This page contains a Flash digital edition of a book.
CONTENTS 2 Editorial


___________________________________ 3 Where have all the _________________________________________


stories gone? asks Prue Goodwin


4 Ten of the Best: Books to Introduce Children to Philosophy. John Newman chooses books to initiate philosophical discussion.


_________________________________________


6 Windows into Illustration: Kristjana S Williams on The Wonder Garden and working with old Victorian engravings


_________________________________________


8 Heartsong: Jane Ray, Kevin Crossley-Holland and Antonio Vivaldi in harmony


10 Authorgraph: Sarah Crossan interviewed by Clive Barnes


12 Michael Foreman: Painting with Rainbows at Seven Stories


14 Reading Pictures: An Introduction to Visual Literacy by Piet Grobler


_________________________________________ _________________________________________ _________________________________________


our attention. Many of these will be picture books which, in the UK, are almost always aimed at under-5s. Important though these undoubtedly are, it’s a shame that more aren’t published for older children; indeed there are so few that librarians and booksellers have real problems knowing where to put them on the shelves. Older children are so used to exciting visual material that a load of black letters on a white page can look daunting or dull; interesting illustrations can make books much more appealing to them. Illustrations can also really enhance texts. Lewis Carroll understood this: he insisted not only that Alice should be illustrated, but that Tenniel should be the illustrator.


H _________________________________________


16 I Wish I’d Written… Angie Sage chooses


_________________________________________


16 Good Reads chosen by the Chatterbooks group at Explore Acomb Library


_________________________________________ 17 Comics across the _________________________________________


Curriculum: Hannah Sackett on putting comics to work in the classroom.


18 Author and editor in _________________________________________


20 Two Children Tell: Nick and the Crazy Cowboy


_________________________________________


21 Reviewers and reviews Under 5s (Pre-School/Nursery/ Infant) 5-8 (Infant/Junior) 8-10 (Junior/Middle 10-14 (Middle/Secondary) 14+ (Secondary/Adult) + Editor’s Choice + New Talent


_________________________________________


32 Classics in Short No. 113 Little Tommy Thumb with his Pipe and his Drum


_________________________________________


This issue’s cover illustration is from One by Sarah Crossan. Thanks to Bloomsbury Children’s Books for their help with this September cover


COVER STORY Books for Keeps


September 2015 No.212 ISSN 0143-909X © Books for Keeps CIC 2015 Editor: Ferelith Hordon Assistant Editor: Ruth Williams 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, Wood Green, London N22 6BG


2 Books for Keeps No.214 September 2015


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 and follow the Newsletter link. If any difficulty is experienced, email addresses can also be sent to enquiries@booksforkeeps.co.uk*


Email: enquiries@booksforkeeps.co.uk


Website: www.booksforkeeps.co.uk *Email addresses will be used by Books for Keeps only for the purpose of emailing the Newsletter and will not be disclosed to third parties.


conversation: David Fickling talks to Jenny Downham about her new novel Unbecoming


I’ve become particularly aware of the importance of picture books – and in particular wordless picture books – recently, as an important tool to reach out to displaced children and young people, and help provide


the emotional support


they need. IBBY (the International Board on Books for Young People) is supporting initiatives to help Syrian refugees and other children. On the island of Lampedusa there’s a holding camp for people crossing from Africa to Europe; IBBY Italia has pioneered the use of wordless picture books here. All the different national sections of IBBY have chosen and sent wordless books from their country, to make up a collection of a hundred Silent Books. These books truly can ‘reach the places, nothing else can reach’ since they can be used when language is a barrier. I’ve been involved in selecting books from the UK, and am very aware that there is a dearth of wordless books here. Of course, there are some outstanding examples, such as Shirley Hughes’s Up and Away, Raymond Briggs’s The Snowman and recently, Alison


editorial


ow fast the summer goes; a cliché but true! Now we face the activity of autumn, and there will be a spate of new books published demanding


Jay’s Out of the Blue, but there are very few when compared to other countries. The Silent Books in the IBBY collection are examples of outstanding illustration showing a real diversity of style, approach, subject matter and ideas. They are books that can open doors, and that would surely be useful in classrooms throughout the country – but almost all of them will be unfamiliar to people in the UK.


However, there are signs that interest is growing among UK publishers for picture books for older children. I have just returned from Bratislava where I visited the exhibition of works submitted


for the BIB – the


Biennale of Illustrations, Bratislava. This is one of the oldest international awards for children’s book illustrators, and provides the opportunity to see illustrators from countries as diverse as Mongolia and Sweden, Peru and Lebanon. It’s not frantic, like the international book fairs, but is instead a wonderful place to wander and look. Twelve UK illustrators were displayed – you can see them on the excellent Gallery on the Guardian website – and two of them won awards for their illustrations for older picture books: Levi Pinfold won a Plaque for his illustrations for Black Dog, while Laura Carlin won the Grand Prix, the highest award, for her illustrations for Ted Hughes’s The Iron Man. The last time the UK received such an honour was in 1995 when John Rowe was the Grand Prix winner. We have cause for celebration! The next Biennale will be in 2017. Bratislava is a lovely city to visit; I am already packing my bags.


Ferelith Hordon, Editor


Page 1  |  Page 2  |  Page 3  |  Page 4  |  Page 5  |  Page 6  |  Page 7  |  Page 8  |  Page 9  |  Page 10  |  Page 11  |  Page 12  |  Page 13  |  Page 14  |  Page 15  |  Page 16  |  Page 17  |  Page 18  |  Page 19  |  Page 20  |  Page 21  |  Page 22  |  Page 23  |  Page 24  |  Page 25  |  Page 26  |  Page 27  |  Page 28  |  Page 29  |  Page 30  |  Page 31  |  Page 32  |  Page 33  |  Page 34