What makes a classic children’s book?

Sadly no mention of Rosemary Sutcliff as Lucy Mangan asks why some children’s stories survive multiple generations of young readers, while others enjoy short-lived glory

via What makes a classic? | The Observer.

Twitter users report favourite Rosemary Sutcliff books | Dawn Wind, The Lantern Bearers, Sword at Sunset

Twitter on favourite Rosemary Sutcliff book

Children’s writer Rosemary Sutcliff said writing for adults only a small gear-change

Prompted by The Guardian who recently did an item where ” authors reveal the secrets of their craft … (in) …  interviews with some of our most celebrated writers recorded for the British Library, I am reminded , again, that Rosemary often said that she wrote for children aged 8 to 88, and that she once spoke  in an interview about the difference between writing for children and for adults:

The themes of my children’s books are mostly quite adult, and in fact the difference between writing for children and for adults is, to me at any rate, only a quite small gear change.

Rosemary Sutcliff won The Carnegie Medal for historical novel The Lantern Bearers in 1959

Rosemary Sutcliff’s historical novels The Eagle of the Ninth, The Silver Branch, and The Lantern Bearers are sometimes called a trilogy. Rosemary Sutcliff won the Library Association Carnegie Medal for The Lantern Bearers in 1959. The Medal is awarded every year in the UK to the writer of an outstanding book for children. The Library Association started the prize in 1936, in memory of the Scottish-born philanthropist Andrew Carnegie (1835-1919), a self-made industrialist who made his fortune in steel in the USA. His experience of using a library as a child led him to resolve that “if ever wealth came to me that it should be used to establish free libraries”. He established more than 2800 libraries across the English speaking world and, by the time of his death, over half the library authorities in Great Britain had Carnegie libraries.

First awarded to Arthur Ransome for Pigeon Post, the medal is now awarded by the Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals. The winner receives a golden medal and some £500 worth of books to donate to a library of their choice. Rosemary Sutcliff also:

The Eagle of the Ninth eBook is Today No 1 Children’s Fiction Book on Amazon

(At 08.30am March 26th)

The Eagle of the Ninth topselling on Amazon 26 March

[Amazon U.K.] [Amazon U.S.] [Amazon Canada]