CONTENTS
2 Guest editorial: Sarah Odedina of Scoop magazine
_________________________________________ 3 All hail the new Children’s _________________________________________
Laureate: an interview with Lauren Child
4 2017: the Books of the _________________________________________
Year: our panel makes their choice
6 Books for Giving 2017: Ferelith Hordon plays Santa
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8 Authorgraph: Kate Saunders interviewed by Philip Womack
10 Ten of the Best fairy tale collections chosen by Ann Lazim
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12 Once upon a time: Hilary McKay on her new collection of fairy tales
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13 Truly Two: Catherine MacPhail and Robert Louis Stevenson
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14 A Talent for Happiness: Judith Kerr interviewed by Nicholas Tucker
18 Two Children Tell: Nick meets monsters
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16 Windows into Illustration: Ehsan Abdollahi
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19 I Wish I’d Written… Jonathan Meres chooses
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19 Good Reads chosen by pupils at
guest editorial Sarah Odedina, Editor-in-Chief, Scoop magazine
The world is full of stories. People use stories to navigate life – their own lives as well as the lives of others. In these rapidly changing, fractured times stories give us a way to understand and a way to share our experiences. Never before have they been as important as they are now nor has there ever
been such a loud and vocal demand for stories that marginalised from the publishing canon.
It is a great time to be a young reader in terms of the wealth of choice, the range of voices, and the quality time, I believe, to see a truly golden world of literature that offers access to all children and all authors.
Just in the last few days there has been the exciting announcement of the launch of the new publishing house Knights Of. Aimee Felon, one of the founders, says, ‘Knights Of was born out of a frustration with the lack of representative voices and narratives Knights Of we can celebrating them, making it central to our business.’ In so doing they offer all children the opportunity to see themselves in books as well as to read stories with children young readers consider different from themselves in starring roles.
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20 Brian Alderson reviews two new exhibitions
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21 Reviewers and reviews Under 5s (Pre-School/ Nursery/Infant) + Ed’s Choice 5-8 (Infant/Junior) + New Talent 8-10 (Junior/Middle) 10-14 (Middle/Secondary) 14+ (Secondary/Adult)
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32 Classics in Short No. 126 Children of the New Forest
_________________________________________ COVER STORY This issue’s cover illustration is
from Fairy Tales by Hilary McKay, illustrated by Sarah Gibb. Thanks to Macmillan Children’s Books for their help with this Christmas cover.
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across all sectors of the market, from pre-school to teen and YA. This autumn will no doubt ensure a bumper year for the sales of teen and YA titles, with the launch of the highly anticipated The Book of Dust by Philip Pullman, which pulled crowds to bookshops at midnight on publication phenomenally successful The Fault In Our Stars.
know that they can access a huge resource of titles that spans decades of innovative and brave publishing, and publishers are now waking up to the demands of society to break out from their traditional white middle-class roots to ensure stories that encompass a more realistic portrait of society and the wider world are there to give children the bigger picture.
But still we have to work hard to allow all children access to the joys that are contained in the written word. Many children struggle with literacy or indeed don’t ‘click’ with the reading habit. Michael Morpurgo and Chris Riddell
Books for Keeps
November 2017 No.227 ISSN 0143-909X © Books for Keeps CIC 2016 Editor: Ferelith Hordon Editorial assistant Grace Hebditch Managing Editor: Andrea Reece Design: Louise Millar Editorial correspondence should be sent to Books for Keeps,
c/o The Big Green Bookshop, Unit 1, Brampton Park Road,
2 Books for Keeps No.227 November 2017
are vocal on the need for children to see reading as a pleasure and not an educational chore. It is only once someone reads for pleasure that the true joys of stories are unlocked for them, and organisations like BookTrust are at the vanguard of this movement.
The charity’s c.e.o., Diana Gerald, said: ‘At BookTrust we are all about getting children reading for pleasure. Children who enjoy reading are happier, healthier and more empathetic …’
every year are magazines like Scoop, which celebrates the world of stories and aims to offer young readers a nature of the writing (the longest piece in the magazine is 2000 words) means that the bite-sized offerings allow a more reluctant reader very manageable pieces to read while also offering more avid readers a ‘Sunday such as Michael Morpurgo and Piers Torday as well with issues as diverse as the ability of wild dogs to communicate by sneezing, and the phenomenon of milky-seas that can be viewed from outer space, recipes, crafts, jokes and riddles, puzzles and lots of wonderful art. The magazine is themed monthly and each focus ties in with wider issues in the world that the child would be interested in, such as Black History the role of girls and women around the world.
Today’s child in today’s world wants choice, wants the in the words that they read and wants to hear from their peers and friends about what is good. If we as publishers, writers, librarians, teachers and carers don’t recognise this we will not be able to ensure that the love of reading that we so want to share is indeed passed on. I think we are all getting much better, even if there is still some way to go.
Scoop is published
www.scoopthemag.
co.uk.
Books for Keeps is available online at
www.booksforkeeps.co.uk A regular BfK Newsletter can also be sent by email. To sign up for the Newsletter, go to
www.booksforkeeps.co.uk email addresses can also be sent to
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Email:
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