The book that has us saying “Oh woe!”

“Oh woe! Oh woe!” I know, I know, everything can sound downright adorable when voiced by a toddler – or by your own toddler, at any rate – but there’s something exceptionally so about the refrain of Mac Burnett and Jon Klassen’s new book, The Wolf, the Duck, and the Mouse. And it’s a cracker […]

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Novels about motherhood: a work in progress

When my daughter was around six months old, I’d peer out of her nursery window and see a neighbour reclining in a hammock with her newborn. The infant was always asleep, the mother forever reading. No frantic nocturnal skimming of mummy blogs for her (do yourself a favour: never ask the internet when your baby […]

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August’s classic of the month

Owl Babies. Can there be anything cuter? Only if we’re talking owl babies written into being by Martin Waddell and illustrated by Patrick Benson. This new edition marks the book’s 25th anniversary and it arrives fittingly garlanded in gold foil. The story is simple and warmly told: owlets Sarah, Percy and Bill awake one night […]

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Bookish adventures: Bateman’s

Rudyard Kipping was smitten with Bateman’s from the moment he clapped eyes on the place. In a letter from 1902, the year he and his family moved into the Jacobean manor, he describes ‘a grey stone lichened house […] beamed, panelled, with old oak staircase, and all untouched and unfaked. It is a good and […]

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July’s classic of the month

Happy birthday Shirley Hughes! My memories of her from my own childhood may be dim but 40 years after it was first published – and as she celebrates her own 90th birthday – her bestselling story about a favourite toy lost and found is a firm favourite in my household. Dogger tells the story of […]

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June’s classic of the month

When I went to register my daughter for her first library card, I was overcome by nostalgia. Books were abundant in my own childhood. Toys and clothes may have been homemade or secondhand (and all the nicer for it, I now see) but there always seemed to be new books, and wonderfully chosen ones at […]

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May’s classic of the month

Back when my little girl was just a month or so old, a screenwriter friend called to ask if I’d lately come across any novels that might make for a good film adaptation. The only book that popped into my sleep-starved, love-drunk mind was The Very Hungry Caterpillar. “It has a great beginning, middle and […]

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My trip to Judy-land

Of all the authors I’ve been lucky enough to interview over the years, none – not even that impish seer Margaret Atwood, with whom I once conducted an entire conversation in the apt position of supplicant, crouched at her feet for want of a chair – made me quite so giddy as Judy Blume. It’s all to […]

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Getting Flat Stanley-ed

Remembering a book from childhood. It’s a madeleine moment everyone can relate to, and it’s #47 of Daniel Gray’s ’50 eternal delights of books’, sandwiched between ‘Letting Poetry Tingle Your Spine’ and ‘Getting Waylaid Looking at a Dictionary’ (I’m with him there – how else would I have discovered the word galactophagist*?). As Gray explains […]

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April’s classic of the month

Madonna, Chelsea Clinton, Frank Lampard, Cara Delevingne, David Walliams, Jamie Lee Curtis… It has to irk the pros that every other celebrity seems convinced they have a children’s book in them, but when it’s someone who actually happens to be a writer – albeit a long dead one equally famous for his off-the-page exploits – it’s […]

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