Bath Festival Of Children’s Literature 2011

Perhaps unsurprisingly, the national newspaper of the same name, claims that “The Telegraph Bath Festival Of Children’s Literature has become one of the most important events for children’s literature in the world.” Is this true? Regular, or indeed occasional, readers of this blog may have better knowledge than I …

Apparently The Telegraph has been the media and title sponsor since the first event in 2007 – and this year’s festival in Bath features, according to them, some of the biggest names in children’s fiction. Roddy Doyle, Jeremy Strong, Judith Kerr, Cressida Cowell, Andy Stanton, David McKee and Bath-born Jacqueline Wilson (who was at the first festival) are just a few of the authors who will be taking part in events over 10 days.

The Festival runs from Friday 23rd September 2011 until Sunday 2nd October. We had better get some attention to Rosemary Sutcliff!

Source: Celebrate the Bath Festival Of Children’s Literature 2011

Place names in Roman Britain | In The Silver Branch | Rosemary Sutcliff Discovery of the Day

TanatusThanet
Acqua SulisBath
Venta – Winchester
Laighin – Leinster
Dubris – Dover
Eburacum – York
CallevaSilchester
Portus Adurni – Portchester
RegnumChichester
Vectis – Isle of Wight
AnderidaPevensey
Durovernum – Canterbury

French poster for The Eagle of the Ninth film | L’Aigle de la Neuvieme Legion

I have just come across this reproduction of a french film poster: note how the French sensibly called the film The Eagle of the Ninth (in French!). They knew something that the US marketers did not!

French film poster for The Eagle of the Ninth | L'Aigle de la Neuvieme Legion

Source: Facebook pages of Channing Tatum

 

 

 

Patrick Ness wins Carnegie Medal for 2011 | Rosemary Sutcliff in 1959!

Patrick Ness winner of 2011 Carnegie MedalThe Carnegie Medal for 2011 (won by Rosemary Sutcliff in 1959, see previous post!) has been presented to Patrick Ness for his book Monsters of Men, the final volume of the Chaos Walking trilogy.  In his acceptance speech, according to The Guardian, he  launched a “scorching” attack on the (UK) coalition government’s policy on libraries – a policy which results in many many closures.

His first two novels, The Knife of Never Letting Go and The Ask and the Answer, were runners-up for the Carnegie Medal in 2009 and 2010. The Knife of Never Letting go won both the Guardian Children’s Book Award and the Book Trust Teenage Award.

The chair of the 2011 Carnegie judging panel praised Ness for creating a “complex other world, giving himself and the reader great scope to consider big questions about life, love and how we communicate, as well as the horrors of war, and the good and evil that mankind is capable of.”  I am not sure who the chair of judges was, but possibly not a writer?! Patrick Ness, however, clearly is. An American, one time writer for a big corporation,  he has lived in the U.K. since 1999.  I have not read anything he has written – yet – I am afraid. Any readers of this blog have any experience and views?

Addendum: Since I posted this I have read that the book Monsters of Men that had begun as a fragment and an idea written by Siobhan Dowd, who died of breast cancer before the novel was finished (and who won the 2009 Carnegie Medal posthumously for Bog Child).  See  tis Q&A with Patrick Ness and Denise Johnstone-Burt.

The mystery of Rosemary Sutcliff and the ninth legion | Simon Parke in the Church Times | Sutcliff Discovery of the Day

One of you regular readers – but I cannot find who at the moment, sorry – commented a while back pointing me to the fact that Rosemary Sutcliff’s story of the ninth legion, The Eagle of the Ninth, was the jumping off point for a column in The Church Times earlier this year by Simon Parke (sic!), entitled ‘The Mystery of the Ninth’. He concluded:

It was the Ninth ..the most exposed and northerly of all legions in Britain, that bore the brunt of the unrest. But where and why did they cease to exist? After York, the archaeological trail of this elite force of soldiers grows strangely cold. Sometimes mystery is more gripping than fact, and loss more wondering than gain.

The full column is reproduced, with permission from the writer, below. It sets out broadly one version of the case for and against Rosemary’s ‘imagined’ version of events.Read More »