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Authors & Artists

Showing 11 to 20 of 27 Results

  • Judith Judith

    Judith Allibone

    Illustrator of Jody's Beans.
  • David David

    David Almond

    The multi award-winning author of The Savage. ,I grew up in a large Catholic family in Felling-on-Tyne: 4 sisters and one brother. I always knew I'd be a writer - I wrote stories and stitched them into little books. I had an uncle who was a printer, and in his printing shop I learned my love of black words on white pages. I loved our local library and dreamed of seeing books with my name on the cover on its shelves. I also dreamed of playing for Newcastle United (and I still wait for the call!). There was much joy in my childhood, but also much sadness: a baby sister died when I was 7; my dad died when we were all still young; my mum was always seriously ill with arthritis. But it was a childhood, like all childhoods, that provided everything a writer needs, and it illuminates and informs everything I write. After school, I read English and American Literature. When I graduated I became a teacher - long holidays, short days, just perfect for a writer. After 5 years, I gave up the job and lived in a commune in rural Norfolk where I wrote and met my partner Sara Jane. I wrote a long adult novel that was rejected by every UK publisher. I had two collections of short stories published by the tiny IRON Press. I started another adult novel, put it aside, and suddenly, out of the blue, I found myself writing Skellig. It was as if the story had been waiting for me, and once I began, it seemed to write itself. I hadn't expected to write a children's novel, but in some way it was the natural outcome of everything I'd done before, and was the stepping-stone to everything I've done since. I now live in Northumberland with Sara Jane and our daughter Freya. I'm a full-time writer. Sara Jane makes ceramics, Freya goes to school. For years, I was hardly published and hardly anyone knew about me apart from a handful of keen fans. And I made just about no money at all from writing. That didn't really matter to me. I'd keep on writing, no matter what. Then I wrote Skellig and everything changed. I began to sell lots of books, to be translated into many languages, to travel, to win lots of prizes. I've written a number of novels after Skellig, including Kit's Wilderness, The Fire-Eaters and Clay. There have been stage versions of the novels, and films and an opera are on their way. I used to write in the attic at home, but there were lots of distractions - especially from email and telephone. So last year, I had a cabin built at the bottom of the garden. It's very nice, blue-grey and surrounded by trees. I have a radiator to keep me warm and I have a tap and a kettle for making tea. Every morning - when I'm at home and not travelling or making school visits or talking to people on the phone or answering emails - I carry my laptop down to the cabin and I set to work. Things you didn't know about David Almond 1. I once held the school high-jump record - 5 ft 2.5 inches. 2. I have a pet rabbit called Bill who can grunt. 3. I dream about football - and kick in my sleep! 4. I love Japanese food - except for the thing I was given once that looked like an alien's brain. 5. I've taken part in 3 Great North Runs (half-marathons). 6. My favourite place is Upper Swaledale in Yorkshire. 7. I love bikes, camping and fires. 8. My first TV appearance was as an altar boy in a televised mass when I was eleven. 9. My grandfather was a bookie (he took bets on horse races). His advice? 'Never bet.' He also told me, 'Never read novels. They're all just lies.' 10. My nickname at school was Dai, and several old friends still call me that.
  • Gigi Gigi

    Gigi Amateau

    Author of the acclaimed debut novel Claiming Georgia Tate.,About Me I was born October 20, 1964 in Ripley, Mississippi. I cherish having lived my early childhood in Mississippi and having visited my grandparents there every summer and at Thanksgiving. Most of my growing up, I did outside of Richmond, Virginia, in Mechanicsville. I went to college at Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU) - an open, urban, diverse campus - and majored in Urban Studies and Planning. My VCU experience was like living in a lab where we could study the city - its history, influences, and dynamic nature - every day. I still live in Richmond with my husband, my daughter, and our sweet old dog. Not too far from our home we also have horses and cows, so we have the city and the country in our lives. About My Work I love writing and I love the creative process, though it's tough to describe because the imagination seems to work differently with each story. Sometimes I feel as though I'm listening to a story unfold in my mind; sometimes I watch it, and then write it down. Other times it's as though the story is hidden inside the world around me, not so much the world inside me, and my delightful job is to uncover it. I find that writing comes easier to me when I connect my work with physical activity - gardening, walking, dancing, doing yoga, swimming, or even riding a horse. I write about grandparents, mothers and daughters, horses, the earth, love, and personal faith because these things matter most to me. Three Things You Didn't Know About Me 1. One of my favorite poems is The Prayer, by Mikhail Lermontov, which I can recite in its native Russian. 2. I love to watch basketball, especially my VCU Rams. 3. Some day I might like to become a yoga teacher or a librarian or an ornithologist.
  • Gabriella Gabriella
  • Niccolo Niccolo
  • Andre Andre

    Andre Amstutz

    André Amstutz has illustrated many books for children including The Baby in the Hat, The Shopping Expedition and Monkey Do, all by Allan Ahlberg.
  • Hans-Christian Hans-Christian

    Hans Christian Andersen

    A world-famous author of classic folk stories and fairy tales.
  • Matthew-Tobin Matthew-Tobin

    M. T. Anderson

    Author of the acclaimed young adult novels Feed, Thirsty and Burger Wuss.,Writing the celebrated satire FEED, says M. T. Anderson, was a process that demanded a fair share of field research. "I read a huge number of magazines like SEVENTEEN and STUFF," he confesses. "I listened to cell phone conversations in malls. Where else could you get lines like 'Dude, I think the truffle is totally undervalued'?" It seems these furtive observations paid off: FEED, a National Book Award Finalist, was honored with the LOS ANGELES TIMES Book Prize, among many other major awards, and dubbed "satire at its finest" (KIRKUS REVIEWS, starred review). Said the NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW, "FEED demonstrates that young-adult novels are alive and well and able to deliver a jolt." The research undertaken to write THE ASTONISHING LIFE OF OCTAVIAN NOTHING, TRAITOR TO THE NATION, VOLUME 1: THE POX PARTY, a National Book Award Winner, was on a wholly different magnitude, the author recalls. Street-side eavesdropping was replaced with visits to battlefields in historic Lexington, Massachusetts, and hours spent in libraries poring over 250-year-old documents. In addition to writing for young adults, M. T. Anderson also writes for younger readers, including two picture books illustrated by the award-winning Kevin Hawkes: HANDEL, WHO KNEW WHAT HE LIKED, a biography of eighteenth-century composer George Frideric Handel, which was a BOSTON GLOBE-HORN BOOK Honor Winner, and ME, ALL ALONE, AT THE END OF THE WORLD, which NEWSDAY called "a persuasive argument for a little solitude and space to think." M. T. Anderson lives near Boston, Massachusetts.
  • Catherine Catherine

    Catherine Anholt

    Irish artist and illustrator who has, with her husband Laurence, produced over ninety children's books.
  • Laurence Laurence

    Laurence Anholt

    Part of one of the world's most successful illustrating/author teams and winner of two Nestle Smarties Gold Awards.