities to chant words, to take part in the sounds and rhYthms and to guess what might come next. Kes GraY’s rhYming text in the Oi series is a delight to read aloud and offers rich opportunities for joining in whether you are 'a mosquito on a burrito' or a 'Yak on a sack'!
WhY Jim Field’s illustrations help relaY emotions
Large eYes and clear facial expressions make it easY for children to interpret and understand the emotions that characters have. Jim Field’s illustrations not only ooze child appeal, but are great for this. Keep an eYe on the eYebrows in his illustrations too, these plaY a keY part in helping to show the feelings of his characters!
WhY being part of a series can be reassuring
Finding books we love is such a powerful thing for any reader and often there can be a sense of loss on reaching the end. Books in a series have familiaritY so can be a useful waY to reallY develop and build an appreciation and love of books and stories. There are six main titles in the Oi series to explore and share.
WhY design is important
High contrast page colours really make the books ‘pop’ visuallY. The size and shape of the books make them ideal for sharing whether at storYtimes in libraries or schools or whether cuddling up close together in more intimate moments.
WhY not pop to your nearest librarY and borrow some of the Oi Books, look out for the latest title, Oi! Aardvark?

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picture books
reading
Reading for pleasure
sharing
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Posted By Jacob Hope,
17 September 2020
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We are delighted to welcome Ruth Ahmedzai Kemp to the blog. Ruth is the translator of b small publishing's How Do Bridges Work? written and illustrated by Roman Belyaev. Here Ruth provides an insight into translation. Many thanks to Sam Hutchinson from b small publishing for the opportunity.
How long have you been a translator and how did you get started?
I qualified as a professional translator in 2004 when I finished an MA and postgraduate diploma in translation, but my first taste of freelance translation was during my third year abroad, when I spent 4 months in Dresden. I translated some texts and marketing videos for an eco tech company at Dresden Environment Centre - a really fascinating experience.
This new book from b small publishing, HOW DO BRIDGES WORK?, was originally written in Russian. Tell us about your connection to the Russian language.
I started learning Russian aged 16, when I was lucky enough to do Russian GCSE alongside my A levels. I fel in love and went on to study Russian and German language and literature at Oxford University, spending every summer in Moscow and St Petersburg, traipsing around the many wonderful writers' house museums. I associate Russia with music and singing with friends around the kitchen table. About 10 years ago I taught Russian A level at a local school and it was a delight to devise grammar activities based on classic Soviet rock songs!
HOW DO BRIDGES WORK? contains some quite technical language to do with architecture and engineering. How do you tackle this?
I have a background in literature and history, not science and technology, and yet over the years I have translated a few popular science books. Part of the essential toolkit of a translator is excellent research skills and also a reliable network of expert friends to ask about terms and concepts when in doubt! I also think self-doubt as an underlying principle is important in translation: you need the confidence to tackle texts that are sometimes out of your comfort zone, but the self-doubt to check and double check everything! One thing I love about translation is the excuse to read books and texts about a vast range of subjects. You never know what you're going to be asked to work on so the best preparation for a translation career is to read constantly and read widely.
Do you do any preliminary work to find the voice of the original author or do you like to approach the text without preconceptions?
It depends on the text and the target readership, and where on the spectrum the book fits: should it be written in a neutral nonfiction style or a more chatty, personal style, for example? With this book, it was most important that the text was clear, concise and accessible to younger readers, so at times I need to restructure a sentence or a paragraph to express the same ideas in a way that would be clear to young English readers.
As a fan of foreign languages, are you learning any new languages at the moment? What’s next?
To say I love exploring foreign languages is an understatement! I was 24 when I started learning Arabic, and for the first decade or so I had to focus on that alone - Arabic is many languages in one, after all, when you consider how much the spoken dialects vary. But in recent years I've allowed myself time to dabble in other languages again. I'm slowly working on my Norwegian on Duolingo, as we have family in Bergen; as I'm a linguist I fear they're expecting me to be fluent by our next visit! I got a bit distracted by Yiddish after watching Unorthodox on Netflix - I'm instantly gripped by a language that is similar to one I already know well, and Yiddish is very close to German. I have family links to Malta and I was astonished when I started listening to Maltese podcasts and realised I could understand a lot because it's very close to colloquial Arabic, particularly the Palestinian and Syrian dialects I'm most familiar with.
Foreign languages don’t always have the most consistent spot on the Curriculum, particularly in primary schools. How would you encourage children to take an interest in foreign languages?
This is a particular passion of mine and I'm working with the Stephen Spender Trust to develop teaching resources for primary schools, exploring creative translation in the classroom. These activities give pupils the satisfaction of codebreaking and working out how to read a creative text in a language they have no experience of, and then translating it as they would approach any creative writing task: writing freely but with certain constraints. Pupils discover language skills they didn't realise they had and make discoveries about English at the same time.
Another way young people can explore our multilingual planet is to get involved in #WorldKidLitMonth, which is happening now in September. On social media, this is an initiative aimed at encouraging kids and adults to read beyond our shores, and to explore children's and YA books in translation from other languages. There are heaps of resources on World Kid Lit blog, a website I co-edit, including reading lists and maps for different age groups, and you can search the site by language and by country. We aim to make it easier than ever before to pick a place in the world and fly there by book!
Finally, now that many of us are having to work from home or in new conditions, tell us about your workspace!
My workspace actually hasn't changed as I have a home office; what is new is having to share it with my husband! But as we've had the children home from school throughout lockdown, we've worked shifts and haven't been in there at the same time. From September we might have to get another chair but to be honest I'm not sure I'll be able to share with him - I think I talk to myself too much when I'm translating! I have to read texts aloud to hear how they sound and as I'm currently editing my translation of a novel I'm forever acting out scenes to check it all fits together. I think I may be banished to the living room!
A huge thank you to Ruth Ahmedzai Kemp and to b small publishing for the opportunity.

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Tags:
Information Books
Non-fiction
Reading
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STEAM
Translation
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