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An Interview with David Roberts

Posted By Jacob Hope, 01 July 2025

We are delighted to welcome multi award-winning illustrator and author David Roberts to the blog to answer questions on his exciting and highly informative new book, We are your Children: A History of LGBTQ+ Activism.  Questions have been posed by students at Ullswater Community College.

 


Were recent international and national political attacks on the queer community a motivation to write this book or is it just a coincidence that it is publishing at a time where it is more relevant that ever?

 

No, the timing of the book is coincidental with current events.

 

The book was planned back in 2018, with my motivation being to make a book that highlighted the stories of previous generations of LGBTQ+ people who fought for their own (and subsequently our) rights to live freely as queer people. I wanted to show that by their actions, and often simply by being visible in their communities, they gradually created a culture of greater acceptance and respect towards queer people where previously there had been suspicion, fear and prejudice.

Do you have a favourite LGBTQ+ power moment?

 

Gosh, that would be so hard to choose! I am particularly interested in the Radical Effeminists of the 1970s. As a gay boy who was always questioning `what I saw as the ridiculous restrictions around gender expression and expectations, I have been fascinated by their ideas. They were focused on smashing these gender stereotypes and working towards complete liberation from them, for everyone.

 

They wanted to establish a completely different way of being a man and expressing masculinity. Radical ideas back then – and still now it would seem! 

 

Whilst researching the book, what was the most inspiring story or advice you came across that you wanted to share with queer readers and their allies?

 

I don’t think I could single out one story in particular, but collectively I found the resilience of people and their determination to not be brushed aside, overlooked or disregarded very powerful. They knew they were right and they cared enough to show up and speak out to challenge discrimination. They may not have seen themselves as revolutionary, and they must have felt exhausted and perhaps even hopeless at times, but they kept going – and their actions did change attitudes towards LGBTQ+ people in a positive way. That’s very inspiring.

    

 

Do your experiences as a fashion designer influence your work? Is it clothes you still enjoy illustrating most?

 

YES! Thank you so much for that question , I love it! 

 

My love of clothing and style and how we dress ourselves has been a major influence on my work as an illustrator. With every new character I encounter I’m always asking myself – who are they? What’s their style? How will their style inform their personality? I see individual style as a form of storytelling in itself; perhaps we are expressing ourselves in ways we can’t with words. Or perhaps we are hiding ourselves and our true identity. So I would say it’s not only clothes I love to draw, but the personality that is wearing them.

What are the best things about being an author and illustrator?

 

As an illustrator of other people’s stories, it’s such a privilege and an adventure stepping into someone else’s imagination. Often when I read a text for the first time it fills my mind with images and possibilities! I may be taken to places in my own imagination that I would never have thought possible. It may challenge me to think about what story is being told – both through the images and the words, and is it the same story? What else can the image bring to the reader that’s not being said in the text? Oh and being able to listen to the radio while working is fabulous too. I’ve always loved radio ever since I was little. The working life of an illustrator is rather solitary so the radio is a bit like a work colleague. 

   

Are there any things about being an author and illustrator that you don’t like?

 

Good question! I think it’s hard sometimes to accept your limitations and embrace the challenges of working within them to create the best work you can.

 

I think also as I get older, focus (or should I say a lack of focus) is becoming a real problem! Oh, and some days I just don’t want to draw! 

 

Do you have any tips for aspiring authors and illustrators?

 

Composition is everything! 

Do you prefer writing or illustrating?

 

I think illustrating feels more natural to me. I like the language of illustration and the way a story can be told just with pictures. I think I might have developed a stronger sense of visual language because I have dyslexia, which when I was a child was not picked up on, so I was left to struggle with reading and writing and eventually drifted away from that form of communication sadly.

 

It’s been a bit of a revelation for me working on information books, as I have found the process of writing really satisfying, so perhaps I will try more.

What is your working style? Do you plan everything in lots of detail or go with the flow? Where do you prefer to work?

 

That’s a good question! I’m a planner; I plan every picture in great detail. I’m obsessed with composition so I’m always looking for an interesting way for the image to sit on the page. What gets seen and what is suggested? I love planning how the viewer’s eye will travel through the image and how that might help to enhance the storytelling, atmosphere and emotional impact of an image. I work from a studio space at home but will often travel with work, so really I can work anywhere as long as I have my easel, light box, daylight lamp, radio and magnifier (my eyesight is not what it used to be!).

 

I also am never without a note book.

  

We liked that the stories in the book are told in the first person, it really feels like those individuals are speaking directly to us. How did you research and collect their stories?

    

Thank you, that’s a lovely compliment. Where I could, I interviewed people.

 

It would have been wonderful to speak directly with all the people I was writing about, but unfortunately that wasn’t always possible. So for many of the stories I made sure I gathered as much information as possible.

 

Watching documentaries or listening to podcasts or radio interviews to hear the person speak about their experiences was a huge help in finding a way of telling their story. Finding news footage on YouTube was also amazing in helping me see events unfold and get a sense of the atmosphere around them. Newspaper stories and interviews were also really helpful, as they can capture the tone of how society was reacting and representing these events.

 

It became sort of journalistic as I wanted to re-tell stories without bringing too much of my own opinions or voice to the text. 

    

Given recent hostilities to the queer community and the increase in book bannings, we think that you publishing this book right now is a huge act of rebellion.  Is it intimidating and scary to put your head above the parapet though?

     

Yes, because many queer people of my generation are unable to fully shake off the shame about ourselves that was projected onto us by the homophobia we grew up dealing with. Even if we felt perfectly comfortable with our sexuality, society was telling us it was wrong, unnatural and shameful. It’s hard not to absorb some of that and carry it with you through life. It’s why we often say as gay people we are constantly coming out. (Not that I was ever in!).

 

There were no books like this one in my school or local library that I could access growing up, which only contributed to feelings of confusion and isolation as a young gay teen. We have come so far in terms of publishing with LGBTQ+ themes and characters in an encouraging variety of kids’ books from baby board books to young adult fiction.

 

So I’m particularly saddened and angry when I hear that these books are being removed from school or local libraries, putting young people in the same situation I was in at age 15, 40 years ago. 

I think because older queer people have experienced rampant homophobia and seen how far we have come over time, when we see these hostilities resurface – particularly now for trans people – it makes us even more determined not to go backwards. I think it’s important that we all know the stories of the generations who came before us and took action against the prejudice and discrimination they faced, to recognise when it is happening again. As the saying goes, ‘knowledge is power’.

    

We were excited by the big bibliography at the end of the book, what are the 3 books or websites you suggest we look at first to continue our queer education?

 

Making Gay History is a podcast where we can listen to interviews with many of the key figures in our queer history and culture. Many of the people interviewed are no longer with us so it’s an extremely important and valuable resource. 

 

No Bath But Plenty of Bubbles: An Oral History of the Gay Liberation Front 1970–73  by Lisa Power published by Cassell (but sadly now out of print). You can find used copies but they are very expensive. It’s a fascinating account of the British Gay Liberation Front, using interviews with its members to capture an insight into what life was like for queer people in the early 70s. The blurb on the back of the book states “The Gay Liberation Front dragged homosexuality out of the closet, onto the streets and into the public eye!” 

     

May I suggest a documentary? The Rebel Dykes directed by Harri Shanahan and Sîan Williams. This film is described as “a brilliant and refreshing story of post-punk Dyke culture told by those who lived it”. It is available on YouTube, and it’s such an important and valuable resource, especially because so much of lesbian culture was not seen. Even within the queer community, lesbian voices were not always heard. 

We Are Your Children is written and produced in the same style as Suffragettes: Battle for Equality – are there any other communities you would like to create a book about?

 

Ooh that’s a very good question! There is actually one that I would love to research and make a book about, and that’s the conscientious objectors from World War One. Or perhaps conscientious objectors of any war. I know only a tiny little bit about them, because in my family it’s believed that my great grandfather was one. I believe there were about 16,000 in the First World War who objected to being drafted, or refused to fight in armed combat for loads of different reasons. 

 

They were seen as social pariahs, ostracised and denigrated by society, portrayed as ‘cowards’ and ‘shirkers’. The rigid expectations of masculinity often highlight how men are taught to think but not feel, and in times of war, to step up and follow orders. So when faced with all that, their strength in staying true to their beliefs really inspires and intrigues me. I would love to find out more about them.

 

A big thank you to David Roberts for the interview, to students at Ullswater College for the brilliant questions and to Macmillan Children's Books for the opportunity.


Tags:  History  Illustration  LGBTQ+  Outstanding Illustration  radical literature  reading  young people 

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The Story of Now: Let's Talk about the British Empire

Posted By Jacob Hope, 29 December 2023

 

We are delighted to welcome Shelina Janmohamed, author and commentator, to the blog to explore approaches for considering and discussing the British Empire and the role this has played in global history and the impact it has on children’s lives today.  This is a fascinating blog and a powerful story that impacts upon all of us.


The British Empire was the biggest empire in history. Ever. Bigger than the Roman Empire. Bigger than the Incas, Mayas, Aztecs, Mughal, Ottoman, Malian, Mamluk… well, you get the picture. It was REALLY BIG. Bigger than any other country, empire, kingdom, sultanate or dynasty. Ever.

The British Empire affected everything. Not only did it affect everything then, it still affects so many of our lives in big and small ways today. 

Yet, while we teach our children about the Romans, Greeks, Egyptians and other empires, the biggest, wealthiest, most powerful and most influential empire in the history of ever – the British Empire is not even currently officially on the school curriculum, and we don’t have the resources to talk about it with nuance and complexity. In fact, when I started writing it in 2020 there were barely any children’s books at all about the British Empire!  I wanted to change that. 

That’s because the British Empire didn't just affect countries over there. It affected everything about the islands we live on today, including our four nations. It affected everything and still does, from the language we speak, to the food we eat, to the buildings that surround us, to the people who live here, to the prosperity we enjoy, to who gets to have power, wealth and influence, to how we shape our future. 

Growing up I wasn’t taught anything about the British Empire. A big fat zero. So, I’ve written the book I wish I’d had as a kid to help children make sense of the world and find their own stories in it whatever their background. Kids don’t need culture wars, they need conversations.

My aim has been to stand in children’s shoes to see the world as it matters to them – everything from the heated debates around then, to climate change, technology, migration, social and racial equality, global relationships and big businesses. And I’ve told it through the stories of children like them, so they can hear the voices of kids through the ages and around the world. I’ve told the stories of children during the British Empire like the home children, the kids who took part in the anti-slavery sugar boycotts and the brave ones of the Industrial Revolution whose testimony changed labour laws; and more. So kids can see how their stories matter. 

And while it’s of course a deeply serious subject, I’ve worked hard to make it approachable, engaging, packed with facts and puzzles, aiming to bring it to life, and make it interactive with quizzes and posing questions for them to solve. But most of all, I’ve centred them: a book written from scratch for children so children can make sense of the world. 

Which is why Story of Now has the strapline “This is not a history book, this is the story of now”. And it’s also why the language and direction are about how to apply topics that cover everything from corporations, consumerism, technology, women’s rights to climate change and children’s protests and power. 

As one child told me, it’s a book that isn’t just about what happened, it’s a book that teaches you how to think! 

What would you answer to these?

 

  • If you had 7 million pounds to set up a company what would it do?

    This was the amount for the East India Company, and it shaped an entire empire!

 

  • Should businesses have their own country, army and currency?

 

  • What can we learn from Francis Drake and his imperialism to help us in the new frontiers in galactic and digital space?

 

  • If you ran a branding agency, how would you create Brand Britain?

 

  • How can you talk to friends, family and elderly relatives like grandparents to find out your own Empire story?

 

  • How British is the great British cuppa?

 



Here are some of the activities prompted by the book:

 

  • How can you find your own story and map your history

 

  • Explore your local history and surroundings


  • Shine a spotlight on specific geographic areas

 

  • Discuss ways to exercise children's power and process using examples from the British Empire

 

  • Help children understand the experiences of others, and how they connect with their own


In writing the book, I’ve tried to be mindful of the challenges facing teachers, educators, schools, families, libraries and librarians when it comes to a topic often described as ‘controversial’ or ‘complicated’ or even ‘woke’.  That’s why I’ve taken the approach that this about every child whatever their background, finding their own story.

Even adults struggle. When I talk to grown-ups it amazes me that people will say something like, “well I’d never thought about the British Empire because it’s nothing to do with me…”. And I ask, well where are you from? Birmingham? Liverpool? Scotland? Bristol? the London docklands? I want every child to see their story and how they are woven together, how they connect.  Because one of the greatest gifts a child can give themselves is knowing their own story. This connectivity is key.

We are seeing a growing number of books that speak specifically to a specific group of readers, and that’s important, highlighting their particular experiences.

But sometimes we also need for those experiences to be contextualised as one of many, to show variation as the norm, rather than silos and buckets.

And perhaps most notably, we can sometimes run into the problem that certain subjects are seen as for 'specific' or 'problem' or 'underrepresented' groups, which leaves everyone else feeling like it's not for them, not relevant or worse not their responsibility. It also underscores the issue of 'norm' and abnorm. It can feel heavy if a book shines a spotlight on you as a child in a group setting. Instead, I want every child to see their story and how they are woven together, how they connect. 

So, what do you do when one of the biggest topics ever - and one which is constantly discussed and shaping our huge social conversation - doesn't include children, and doesn't support families, schools and libraries with materials? And one that feels pressing, urgent and important but isn’t even on the school curriculum? That’s the dilemma I’ve set out to solve, and I hope it helps fill this woeful gap. AND bring a new fresh perspective to the wider debate. 

So, if you need to give a book or a recommendation, you know this is one that all kids will find themselves in - what's not to love about stories of pirates, space travel, huge protests, children's boycotts not to mention that at the beginning I even challenge whether history even exists?!

Heck, why not even recommend it to adults and parents. I think all of us could do with understanding the world a bit better!

Thank you to Shelinha Janmohamed for such a thought-provoking and impactful blog.

 

 

Tags:  Children  Empire  History  Reading  Reading for Pleasure 

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First Names Nelson Mandela, an interview with Nansubuga Isdahl and Nicole Miles

Posted By Jacob Hope, 27 February 2021

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.

  1. 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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Introducing It's Her Story: Rosa Parks

Posted By Jacob Hope, 03 February 2021

 

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 wont 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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The House by the Lake - An Interview with Thomas Harding

Posted By Jacob Hope, 23 October 2020

We are tremendously excited to welcome Thomas Harding to the blog for an interview.  Thomas is an author and journalist.  He co-funded a television station in Oxford and has worked for many years as an award-winning documentary maker.  Thomas is the author of Hanns and Rudolf, a Sunday Times bestseller and winner of the JQ-Wingate Prize.  His book, The House by the Lake a Costa Biography Award shortlistee has been adapted by him into a truly remarkable picture book showing how homes and lives span generations and the politics of their time.  The book is powerfully illustrated by Britta Teckentrup.  Do take a look at the gallery of images which Thomas has kindly shared with us.

 

Can you introduce yourself a little please?

As a young boy, I loved pictures books. I still have many of my favourites on my shelves. Later, as a teenager, I spent a short time working in a children’s bookshop, and it was then that I understood the diversity of picture books. When I had my own kids, I adored reading to them every night. Safe to say, I have always wanted to write my own picture book.

I have been a journalist for more than 30 years. I have written for various newspapers including the Guardian, FT, The Times and Washington Post. I have made documentaries and ran a TV station with my wife, Debora.

In 2006, my great uncle Hanns Alexander died. I knew him well, he was the person in the family who carried out pranks, who told us children dirty jokes. I knew that he and his family (including my grandmother Elsie) had fled Nazi Germany in 1936; they were Jewish. At Hanns’ funeral a eulogy was given which reported that he had tracked down and captured the Kommandant of Auschwitz. This shocked me. I had never heard this story before. How was it possible that nobody had told me? This got me going on an 8-year journey to find out the truth and resulted in my first book, Hanns and Rudolf. Ever since, I have worked as a full-time author.


The story of the house by the lake is an extraordinary one, not least because it makes us think about what a home is and means, can you tell us a bit about how you came to write it?

When I was young, my grandmother Elsie — we called her ‘Granny’ — told us about her family’s weekend lake house just outside of Berlin. She called it her ‘soul place’. Granny was a larger-than-life character, thick German accent, shock of white hair, bright red lipstick, a cigarette always on her lip. When she turned 80, she took me and my cousins back to the city of her birth. She showed us her family’s apartment in the city centre. It had been bombed during the war and was now a high-end suitcase store. She took us to the school near the Grunewald Forest where she had learnt to speak English. And then she took us out to the lake house, thirty minutes’ drive out of Berlin and to the West.

When we arrived at the lake house I was struck by how small it was. A one-level wooden structure, perhaps 9m wide and 10m long. But it had a fabulous position, overlooking the Gross Glienicke Lake. A we walked down the sandy path we were met by a tall man with a fluffy hat who asked us what we wanted. Later we would learn his name was Wolfgang Kuhne.

Granny explained that she had lived at the house in the 1920s and 1930s. Suddenly, his mood changed. ‘Come in’, he said, ‘come in!’  We then toured the house, with Herr Kuhne showing off all his improvements and my grandmother pointing out that her parents lived in this bedroom and she in that bedroom. It was a lovely, warm encounter. But it was also deeply emotional. After all, this was the last physical trace of the family in Germany. Granny was clearly pleased, however, that even though the house was no longer hers, someone was living there, taking care of it.

Twenty years later, when I was researching my book Hanns and Rudolf, I heard from a resident in the village that the house was in bad shape. I needed to come take a look. So, I hopped on a plane — easier in those days — and a few hours later was standing in front of the lake house.

The building was now overgrown with bushes and trees. The windows were broken. Inside graffiti covered the walls, the floors were strewn with broken bottles and fragments of furniture. The back bedroom, where Granny’s parents had slept, had been used a rug den. I had that uncomfortable feeling in my stomach, when you see a child fall of a swing.

I went to the local city hall and asked what the plan was for the house. They said they would soon knock it down and then replace with new housing. How could I stop this? I asked. They said I would have to prove the house was culturally and historically important. This is what got me going on my research on the house, the 5 families who had lived there and the history it had seen. Which resulted in my writing the adult non-fiction book The House by the Lake.

At the same time, I started working with the residents of the village and involving members of my family. Together we agreed to save the house. Six years later, we had registered the lake house as national monument (a ‘Denkmal’ in Germany) and raised enough money to repair it back to its former state. The house was stunning! Its walls painted in mustard yellows and aqua blues and forest greens.

A few months after we opened the house to the public, I watched some young children as they walked around. I noticed their fascination with a hole in the wooden walls made by a bullet in 1945 when the Russian and German soldiers had fought house to house. I saw them touch the sunflower wallpaper and look out at in wonder the beautiful lake view. It was then that the question came into my head, could I tell this story for young readers? I was immediately excited. But I had never written a picture book before, I wasn’t sure how to do it.

As it happens, a few weeks later I bumped into Nicola Davies the author of many wonderful picture books. I told her I desperately wanted to write a book for younger readers about the house by the lake, but I wasn’t sure if I could do it. She turned to me and said ‘of course you can!’ and then added ‘just go for it’.

A few days later, I sat down at my desk and started the first draft. After a few more attempts and a few more after that, I sent it off to Walker Books, who to my great delight, said that they would like to publish the book. They then contacted the extraordinary German illustrator Britta Teckentrup, who agreed to join the project. Britta lives in Berlin and we immediately connected. It was the perfect partnership.


What type of research was entailed with the book?

I interviewed people in the village who remembered the house and the history it had witnessed. I spoke with my family of course, collecting letters, photographs, film and stories. I also went to various archives in Germany and the UK. The house itself held its own secrets, the fabric it was made from, the environment it was located in, the impact of history on its walls and floors.


Were you able to make contact with any of the families who have previously lived in the house?

Yes! Some were easier than others.

I spent weeks trying to find someone from the family who leased the land to my family. The Von Wollanks. As a last resort, I looked on Facebook, and found the great-grandson of Otto Von Wollank. He was an influencer in Berlin and his most recent picture was of him with Lady Gaga.

The Meisel family who lived at the house after my family were easier to track down. They still ran the same company ‘Meisel Music’ in Berlin. I met Doris Meisel, the daughter-in-law of Will Meisel, the man who lived at the house after my family. She handed me a plastic bag and said that she wanted me to have it. I thanked her and asked her what was inside. She said it was full of documents proving that her family had stolen the house from my family. ‘It’s important to me that you tell the story,’ she said ‘both the good and the bad.’

The Kuhne family still lives near the house. We met a few times and shared stories. Bernd Kuhne had grown up in the same room that my grandmother had used. I was struck by people and stories take place within the same walls, with the same views out of the window.

The Fuhrmanns also live nearby. When I visited the house with them they were overwhelmed with emotion. This is the strange thing about this small wooden house, it appears to provoke strong love and attachments with those it encounters.  


The picture book is an adaptation of your Costa-shortlisted biography, was it challenging adapting the book into such a short form?


When I started, I thought the biggest hurdle would be reduce a story that takes 120,000 words to tell in the adult version of the book to a few hundred for the picture book. I was wrong. The toughest challenge I realised was to locate the essence of the story. To ask the question: what are the characters’ key emotions and what is their narrative arc? This was more important than facts and dates. In truth, I found this tremendously helpful for my other non-fiction adult writing as well.


The book alludes to some dark points in human history, what was your approach to making these accessible for young readers?

This was the other major concern I had. How do you talk about the Nazis, the Berlin Wall, the Stasi, the bombing of Berlin and other dark events for young children?

Then I realised that children fall in love with places. They are sad when they have to leave them. They make friends with some and are bullied by others. They know what it is like to have something they love taken from them.

Most of all, almost everyone knows what it is like to have a home. Whether it is a tent, a flat, a house or a palace. A home is different from a building. A home is somewhere we make memories. A place we are attached to. Somewhere we leave and come back to. Have family celebrations. A place we retreat to our favorite spot, where we feel safe. Where we feel ‘at home’.

This is why I chose to put the little house by the lake, with its own personality and journey, at the centre of the story. I felt that perhaps that was a way for younger readers to connect.

And I hope the book will encourage young readers to think about what is their favourite spot, what is their ‘soul place’?

 

 

There are some very poignant explorations of barriers and borders, what kind of resonance do you feel exist with current geo-politics?

The Berlin Wall was an example of a society locking its citizens in, like a city-wide prison. This was a government trying to stop their people leaving. They were not trying to stop others coming in.

Though this is different from many other walls, the impact is similar. There is an ugly tall structure made by humans dividing one community from another.  Whether it be the Berlin Wall, or the wall along the Mexico/ USA border, or the so-called ‘peace wall’ in Jerusalem or the wall dividing the Catholic and Protestant areas in Belfast.

When I asked the people who lived in the house during the time of the Berlin Wall ‘what it was like?’, they said it was ‘normal’. They got used to it. This despite the Wall being less than 10m from the back door, with its watch towers, search lights, barking dogs, machine guns and ‘death strip’. It is a reminder that we humans can find a way to live in even the darkest of situations. Of course, this comes with a terrible cost, which those I spoke with were quick to explain.


What were your thoughts on Britta Teckentrup's illustrations?

I cried when I first saw the pictures. She has so perfectly captured the characters and the house and the story. The way the colours shift, the tone and movement. Granny would have loved these illustrations!


 

Can you tell us about how the house by the lake is used now?


The house by the lake has been renovated and tours and activates that take place at the house are managed by a German charity called ‘Alexander Haus’. It operates as a centre for education and reconciliation, welcoming tours from the public, schools and other institutions. We run workshops, training sessions and other similar activities. The house is open, when you are next in Berlin please come visit !


Would you be interested in writing anything else for the children and young people's market?

 

As it happens, I have written a book for young adults called Future History. I like to say it is a non-fiction history of the next thirty years. It has been published in Germany, will be released soon in France, we are currently looking for an English publisher. I would like to write other picture books. I have a couple of ideas… Let’s wait and see if the stars align…



Image Gallery

Image 1 book cover of The House by the Lake, by Thomas Harding illustrated by Britta Teckentrup

Images 2 and 3 Interior and Exterior of the house, 1927 photos copyright Lotte Jakobi

Photos 4 and 5 Interior and exterior of the house, 2013 photos copyright Thomas Harding

Photos 6, 7 and 8 Interior and Exterior of the house, 2019 photos copyright Andre Wagner

Photo 9 Photograph of Thomas Harding outside Alexander Haus, photo copyright Cristian Jungeblodt

Images 10, 11 and 12 spreads from The House by the Lake by Thomas Harding illustrated by Britta Teckentrup, published by Walker Studios 2020 



Massive thanks to Thomas Harding for so generously sharing his time, images and expertise through this interview.


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Tags:  History  Homes  Illutration  information  interview  non-fiction  Picture Books  reading  reading for pleasure 

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Candy Gourlay Discusses First Names: Ferdinand Magellan

Posted By Jacob Hope, 02 July 2020

We are delighted to welcome Candy Gourlay, author of Tall StoryShineBone Talk and Is it a Mermaid? to discuss her new biography First Names: Ferdinand (Magellan). Candy won the SCBWI Undiscovered Voices, her books have been included in National reading promotions and initiatives and it is a real pleasure to welcome her to the blog.

 

You've worked on fiction, picture books and Ferdinand Magellan is your first information title.  Did its creation require a different approach and how did you set about this?

 

Yes! Ferdinand Magellan is my first non fiction book – but I definitely used novel writing techniques such as rising tension, a three act structure and character development to create the story. Funnily enough, I do about the same amount of research for my fiction. The big difference between Ferdinand and my other books is that it was very much a team effort. I worked closely with the lead editor Helen Greathead (who, I swear, does not sleep) and Rosie Fickling. And when it came time for illustration, the research continued – for example, we had to find the right picture references to make sure the indigenous people were portrayed respectfully ... and plausible (a lot of the picture references from the 16th century are suspect!). At one point, the wonderful illustrator Tom Knight had to draw what the ship toilet seat looked like! I found a museum photo of one from a wreck! 
 
It was also much faster than I normally work. I wrote it in two months and the text was edited and ready for proofing within a year ... I have been known to take years to write the first draft of a novel! I was so impressed with Tom who managed to produce so much complicated artwork so quickly! 

 
How did the idea first come about and can you tell us a little about the book?
 
DFB created First Names as a biography series to put children on first name terms with both historical characters like Abraham Lincoln and contemporary figures like Malala Yousafzai. My editor Helen Greathead asked me if there was someone I would like to write about for the series and Ferdinand Magellan immediately sprung to mind. "Ferdinand" as we refer to him in the series is an extraordinary person who lived during extraordinary times. Against many odds, he led the voyage that became the first circumnavigation of the world (even though he did not survive to complete it). There's a penguin named after him as well as a galaxy! He has given his name to the passage he discovered linking the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific Ocean. Heck, it was Ferdinand who named it the Pacific, but for a long time it was called Magellan's Sea. He was also the first European to land in the Philippines, where I was born.

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Because Ferdinand "discovered" the Philippines, he is the first historical figure Filipino children are taught about in school. Growing up in the Philippines, I was taught that Magellan's arrival was the beginning of our history, as if nothing had happened before Europeans came to Southeast Asia.
 
So for me, writing this little book has been hugely important.
 

The book details a lot of global figures including Eratosthenes, Aryabhata, Ibn Hazm and many more.  How much research was required for the book?

 

LOTS! I don't think you can discuss Magellan without understanding the context of his journey. 
 
When structuring a novel, I have to make sure that nothing happens randomly: that cause and effect drive the plot forward. It was the same writing this biography: Ferdinand would not gone on the journey if he had not defected to Spain. He would not have defected had he not been mistreated by the Portuguese king. He would not have had such a high opinion of himself had he not been a highly regarded veteran of the wars conquered the Indian Ocean. He would not have wanted to go on his journey had not grown up in a Portugal where explorers were regarded as rock stars. There would have been no explorers had the Ottoman Empire not choked off the spice trade and the silk route. And so on. 

 

How conscious were you of creating a 'global historical perspective' rather a politicised one?  Were there challenges involved with this?
 
I deliberately use "The Age of Exploration" instead of " The Age of Discovery" out of respect for the peoples that suffered invasions during this period. As a Filipino, I am acutely aware of how this era has been portrayed in history books – these heroic explorers discovering weird peoples. The explorers wrote narratives that dwelled on the strangeness of the cultures they encountered and it would be unfair to take these writings verbatim. Of course we don't have the writings of these indigenous folk to tell us how they felt, but the design of the First Names books allowed me to give them a voice.  

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I was learning as I went along. I didn't want to tell Ferdinand's story in isolation, as a novelist, I felt that his story would only make sense if I made sense of his world. I didn't know about the Portuguese armadas that pillaged the continents on either side of the Indian Ocean. I didn't know of the elaborate societies that traded with each other in Southeast Asia. It was very exciting, I felt like an explorer myself!
 
 Because this is a children's book, it was important to write about Ferdinand's childhood ...but there is very little information to be found. All I knew was that he was an orphan and he lived in Porto. So I researched what happened to orphans in that era ... and was astonished to discover that the Age of Exploration meant many orphans were shipped off to Portugal's new outposts in newly discovered lands! And I found out that Porto was where the ships used for Portuguese exploration were built. Imagine growing up and seeing those ships heading out to the unknown!

 

What was the most surprising fact you discovered in writing the book?

 

I had been researching the European drive to reach the East Indies before I realized: the Philippines was the East Indies!
 
The other surprising fact was how multicultural Spain and Portugal were during the Age of Exploration. There is a painting called The Chafariz d'El-Rey (King's Fountain) (download the photo here https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_King%27s_Fountain#/media/File:Chafariz_d’El-Rey,_c._1570-80_(Colecção_Berardo).png) set in a Lisbon dock. It shows a crowded embankment, including many black people, some wealthy, some poor. I realized that Ferdinand's desire to travel might also have been driven by seeing so many people from foreign lands and wondering where they came from. I wish we could find out more about the painting.
 

The toppling of the statue of Edward Colston in Bristol powerfully demonstrated the importance of how we communicate history and educate this.  Do you feel there is the need for change and in what ways could this be achieved?

 

Absolutely. History is a many-sided narrative – as can be attested by the Filipino experience of reading our story through the prism of our conquerors who repeatedly commented on our ugliness, the darkness of our skin, our strangeness and our indolence. The usual reading of this story dismisses as bit players the indigenous people whose lives were changed forever by explorers.  It's high time our children are taught to read this narrative critically, ask questions and do the work to find the answers.   

Examining the impact of the Age of Exploration on its victims, does not diminish Ferdinand's achievement. In fact, realizing what a human figure he was, tormented by low self esteem and rejection, made me feel empathy towards him, and yes, made me admire his achievement all the more.
 
Writing this book, I was constantly thinking of the children I meet during school visits. What will children of African heritage feel when they read about how Vasco Da Gama fired cannons willy nilly on the African kingdoms on the shore? How will children of Indian heritage react to the destruction wrought by Portugal on India's Western coast? And I thought of children in my native Philippines, who have no idea of the Philippines' pivotal moment in the Age of Exploration. 
 
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Ferdinand was published during Lockdown, what challenges did this present and has it led to you exploring different ways to encourage engagement with the book? 

I had 28 school visits and speaking engagements booked and Lockdown cancelled them all! Children's authors, who make their living via these bookings, are looking at a difficult year (or two!) ahead. I honestly don't see author visits happening in the coming months. Like a few other authors, I've begun creating videos of my presentations in lieu of visiting schools in person. I've just finished one for Ferdinand and boy, I've learned a lot of things. Without the thrill of a physical presence, I imagine children will struggle to watch a continuous author presentation, especially if it is via Zoom. So I've tried to make mine lively, with quizzes, lots of visuals, and even a comedy song (that's a screenshot of me from the video, with my trusty giant beach ball globe that took me two days to inflate)! A teacher's guide is available as a free download and the videos will be available for rent on my website http://candygourlay.co.uk
 
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What is next for you?
 
I am currently working on my next novel but it's all still very rough and it's impossible to say when it will be published. This year, I do have a small book for younger readers with Stripes' Colour Fiction Series. It is called Mike Falls Up and it is illustrated by the wonderful illustrator Carles Ballesteros, based all the way in Chile! I can't wait until it's out!
 
 
Thank you so much for having me. People in the business discount these series books but you can tell that Ferdinand is a book that is very close to my heart. I feel privileged to have worked on it!

 

 

Tags:  Biography  History  Information  Reading  Reading for Pleasure 

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The Children's Books Which Still Make Me Laugh Out Loud - Pete Johnson

Posted By Jacob Hope, 19 September 2018

We are delighted that Pete Johnson, author of multi award-winning titles like The Ghost Dog and How to Train Your Parents is joining this year's Youth Libraries Group Conference to discuss funny books.  Here he talks about some of the books that made him laugh as a child and continue to provide mirth and merriment.  Which books made you laugh as a child and do they continue to do so today?


Writing this,  I only have to look up, to see them massed across two shelves. Some are rather shabby and battered now, but they have travelled through time with me.

For these are my most treasured children’s books. The ones which cast such a spell, they made me a reader. And many of them are funny stories.

Now, if you’d come across me when I was eight or nine, I doubt if you’d have described me as fizzing with comic energy. I was a painfully shy,  fearful boy. ‘Look at people when they’re speaking to you,’ my mum would say. But I found that very hard. I was much happier mumbling away to my shoes.

This at least, was the outward me. But as soon as I could escape the tyranny of what other people called ‘real life’ I was off travelling the countryside with my irrepressible alter ego, William Brown.

One night while reading a William book I caused my parents to come tearing up the stairs. They’d heard a noise. What had happened?  It was very simple. I’d been laughing so hard at William and the Princess Goldilocks (from William the Pirate) I’d fallen out of bed. My parents were so pleased to see me smiling and free from my usual anxiety they didn’t say a word. In fact, they helped me buy all thirty eight of the Just William books by Richmal Crompton. William’s anarchic spirit called up something in me, as well as his optimism and resilience and sense of purpose.

I collected every one of the Jennings books by Anthony Buckeridge too. He was similarly bold and impetuous, never deliberately causing trouble but still leaving a hilarious trail of accidents and disasters. The moment when Jennings accidentally stuck his head in the railings, while attemping to photograph a squirrel never failed to make me fall about helplessly.

I re-read the William and Jennings stories over and over, marvelling not only at the brilliant characters but the witty dialogue and careful way they were structured. I suppose I was starting to analyse them.

 But mainly, I was a boy who, left to his own devices, could swiftly fill his head with gloomy thoughts. In fact, I could depress myself in seconds. And there was only one antidote.

 Another book which always lifted my spirits was Holiday at the Dew Drop Inn, by Eve Garnett. Here, my favourite character from the One End Street books – Kate Ruggles – spends two glorious months in the country. Now Kate was more than a bit like me – earnest, bookish, eager not to give offence. The book’s humorous tone, gently mocks Kate’s endless worrying and anxiousness and I suppose in laughing at Kate I was also beginning to laugh at myself.

Anyway, I finally started to become more confident. My secret self, so far hidden from everyone but my fictional friends began to shakily emerge. There were even moments when I’d been glimpsed looking cheerful, happy even. But then – disaster.

When I was twelve we moved away. And I was plunged into a new school, at which I felt instantly out of place. Soon a horrible cloud of misery settled over me and clung to me unceasingly every day. I’d  never felt more isolated. 

But at my lowest point help, once more, was at hand. I came across an Armada paperback. (Hands up who remembers Armada books?) called Mike and Psmith by P.G Wodehouse. The cover featured a boy in cricket whites and another reclining in a chair – wearing of all things, a monocle. It didn’t appeal to me at all. I nearly stopped there. But standing in the bookshop I read the first page. That was enough. I was hooked. I sat up half the night finishing it.

There was something to make me laugh on every page. But best of all there was the author’s beguiling voice. And long after I’d put the book down, I still had this big smile on my face. Next day I tore to the library to see what else P.G.Wodehouse had written. And there was a shelf and a half of Wodehouse treasures. So began a golden chapter in my life. Whenever I was feeling down I reached for Wodehouse or Edward Eager.

Eager is best known for Half  Magic, a wonderfully inventive and funny book about a magic coin, which makes wishes come half true! This became a favourite escape read.

Shortly afterwards, I discovered several other hardback Edward Eager books for sale at my local library – 20p each. I bought all six of them. I’ve never made a better deal. The books captivated me and especially Seven Day Magic, which has a great central idea: library books are magic. Soon  this book is taking the characters to their favourite fictional worlds.

As with Wodehouse, it was Edward Eager’s voice – wry, quizzical, often  dryly humorous – which especially delighted me. And that’s why I wrote to him c/o his publishers to say how brilliant and brilliantly funny his books were and ask what else had he written as I was extremely keen to read them. I knew he lived in America, so I expected a bit of a wait for a reply.

But, in fact, it came almost by return of post. It was from his publisher to thank me for my enthusiastic appreciation – but to tell me., Edward Eager had died back in 1963 (at the age of just 52 of lung cancer,  I later discovered) and the seven books I mentioned were the only ones he’d written.

I felt as if I’d lost a friend. And a friend who’d helped me get past the towering misfortune of having to change schools.

That’s why books which make you laugh are so special. They are the ones which reach right out to you. They go on doing that for me today. I only have to open any of these titles at random and within a very few pages I am laughing out loud. And there’s a rush of joy as they cast their spell all over again.

Tags:  children's literature  conference  funny  history  laughter  reading  Reading for Pleasure 

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