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Good Reads: Trafalgar Junior School, Twickenham, Middlesex.

BfK No. 180 - January 2010
BfK 180 January 2010

Cover Story
This issue’s cover illustration is from Cressida Cowell’s How to Train Your Dragon. Cressida Cowell is interviewed by Clive Barnes. Thanks to Hodder Children’s Books for their help with this January cover.

BfK No. 180 Articles

Editorial – January 2010

News and comment from the Editor.

Children’s Laureate Anthony Browne on appreciating picture books

Anthony Browne discusses sources of inspiration.

Movables: Paper Engineering Techniques and Their Use and Development in Children’s Books

Mike Simkin and Rosemary Temperley explain.

Multi-lingual Storytelling

Anna McQuinn discusses storytelling with children with different home languages.

Authorgraph No.180: Cressida Cowell

Cressida Cowell interviewed by Clive Barnes

Sharon Creech: a writer who takes risks

Sharon Creech talks to Julia Eccleshare about her latest book.

BfK Briefing – January 2010

AWARDS

Hal’s Reading Diary – January 2010

Roger Mills on sharing the Harry Potter books at bedtime.

I Wish I’d Written…: Jeffy, the Burglar’s Cat

Hilda Offen chooses Ursula Moray Williams’s Jeffy, the Burglar’s Cat.

Good Reads: Trafalgar Junior School, Twickenham, Middlesex.

Reviews from pupils of Trafalgar Junior School Readers and Writers Club

 

Classics in Short No.79: When We Were Very Young

Brian Alderson on A A Milne’s When We Were Very Young

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Article Author: 
Trafalgar Junior School, Twickenham

Chosen by Year 5 (9/10 year-old) members of the Readers and Writers Club, Trafalgar Junior School, Twickenham, Middlesex.

Thanks to Richard Smith, Deputy Head Teacher

The Name of This Book Is Secret

Pseudonymous Bosch, Usborne, 978 0 7460 9092 3, £5.99 pbk

This is a great book for independent readers. If you like books that are funny and adventurous, then this is the book for you. It is about two friends who are always trying to save everybody. There is a magician who dies and Max-Ernest and Cass are suspicious and set out to find out what really happened... If you want to know what adventures they have, READ THE BOOK! I like this book because it is full of surprising and unexpected events. It made me laugh a lot and I always wanted to read on to see what was going to happen next.

Katya von Behr

Alone on a Wide Wide Sea

Michael Morpurgo, HarperCollins, 978 0 00 723058 7, £5.99 pbk

Arthur is an orphan and he is sent out to Australia on a ship with only the memory of his sister Kitty. He soon makes friends with Marty when they meet on the deck of the ship. They go on many adventures together, including meeting the miraculous Aunty Meg and her animals.

Sixty years later Arthur’s daughter Allie sets out to find long lost Kitty. The only clue she has to her whereabouts is that she has a key around her neck. This is one of my favourite books because I like the way one chapter leads into another and I was intrigued how it would all come together in the end. Although it’s long, it’s really gripping and you just have to read on. It’s a very good book, and I highly recommend it for children aged nine and over.

Martha Davies

Dancing Shoes

Noel Streatfeild, Hodder, 978 0 340 62663 4, £5.99 pbk

Dancing Shoes is about Rachel and Hilary who live together happily. But when Rachel’s mum dies, Rachel and Hilary are sent to stay with Rachel’s Aunt Cora who runs a dancing company called ‘Mrs Wintle’s Little Wonders’. Hilary finds it fun to learn dancing and loves all styles – except ballet. Dulcie is Mrs Wintle’s daughter and a very good dancer who shows off all the time. People call her ‘Dulcie Pulcie’ and ‘Mrs Wintle’s Little Horror’. Rachel finds it more difficult to fit in and she has something else on her mind. Her mother wants Hilary to go to the Royal Ballet School. But Hilary has other ideas...

I loved this book because, although it’s about ballet, you don’t have to be a ballet fan to like it. I liked reading about the dancing competitions and thought it was funny when Hilary did a dance about Dulcie and Mrs Wintle didn’t know!

Freya Britnell

Candyfloss

Jacqueline Wilson, Corgi Children’s, 978 0 440 86645 9, £5.99 pbk

Candyfloss is about a mum and dad who split up. The mum moves to Australia and Candy has to live with her dad who owns a chippy. I liked the book because I can’t imagine my mum moving to Australia. I would be so sad.

Candy is best friends with Rhiannon but when a new girl called Susan moves into the school, Candy makes friends with her. Candy has a lot of terrible life-changing things. It’s nice how Candy loves her dad so much. They go to the fair and Candy loves candyfloss – which is how the book gets its name. Although this book is sad in parts, and some terrible things happen, you always want to read on. I think for years to come people of any age will read and enjoy this.

Tania Curtis

Lionboy

Zizou Corder, Puffin, 978 0 14 131726 7, £6.99 pbk

This book is about a little boy called Charlie Ashanti who can speak ‘cat’ – and when he finds that his mum and dad are missing has to trust cats to help him find his parents. He stows away on a circus ship and he meets six beautiful homesick lions who need his help to get them to Africa from under Maccomo (the lion-trainer’s) nose. Will he help the lions or will he not? Find out by reading it! I enjoyed this book – it is an exciting story and it is very well-written. I liked the way Charlie keeps going and never gives up, even though it’s hard for him and he’s feeling homesick. Can he save his parents in time? Or will he fail? I think this book is for all ages, but readers under seven would like it to be read to them. I give this book a big ‘Paws Up!’

Nadja Zaremba-Byrne

All Children's Book Reviews in BfK No. 180

  • Under 5s
  • Ages 5-8
  • Ages 8-10
  • Ages 10-14
  • Ages 14+
  • Books About Children's Books

Under 5s

  • Winnie’s Amazing Pumpkin

    Valerie Thomas
    5
  • Morris the Mankiest Monster

    Giles Andreae
    5
  • Aliens Love Underpants

    Claire Freedman
    5
  • The Dolls’ House Fairy

    Jane Ray
    5
  • Goldilocks and the Three Bears

    Emma Chichester Clark
    5
  • Sleepy or Not, Mr Croc?

    Jo Lodge
    4
  • Cross Crocodile

    Mwenye Hadithi
    4
  • Red Riding Hood: A Pop-Up Book

    Louise Rowe
    4
  • Food Chain

    M P Robertson
    3

Ages 5-8

  • Tabby McTat

    Julia Donaldson
    5
  • Emily Brown and the Elephant Emergency

    Cressida Cowell
    5
  • Red Ted and the Lost Things

    Michael Rosen
    5
  • Ella Bella Ballerina and Cinderella

    James Mayhew
    4
  • Christopher Nibble

    Charlotte Middleton
    4
  • Mrs Cockle’s Cat

    Philippa Pearce
    4
  • The Flight of the Mermaid

    Gita Wolf
    Sirish Rao
    3
  • The Dunderheads

    Paul Fleischman
    3
  • Valentine’s Day

    Berlie Doherty
    3
  • Purple Class and the Half-Eaten Sweater

    Sean Taylor
    3
  • Number Rhymes: Tens and Teens

    Opal Dunn
    2
  • Choking Wolf ¦ Melting Snowman ¦ Injured Spider

    Dosh Archer
    0

Ages 8-10

  • Shapeshifters: Tales from Ovid’s Metamorphoses

    5
  • Madame Pamplemousse and the Time-Travelling Café

    Rupert Kingfisher
    5
  • The Willoughbys

    Lois Lowry
    5
  • New and Collected Poems for Children

    Carol Ann Duffy
    5
  • The Squirrel’s Birthday and Other Parties ¦ Letters to Anyone and Everyone

    Toon Tellegen
    4
  • The Poison Garden

    Sarah Singleton
    4
  • Charlie Bone and the Red Knight

    Jenny Nimmo
    4
  • How Things Work

    Conrad Mason
    4
  • The Comic Strip History of Space

    Sally Kindberg
    Tracey Turner
    4
  • Fabulous Bridges

    Ian Graham
    4
  • Bodies ¦ Creepy-Crawlies ¦ Dinosaurs ¦ Egyptians

    Philip Ardagh
    4
  • Midsummer Knight

    Gregory Rogers
    3
  • Mr Stink

    David Walliams
    3
  • Wolven

    Di Toft
    3
  • The New Children’s Encyclopedia

    Author and Illustrator Unknown
    2

Ages 10-14

  • Beyond the Barricade ¦ Chalkline

    Deborah Ellis
    5
  • The Secrets of Codes

    Paul Lunde
    5
  • Free? Stories Celebrating Human Rights

    4
  • Desperate Measures

    Laura Summers
    4
  • No Such Thing as Dragons

    Philip Reeve
    4
  • The Crowfield Curse

    Pat Walsh
    4
  • Running Wild

    Michael Morpurgo
    4
  • Hush, Hush

    Becca Fitzpatrick
    4
  • The Credit Crunch

    Colin Hynson
    4
  • Out of Iraq: Refugees’ Stories in Words, Paintings and Music

    Sybella Wilkes
    4
  • Aids ¦ Child Labour ¦ Hunger ¦ Poverty ¦ Violence ¦ War

    Otto James
    4
  • The Spitting Cobra

    Gill Harvey
    3
  • What to do About Holly

    Joan Lingard
    3
  • Under the Weather: Stories About Climate Change

    3
  • Where the Streets Had a Name

    Randa Abdel-Fattah
    3
  • The Death Defying Pepper Roux

    Geraldine McCaughrean
    3
  • Tom Fletcher and the Three Wise Men

    Sarah Matthias
    3
  • Troubadour

    Mary Hoffman
    3
  • The Glittering Eye

    L J Adlington
    3
  • Scat

    Carl Hiaasen
    3
  • Sustainable Cities

    Angela Royston
    3
  • Wow! Earth ¦ Wow! Animal

    John Woodward
    3

Ages 14+

  • The Bride’s Farewell

    Meg Rosoff
    5
  • Girls to Total Goddesses

    Sue Limb
    4
  • Shiver

    Maggie Stiefvater
    4
  • Skinned

    Robin Wasserman
    3

Books About Children's Books

  • The Complete Fairy Tales of Charles Perrault

    5
  • 1001 Children’s Books You Must Read Before You Grow Up

    3

BfK News

David Almond Short-Listed for The 2010 Hans Christian Andersen Award

The Hans Christian Andersen Award Jury of the International Board on Books for Young People (IBBY) today announced the 2010 shortlist.

Five authors and five illustrators have been selected including David Almond.

The award, considered the most prestigious in international Children's literature, is given biennially by the International Board on Books for Young People to a living author and illustrator whose complete works have made lasting contributions to children's literature.

read more...
OMG, it's the return of the Queen of Teen award!

The organisers of the Queen of Teen Award are preparing for this year's award and will shortly be inviting nominations.

Described as 'the sparkliest, most glamorous and certainly the pinkest award in the world of fiction' the Queen of Teen Award was founded in 2008 to celebrate writers for the tween and teen market. The first competition was a huge success, with tens of thousands of votes cast for a shortlist that included Meg Cabot, Cathy Cassidy, Jacqueline Wilson and the eventual winner Louise Rennison.

read more...
Blue Peter Book Award Winners Announced 2010

Frozen in TimeFrozen in Time by Ali Sparkes is the winner of this year’s Blue Peter Book Awards. The results were announced on a special episode of Blue Peter broadcast 3 March on BBC One in honour of World Book Day.

read more...
Do! wins 2010 Bologna Ragazzi New Horizons Award

Do! coverTara Books, the independent publisher from Chennai, south India, has won the 2010 Bologna Ragazzi Award for the handmade children's title, Do!

The award, which will be presented at the Bologna Children's Book Fair in March, is designed to acknowledge publishing houses from the Arab countries, Latin America, Asia and Africa that show great innovative talent.

read more...
The Red House Children's Book Award 2010 Shortlist announced

Red House Children's Book Award 2010

Ten books are on the short-list for this year's Red House Children's Book Award, announced today, Monday 22nd February.

read more...
Katie Davies wins Waterstone’s Children’s Book Prize 2010

Kate Davies wins Waterstone's Children's Book prize

Debut author Katie Davies has won the Waterstone’s Children’s Book Prize 2010 for The Great Hamster Massacre (Simon and Schuster), a tale of a girl’s relentless quest for a pet hamster.

read more...
Every primary pupil deserves a school library, says new Charter

The School Library Association (SLA) this month launches a new Primary School Library Charter arguing that investment in school libraries must start early, and quoting the UK Convention on the Rights of the Child to make its case.  Articles 13 of the Convention (‘freedom to see, receive and impart information and ideas of all kinds, regardless of frontiers’) and 17 (‘encourage the . . . dissemination of children’s books’) imply effective library provision, the SLA states.

read more...
Frances Lincoln buys Barn Owl Books - January 2010

Frances Lincoln have announced their acquisition of Barn Owl Books.

Ann Jungman, a popular author, started Barn Owl Books in 1999, carefully selecting out–of-print titles remembered as good reads by teachers, parents and grandparents alike, bringing the books back into print for a new generation of readers. She has been doing this, almost single-handed, ever since. Frances Lincoln have been Barn Owl’s distributors from the start.

read more...
Write Away Annual Conference May 2010

Write Away Annual Conference May 2010

READ, PLAY, THINK, CREATE: generating delight in learning

This conference for teachers and librarians will provide:

read more...
The Tower Hamlets Book Award 2009

Winner:

DIARY OF A WIMPY KID: RODRICK RULES

by Jeff Kinney, Puffin

The award is aimed at children aged 9 to 12 and the winning title is chosen by children in the borough. The award is now in its third year, with the selection and judging process running from March through to December.

read more...
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