Wednesday, 27 July 2011

Exclusive: Picture Book Picnic Trailer

We’re absolutely delighted and excited to exclusively present the Picture Book Picnic trailer. View it here and leave us your comments for your chance to win a limited edition Picture Book Picnic goody bag.



The trailer had its first outing at our Picture Book Picnic party last week and received great feedback. We hope it gives you a flavour of all the amazing titles included in the Picture Book Picnic and there’s also a nod to some of our best loved classics including Maisy, We’re Going on a Bear Hunt and The Pencil.



You can watch this trailer, and many other great videos, on our You Tube channel.







Friday, 22 July 2011

Picture Book Picnic Party




Picnic Wonderland!
The Walker canteen was transformed into an indoor British summer fete for last Thursday’s Picture Book Picnic Party. Guests were welcomed into a room full of bunting and gingham table clothes for a totally original summer party to celebrate the Picture Book Picnic campaign and the fantastic host of illustrators on our list. Jugs of Pimms were served and guests snacked on picnic style canapés followed by a visit to the ice cream stall for strawberries and cream and ice cream cones to round off the evenings. Illustrators Bruce Ingman, Chris Haughton, Ollie Lett, Viviane Schwarz, Sue Heap, Alexis Deacon and David Lucas congregated on the (fake) lawn for some live doodling on flipcharts, adding too and developing each other’s drawings - a fascinating and unique opportunity to see such a wonderful group of illustrators working together.






Deirdre mid speech!
Walker Books Picture Book Publisher Deirdre McDermott gave a lively and heartfelt speech in which she invited us to celebrate the wonderful picture books Walker is home to. The guests were also treated to an exclusive screening of the wonderful Picture Book Picnic trailer which features animated characters from the campaign titles. The trailer was met with squeals of delight and rapturous applause – it will soon be featured here so watch this space!








Our lovely illustrators!
It was a jolly and buzzing evening and guests were in high spirits after the Pimms and were delighted to receive picnic goody bags on departure, which contained branded postcards, posters, stickers and activity sheets. We have a goody bag to give away to one lucky person, for your chance to win just tell us which Picture Book Picnic title is your favourite and why. The winner will be announced at the end of July.

Tuesday, 5 July 2011

What Do TOYS Think of Us?

David Lucas, author of Lost in the Toy Museum and the soon to be published Christmas in the Toy Museum, has very kindly agreed to do a guest blog about the inspiration behind his two titles and tries to answer the question -What do toys think of us? We hope you enjoy it!




My two new books are set in a Toy Museum - a real place: the Museum of Childhood in Bethnal Green in London, which is close to where I grew up, and very near where I still live.



The Museum of Childhood has always been part of my life - I used to go there when I was at school, when I was at Art College, and when I was starting out as an illustrator. (For a while I even worked part-time in the Museum shop.)



All the toys in my stories are part of the Museum collection, and most of them can be seen on display - although some live in the stores downstairs. (It was a real treat, when I was working on the book, to be able to poke around behind the scenes.)





They're all old toys, of course - some are centuries old - and they are all a bit knocked about, and worse for wear, bearing the scars not so much of neglect as of having been loved too much. And some look so sad - like Pumpie, the elephant, or Pip the monkey, or Winkie the One-eyed bear.









Others are more mysterious - like Woolworth the woollen owl or Handsome Harry, a strange knitted cat from the fifties.





And looking at them I can't help wondering what they're thinking, and wondering what became of the children who loved them.



I've always felt that what is most moving for any adult visitor to the Museum is that sense of nostalgia for their own childhood, that memory of innocence, when there was nothing more precious in the world than a knitted owl or a cloth-eared old elephant with a wonky trunk.



Children believe that toys are alive, that they really are thinking and feeling and dreaming. We're expected to grow out of such nonsense, of course, but I do not necessarily think that adults are wiser or cleverer for ceasing to have such an imaginative connection with the things they love.



It was common in every other era of history (when people were every bit as clever as we are today) to believe that everything was alive - even the things we like to call 'inanimate' objects. In Japan the old animist folk-beliefs still persist, even in such an advanced society, so that little everyday objects like pan scrubs are made with faces, not just for decoration, but as a reminder that the pan scrub has a spirit, that the pan scrub has feelings too - and that it deserves respect.





The trouble is that these two characters just hang on little hooks in my kitchen watching me - I daren't actually ever use them for washing up...



Anyway, it is good to see that in the twenty-first century science is at last catching up with the instinctive beliefs of children - and with the ideas of the old folk religions.



Despite all the advances in the study of the brain, scientists remain utterly baffled by the problem of consciousness. How is that the stuff in our heads - which, when you look at it, is just as ordinary as any other kind of stuff - how is it that it can think and feel and dream? No one knows. Honestly. No one has a clue. It is called the 'hard problem' of consciousness, and it gets harder the more you think about it.



No one, at the moment, no matter how clever they are, is even close to an answer. It is such a problem that even some of the most tough-minded, materialist thinkers have begun to take seriously the old idea of 'panpsychism' - that all matter is thinking and feeling stuff - that the basic stuff of the world is thought itself - that atoms and molecules are in fact more like patterns of thought. Which is what children and poets and people of 'primitive' cultures have always believed - that all things are alive, that all things have a spirit or a soul, that all things think and feel and dream. Even if they might not think in quite the way that we do - and after all, why should our kind of thinking be the only kind?



There might be all sorts of minds - from specks of dust to stars - all thinking different sorts of thoughts, dreaming different sorts of dreams. I love the idea that all of us - people, animals, trees, tables, chairs, books, toys, the sun and the moon - that we are all brothers and sisters together in the here and now, all alive with some sort of spirit. To me, it makes the world a magical place - a world alive with magic. My real hope is that I've captured some of that feeling of magic in my books.

Wednesday, 29 June 2011

It's Pyjama Time

Polly loves her pink pyjamas - she wears them all day long! But she can't wear them to Fred's party, so her friends Poppy, Clara, Henry and Sally all lend her something of theirs. Finally Polly is ready to go - but she looks so funny in her borrowed outfit that she can't go after all! Things are looking bad - until her friends reveal that the party is, after all, a pyjama party!



You can join author Vivian French for lots of fun from her latest book, Polly's Pink Pyjamas at the Lennox Love Book Festival in November. The event will include singing the hilarious pyjama song, making your own pyjama design - with a prize for the jazziest ones. And...don't forget to turn up in your favourite pyjamas - Vivian will be wearing hers! Also, why not check out Vivian's gorgeous website for even more event info and behind the scenes treats.



Illustrator Sue Heap is a Smarties Book Prize Gold Award Winner and you can find out more about her here.



As a special treat we have a few internal spreads for you to take a look at - enjoy!























Wednesday, 25 May 2011

Epic Hamsters...

A Place to Call Home is an epic picture book about a brave band of brothers, lost and looking for a new home. Will they find it, across the sea, the mountains, the desert, through endless labyrinths and beyond the edge of the world where strange beasts are lurking?



And will they stay together?



And how will they know where they are going if they are all wearing protective helmets?





Find out in this book, which made illustrator Viviane Schwarz laugh like nothing else she has ever illustrated (hence the wobbly lines in places), and which Alexis Deacon wrote because he knows just how much Viviane likes to draw epic hamsters.



Check out this wonderful video of Viviane drawing said epic hamsters and visit her website for lots of fun videos, stories and news!





Drawing Hamsters from John Peacock on Vimeo.

Friday, 20 May 2011

Let's Celebrate

We were absolutely delighted to receive the news that 'A Bit Lost' by the lovely Chris Haughton was presented with the CBI Bisto Award and the Eilis Dillon award this week! This is the first time in the history of the awards that both the overall and Eilís Dillon Awards have been presented to the same person. The announcement was made by Irish Minister for Children and Youth Affairs Frances Fitzgerald TD at a ceremony held at the National Library in Dublin.



A Bit Lost tells the story of an accidentally orphaned owl, who, after falling from his nest while sleeping, sets out with the help of new friends to find his way home to his mummy. The judges, said that "the work’s brilliantly simple verbal text, complemented by a quirkily psychedelic and surreal visual text, captures both the anxiety and thrill of being lost." 



In addition to this Chris spent a fun filled day at Waterstones Piccadilly in London this week drawing on the blackboards in the Children's department. These will remain up for a month and showcase some of the fantastic art from 'A Bit Lost'.





 Chris mid creation on one of the chalkboards
 
As the little owl falls....
 
Chris with one of the finished boards in the store
 
 

Monday, 16 May 2011

A Bit Lost....The Making Of Finale

The third and final part of Chris Haughton's fascinating insight into the making of his gorgeous picture book 'A Bit Lost'!



I did the typeface for the book with help from the brilliant typographer Andreas Pohancenik











A test for the endpapers







I quite like squirrel playing peek-a-boo in this early version of the cover.





I designed half of the book in Korea ...it was published first by the amazing Borim Press.





...and the other half in Mexico ..so I could concentrate fully on it. I had to stop working on other jobs!





I had some reference images spread out on the hotel floor and was worried they were going to get tidied up.







The final spread of the owl falling





In the finished pages you can see the mother hidden in the top left as her child is running around looking for her. The silhouettes of the running animals were inspired by the earlier work with the running birds.





The panoramic final scene is also based on the imagery from the earlier story





The final cover as it is now in English





Thank you to Chris for this fascinating insight into how the concept for a picture book develops and moves forward ending with the beautiful finished book! 



We have more guest posts coming soon from Niamh Sharkey and David Lucas and an exciting competition to win books including a mystery prize so stayed tuned to the Picture Book Picnic!