ĂŰŃż´«Ă˝

Use ĂŰŃż´«Ă˝.com or the new ĂŰŃż´«Ă˝ App to listen to ĂŰŃż´«Ă˝ podcasts, Radio 4 and the World Service outside the UK.

Episode details

Radio 4,16 Oct 2024,14 mins

Available for over a year

In this gripping investigation of children’s fiction, award-winning author Katherine Rundell makes a passionate argument for a literature that is often underrated, yet whose magic can live on inside us for the rest of our lives. The best children’s books need to be good enough both for the hungriest child and the wisest, sharpest adult. In the third of five original essays about children’s fiction, Katherine reveals some of the ingredients that make a successful book. There are threads that run through the history of children’s literature and that still enthral readers today, including secrets, animals and jokes. The greatest children’s writers have always acknowledged their readers’ intelligence and have never been afraid to include sophisticated ideas or irony. It’s the promise of the young reader’s imagination that appeals to Katherine herself as a children’s author - when you write for a child, you’re writing for someone who is in the process of becoming the person they will be. Katherine Rundell is an acclaimed writer for children, winning Author of the Year and Book of the Year for Impossible Creatures at the British Book Awards 2024, and winner of the Costa Children’s Book Award. Written and presented by Katherine Rundell Producer: Jo Glanville Editor: Kirsten Lass Production Co-ordinator: Heather Dempsey Studio Engineer: Dan King A Loftus Media production for ĂŰŃż´«Ă˝ Radio 4 Photo credit: Nina Subin

Programme Website
More episodes