Showing posts with label picture books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label picture books. Show all posts

Thursday, 8 September 2016

Introducing .......my new team mate!


DRUM ROLL PLEASE....



I'm thrilled to announce we have a new crew member on board the good ship Book Sniffer  

INTRODUCING 
(with an enormous tooty fanfare) 
our new 
London based 
roving reporter 
Steven Lenton! 
Here's a sneaky taster...



With up to the minute finger on the pulse news, The Book Sniffer blog will continue to be the one stop shop for picture book fanatics of all shapes and sizes.


Award-winning illustrator Steven will be providing much needed vlog content each month, delivered in his uniquely charming and enthusiastic style

His first assignment is to set about interviewing and interrogating the crème de la crème of the Illustration world, "no question too quizzical no delve too deep".
So look out for some of our favourites coming very soon. We hope you will enjoy watching this new content as much as we will making it.




You can find out more about Steven and his illustration work here  http://www.2dscrumptious.com 


you can also find Steven and an abundance of puns on Twitter @2dscrumptious


THREE CHEERS AND WELCOME ON BOARD BUDDY! Here's to many mischievous bookish adventures...



Sunday, 17 July 2016

Lock up your valuables! there's a master criminal in town...


Shifty McGifty & Slippery Sam
 The Diamond Chase 
By Tracey Corderoy and Steve Lenton 
£10.99 HB Published by Nosy Crow





Our beloved well-meaning dough-wielding dog detectives are back on the case when a valuable diamond tiara belonging to non-other than Lady Kate goes missing in this fabulous penguin filled romp. 
A perfectly rhyming text written by Tracey Corderoy will tickle your funny bone while the luscious illustrations by our next guest will have you reaching for the nearest bun. A fantastic story to read aloud and one which will no doubt be enjoyed over and over again. But for heavens sake keep hold of your jewels...just in case.





Let's sit down and have a chat and a cup of tea with illustrator 
Steven Lenton!


Do you have a favourite cake recipe? 

Lemon Drizzle or Coffee and Walnut are my absolute favourites to make.  As far as 'shop bought' goes we are very lucky/unlucky that our studio is next door to the Hummingbird Bakery in Soho and the chocolatey waves of deliciousness waft in through our windows every morning and afternoon - they bake the MOST DELICIOUS Red Velvet cupcakes.



Do you have a favourite penguin fact?

I love the contemporary classic fact that Benedict Cumberbatch can't pronounce the word penguin correctly. My favorite, more educational fact is that Penguin’s black and white plumage serves as camouflage while swimming. The black plumage on their back is hard to see from above, while the white plumage on their front looks like the sun reflecting off the surface of the water when seen from below. Isn't nature just AMAZING?!



Whats your favourite pantone colour? 

I prefer PANATONE (especially at Christmas), but my favourite PANTONE color would have to be ORANGE 021 C, because it is the orange featured throughout our premier Shifty and Sam fiction title 'The Spooky School' publishing in September, which Tracey and I are really thrilled about. 


Which is your favourite spread in the book? 

It has to be the reveal of the 42 Penguins in the ballroom scene - when Tracey and I have read the story at events and schools the audience always gasps when they see all the dancing dogs surrounded by waiter penguins - but which one is Sidney Scarper?!


Tell us about your three favourite book shops in London. 

Pickled Pepper is my local children's books shop in Crouch End and has a wonderful selection of classic and contemporary picture books and fiction titles.  They also allow me to create lovely window displays for my books and throw lovely book launches too - Steve and Urmi who own and run the business are lovely and BIG Shifty and Sam fans.

Waterstones Piccadilly and Waterstones stores in general have been incredibly supportive of our Shifty and Sam series and I LOVE to spend as much time as possible exploring the floors (maybe even sometimes the cocktail bar on the way 5th floor, ahem!) chock-full with beautiful tomes.

One book shop which I hope to visit soon is the beautiful Tales on Moon Lane - I think that shop could possible become a new favourite too!




Which spread was the trickiest to complete? 

There is a lot of plot going on in the Shifty and Sam picture books, so keeping the illustrations simple yet full of detail and humour is generally quite tricky!  In this one I think again the ballroom scene as there were so many penguins and dogs to draw! I think my favourite bit in this spread is the two bull terriers dancing the tango!


What would your dog Holly make of Shifty and Sam? And who would she be if she was in one of their adventures? 

WELL it's funny you should say that as Holly does feature somewhere in all three picture books so far - can you spot her?  She is a miniature Jack Russell!  In real-life Holly likes to be the centre of attention so I think she would be MILDLY disappointed that she doesn't have a main role in any of the books.....so far!



Do you collect anything? 

I'm sorry/not sorry to say that I am slightly obsessed not only with collecting picture books, but also Jem and the Holograms merchandise...


See my studio desk as proof! I had a secret obsession with the cartoon in the 80's!


Whats on the drawing board? 

I am working on a top secret picture book just now which will tell you more about as soon as I am allowed!  Also Tracey and I are working on the 4th and 5th Shifty and Sam picture books along with the 2nd and 3rd fiction titles! I am also currently writing my second picture book with Nosy Crow. 

Where can we catch you and lovely Tracey on tour over the next few months? 

We have been very lucky this year and have been invited along to all the major festivals and Tracey has been touring literally HUNDREDS of schools up and down the country with The Diamond Chase! Catch us together at the Edinburgh Festival, Bath Festival, The Cheltenham Festival which we are launching again this year.
BUY A COPY HERE 


With HUGE Thanks to Steven 
for taking the time to join us, 
and to 
Nosy Crow and *Dom* for 
sending us a copy of this book! 


Be sure to check in with Picture Books Blogger for the final stop on this blog tour! 





Saturday, 31 October 2015

Oliver Jeffers and Eoin Colfer - Imaginary Fred


A month or so ago a colleague at Little London Magazine asked if on the off chance I was free I could conduct an interview for the magazine, of course I was free but who would on earth would I be interviewing? 
A few weeks later it transpired I was being sent to meet two of the most successful names in Children's literature today, non-other than the deliciously debonair Eoin Colfer and the delightfully charming Oliver Jeffers

With the luck of the Irish.. (well I have an Irish surname at least) I made my way to The Soho Hotel, all be it a quivering wreck of nerves, to interview to them about their first ever picture book collaboration 'Imaginary Fred'



Time was tight but I just managed to sneak in a few exclusive questions for the Book Sniffer blog. 

NB: Suffice to say there was a lot of the interview which cannot and will not ever be published but let me tell you my sides were splitting and my cheeks were aching with laughter once my 30 golden minutes were up. 



What’s that strangest or funniest question you’ve been asked by a child during a school event?

Oliver: "Sometimes you get asked allsorts. One time I was asked “What does Batman do?” and I got a letter once, which I still have, saying “Dear Oliver Jeffers, What is your name?”

Eoin: "I got some fan mail and it was in a pink envelope with pretty pony stamps, all mail in the states gets checked but they must have seen it and thought it looks fine and it was from a guy on death row and he had a photograph of himself covered in God bless America with two machetes and it said “ I love your books” haha, but it was lovely and it was the sweetest letter, he obviously put it in that envelopes because he knew it would get through. He had a weird nickname which I can’t remember...

BS:  Like “Baby” or something?

Eoin: No I think it was “Hatchet”, there was no irony in there at all hahahaa.



You mentioned that Imaginary Fred had a different ending prior to starting work with Oliver. Which changes did you make?

Oliver: Originally the four of them stayed together and it seemed more natural as to how a group of friends are for them to basically split off so it wasn’t the foursome, the person that Fred had been dreaming of at the start was actually not Sam even though for the majority of the book it’s sets it up that it was Sam it was actually this other character that sets him up towards the end and that is actually how friendships can happen and how people partner up throughout life is introduction through friends and we hinted at that and it felt like that’s the way it should go rather than just the four of them being the statue. Lets bring it back to the beginning and bookend it right.

Eoin: It felt right and at the time I thought that changing the ending is a big thing but as soon as I read it I thought yeah that makes sense.

Oliver: I was nervous about saying that.



In Imaginary Fred Sam and Sammi create their own comics, Eoin you've spoken about your thoughts on writing comics yourself. How do you think we can make people more engaged with the graphic novel format and what’s the potential there?



Oliver: Truly good content. It’s as simple as that.

Eoin: Yes it’s always content. I think the movie world has helped a little bit but there’s always been a huge underground for graphic novels and there’s a really solid core of people who read them. There was a bit of snobbery about them about 15-20 years ago and in some cases teachers wouldn’t even let kids read comic books but now I think that’s changed a little bit and I think the same thing is true of fantasy literature until Game of Thrones came along and I think it’s more mainstream now and people like Frank Miller have really helped do that with comic books.

Oliver: Also away from the superhero/science fiction aspect people like Art Spiegelman who’s been around for a long time, and it’s come back with a bit of a resurgence, for example Persepolis, things like that which is real life not science fiction. I wasn’t really crazy about graphic novels growing up interestingly. You’d think that I was with how visual I am but I’ve never been that interested in making one but it’s not the way that I think. I don’t think about illustrating every moment of a sequence. I trying to breakdown lot of complicated things into ojust one very simple image rather than taking it and breaking it apart into fifty.



Eoin: That’s something I learnt from you actually. You don’t have to say so much. You don’t’ have to lead up to everything and then follow it.

Oliver:  It’s the power of suggestion really. That’s just my particular skill set and other people really do dominate that area where every single moment is shown.
I think with graphic novels I’m surprised that they ever get published because they are so inefficient. It takes so many people so long and you can only charge so much so unless it’s a mega seller it's not really cost effective. 

Oliver How do you feel the illustration world is represented by the visual arts world? Do they compliment each other? and how do you divide your time? 

Oliver: It’s becoming more so that it accepts illustration although illustration is still a dirty word and I was actually talking about this with my gallery recently and we were having a laugh about it . They are never called illustrations in the fine art world whether it’s on paper or ink drawing or whatever but it’s becoming okay because picture books are more popular and, dare I say it, more fashionable it’s more socially acceptable to be making picture books and be in the fine art world. Ten years ago that was not the case.
I divide my time with discipline and dedication and an exhausting schedule really. It’s not quite as formulaic as 50/50 or a week on a week off. Some years it’s more picture books than fine art and some years it’s the other way round.  It’s just a matter of what projects I have on the go and being pretty strict with myself around deadlines and if there aren’t any then I make self created deadlines.


WITH HUGE THANKS TO Vicki from Harper Collins and of course Oliver and Eoin. 


Imaginary Fred
By Eoin Colfer and Oliver Jeffers
Published by HarperCollins
£12.99

A beautifully observed story about an imaginary friend told with great humour and sensitivity. Beguiling Illustrations by the inimitable talent that is Oliver Jeffers make this a highly desirable future classic.

Check out the next issues of Little London and WRD magazines mid November for my full interviews and also a review of their FANTASTIC book.  


BUY A COPY HERE