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Windows into illustration: Mini Grey


Mini Grey is an award-winning writer and illustrator, well known for books such as Traction Man, Toys in Space and Kate Greenaway Medal winner The Adventures of the Dish and the Spoon. She is a judge for this year’s Klaus Flugge Prize. Her books are characterised by their invention, humour and sense of play. Here she describes her approach to creating The Bad Bunnies’ Magic Show.


Every reading of a picture book is like putting on a new performance. When I made The Bad Bunnies’ Magic Show I wanted to make a book that was like a theatrical entertainment, and I wanted the reader to be the audience.


In the story the bad bunnies, Abra and Cadabra, have padlocked their magician the Great Hypno in one of his own trunks. Then they put on their own rather haphazard magic show, culminating in a dastardly scheme to hypnotise the audience and steal their valuables.


At first I wanted the bunnies’ magic tricks to be proper pop-up paper-engineering, because playing around with pop-ups is such a lot of fun. But I realised this would make the book impossibly expensive for a publisher to produce.


So as often happens, I found that less is more, and just cutting into the page edge with a magical sort of shape could be all the magic I needed. When you turn the page you make the magic happen. As in real magic, it’s your imagination that is really doing the trick. Here are Abra and Cadabra performing the Birdcage Transformation.


The page I want to tell you about is the one where the Lovely Brenda is sawn in half in front of your eyes. I’d tried various ways of pulling the two halves of Brenda apart but they were too complicated, I had to do it with the turning of just one piece of paper.


I worked out that with a puff of smoke that was a flap it should be possible. Jane Buckley and Lara Hancock at Simon & Schuster were incredibly helpful. We had to do several test-prints and fiddlings around to get a reliable working flap. With pop-up, as with magic – distraction is everything, and if you get your audience’s attention where you want it, they won’t see a glaring glitch in front of their eyes.


I made the pieces but then when I watched it happen I realised I needed more focus on where I wanted the reader to look – at Brenda’s face – not at the crease where the flap was – so I added a pop of yellow – hypnotic lines round Brenda’s head before, and a yellow explosion after - making you look at where Brenda’s been sawn.


6 Books for Keeps No.242 May 2020


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