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{{Infobox Writer <!-- for more information see [[:Template:Infobox Writer/doc]] -->
h
| name = Michael Morpurgo
| image= Michael Morpurgo 20090315 Salon du livre 1.jpg
| imagesize = upright
| caption = Michael Morpurgo at a book fair in Paris, France, in March 2009.
| birthname = Michael Andrew Bridge Morpurgo
| birthdate = {{Birth date and age|1943|10|5|df=yes}}
| birthplace = [[UK]]
| nationality =
| occupation = [[Novelist]]
| notableworks = [[War Horse]], [[Why the Whales Came]], [[Private Peaceful]]
| deathdate =
| website = http://www.michaelmorpurgo.com
| religion =
}}

'''Michael Andrew Bridge Morpurgo''' [[Order of the British Empire|OBE]] [[Fellowship of King's College London|FKC]] [[Associate of King's College|AKC]] (born 5 October 1943) is an [[England|English]] [[author]], [[poet]], [[playwright]] and [[librettist]], best known for his work in [[children's literature]].

==Biography==
===Early life===
Michael Morpurgo was born in [[St Albans]], [[Hertfordshire]], in 1943, the son of Tony Bridge, an actor. His stepfather, Jack Morpurgo, was a writer and professor of literature at [[Leeds University]]. His grandfather, [[Émile Cammaerts]], was a notable Belgian poet and his uncle, [[Francis Cammaerts]], a [[Special Operations Executive]] (SOE) agent with the [[French Resistance]].<ref>[http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/2006/aug/05/familyandrelationships.family3 The Guardian: "The great oak in our family has fallen" by Michael Morpurgo]</ref>

During the last years of [[World War II]] he was evacuated to [[Cumberland]]; he later moved back to [[London]], and then on to [[Essex]]. He attended schools in London, Sussex and Canterbury (his unhappy experiences at boarding school would inform his novel ''[[Alone On A Wide, Wide Sea]]'', one of his more famous works). When he attended [[The King's School, Canterbury]], he was once described as being "rather stupid but great at rugby". He later trained for the British Army at the [[Royal Military Academy Sandhurst]] but returned home after a painful injury.

===From teaching to writing===
Following an early job as a school caretaker, Michael studied English and French at [[King's College London]], and went on to teach primary school pupils in [[Kent]]. While he was teaching, in his late twenties, he discovered his talent for storytelling, stating "I could see there was magic in it for them, and realized there was magic in it for me."

His writing career was inspired by [[Ted Hughes]]'s ''Poetry in the Making'', Paul Gallico's ''[[The Snow Goose]]'' and Hemingway's ''[[The Old Man and the Sea]]''.<ref>http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2008/jun/12/michael.morpurgo The Guardian</ref> Poets [[Sean Rafferty]] and [[Ted Hughes]] were influential in his career, with Hughes becoming a friend, mentor and neighbour.

Morpurgo's work is noted for its "magical storytelling",<ref>http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2008/jun/12/michael.morpurgo The Guardian</ref> for recurring themes such as the triumph of an outsider or survival, for characters' relationships with nature, and for vivid settings such as the Cornish coast or World War I. His ambitions for writing shows in all of his stories.

In 2009, he donated the short story ''Look At Me, I Need a Smile'' to Oxfam's '[[Ox-Tales]]' project, four collections of UK stories written by 38 authors. Morpurgo's story was published in the 'Water' collection.<ref>[http://www.oxfam.org.uk/shop/content/books/books_oxtales.html Oxfam: Ox-Tales]</ref>

==Farms for City Children==
In 1976 Michael Morpurgo and his wife, [[Clare Morpurgo]] (née Lane), established the charity Farms for City Children,<ref>{{UK charity|325120|Farms for City Children}}</ref> with the primary aim of providing children from inner city areas with experience of the countryside.<ref>[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ktl3_VFg6qo AdventureBox Books Interview on Farms for Children]</ref> The programme involves the children spending a week at a countryside [[farm]], during which they take part in purposeful farmyard work.<ref>[http://www.farms4citychildren.co.uk/ Farms for City Children]</ref>

50,000 children have taken part in the scheme since it was set up, and the charity now has three farms in [[Devon]], [[Gloucestershire]] and [[Wales]]. In 1999 the couple were created [[Order of the British Empire|Members of the Order of the British Empire]] (MBE) in recognition of these services to youth. Michael Morpurgo was raised to Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) on 17 June 2006 for services to literature.

==Children's Laureate==
Morpurgo was involved in the development of the [[Children's Laureate]] award as, "The idea for the Children's Laureate originated from a conversation between (the then) Poet Laureate [[Ted Hughes]] and children's writer Michael Morpurgo."<ref>[http://www.childrenslaureate.org.uk/About-the-award Children's Laureate: About the Award]</ref> He was the third person to become Children's Laureate and held the title from 2003 to 2005.

===Illustrators===
Michael Morpurgo has worked with a number of illustrators, including [[Quentin Blake]], [[Christian Birmingham]], Emma Chichester Clark, [[Michael Foreman (author / illustrator)|Michael Foreman]], Shoo Rayner and [[Tony Ross]].

==Adaptations==
''Gentle Giant'' was presented as an opera by composer Stephen McNeff and librettist Mike Kenny at the Royal Opera House in 2006. Film versions have been made of ''Friend or Foe'' (1981) and ''When the Whales Came'' (1989), the latter also being adapted to a stage play. ''My Friend Walter'' (1988) and ''Out of the Ashes'' (2001) have both been adapted for television and ''[[War Horse (book)|War Horse]]'' has been adapted as a [[War Horse (play)|stage play]] and radio broadcast. His story ''[[War Horse]]'' has now been made into a west end play and has been awarded several prizes, it has been called "the theatrical performance of the decade."

==Literary awards and prizes==
===Shortlisted===
*1991 [[Carnegie Medal in Literature|Carnegie Medal]]: ''Waiting for Anya''
*1995 Carnegie Medal: ''Arthur, High King of Britain''
*1996 Carnegie Medal: ''The Wreck of the Zanzibar''
*2002 W. H. Smith Award for Children's Literature: ''Out of the Ashes''
*2003 [[Blue Peter Book Award]]: The Book I Couldn't Put Down: ''Cool!''
*2003 Carnegie Medal: ''Private Peaceful''
*2004 Whitbread Children's Book Award: ''Private Peaceful'

===Awarded===
*1993 [[Prix Sorcières]] (France): ''King of the Cloud Forests''
*1995 Whitbread Children's Book Award: ''The Wreck of the Zanzibar''
*1996 [[Nestlé Smarties Book Prize]] (Gold Award): ''The Butterfly Lion''
*1999 Prix Sorcières (France): ''Wombat Goes Walkabout''
*2000 Red House Children's Book Award: ''Kensuke's Kingdom''
*2001 Prix Sorcières (France): ''Kensuke's Kingdom''
*2002 Nestlé Smarties Book Prize (Bronze Award): ''The Last Wolf''
*2004 Red House Children's Book Award: ''Private Peaceful''
*2005 Blue Peter Book of the Year Award: ''Private Peaceful''
*2005 [[Hampshire Book Award]]: ''Private Peaceful''
*2007 California Young Reader Medal: ''Private Peaceful''<ref>[http://www.californiayoungreadermedal.org/index.htm California Young Reader Medal]</ref>

==Bibliography==
*''It Never Rained: Five Stories'' (1974)
*''Living Poets'' (compiler with Clifford Simmons) (1974)
*''Long Way Home'' (1975)
*''Thatcher Jones'' (1975)
*''The Story-Teller'' (compiler with Graham Barrett) (1976)
*''Friend or Foe'' (1977)
*''Do All You Dare'' (1978)
*''What Shall We Do with It?'' (1978)
*''All Around the Year'' (with Ted Hughes) (1979)
*''Love at First Sight'' (1979)
*''That's How'' (1979)
*''The Day I Took the Bull By the Horn'' (1979)
*''The Ghost-Fish'' (1979)
*''The Marble Crusher and Other Stories'' (1980)
*''The Nine Lives of Montezuma'' (1980)
*''Miss Wirtle's Revenge'' (1981)
*''The White Horse of Zennor: And Other Stories from below the Eagle's Nest'' (1982)
*''[[War Horse (book)|War Horse]]'' (1982)
*''Twist of Gold'' (1983)
*''[[Little Foxes]]'' (1984)
*''[[Why the Whales Came]]'' (1985)
*''Words of Songs'' (libretto, music by Phyllis Tate) (1985)
*''Tom's Sausage Lion'' (1986)
*''Conker'' (1987)
*''Jo-Jo, the Melon Monkey'' (1987)
*''King of the Cloud Forests'' (1988)
*''Mossop's Last Chance'' (with Shoo Rayner) (1988)
*''My Friend Walter'' (1988)
*''Albertine, Goose Queen'' (with Shoo Rayner) (1989)
*''Mr. Nobody's Eyes'' (1989)
*''Jigger's Day Off'' (with Shoo Rayner) (1990)
*''Waiting for Anya'' (1990)
*''And Pigs Might Fly!'' (with Shoo Rayner) (1991)
*''Colly's Barn'' (1991)
*''The Sandman and the Turtles'' (1991)
*''Martians at Mudpuddle Farm'' (with Shoo Rayner) (1992)
*''The King in the Forest'' (1993)
*''The War of Jenkins' Ear'' (1993)
*''Arthur, High King of Britain'' (1994)
*''Snakes and Ladders'' (1994)
*''The Dancing Bear'' (1994)
*''Blodin the Beast'' (1995)
*''Mum's the Word'' (with Shoo Rayner) (1995)
*''Stories from Mudpuddle Farm'' (with Shoo Rayner) (1995)
*''[[The Wreck of the Zanzibar]]'' (1995)
*''Robin of Sherwood'' (1996)
*''Sam's Duck'' (1996)
*''The Butterfly Lion'' (1996)
*''The Ghost of Grania O'Malley'' (1996)
*''Farm Boy'' (1997)
*''Cockadoodle-doo, Mr Sultana!'' (1998)
*''Escape from Shangri-La'' (1998)
*''Joan of Arc'' (1998)
*''Red Eyes at Night'' (1998)
*''Wartman'' (1998)
*''[[Kensuke's Kingdom]]'' (1999)
*''The Rainbow Bear'' (1999)
*''Wombat Goes Walkabout'' (1999)
*''Billy the Kid'' (2000)
*''Black Queen'' (2000)
*''Dear Olly'' (2000)
*''From Hereabout Hill'' (2000)
*''The Silver Swan'' (2000)
*''Who's a Big Bully Then?'' (2000)
*''More Muck and Magic'' (2001)
*''Out of the Ashes'' (2001)
*''Toro! Toro!'' (2001)
*''Cool!'' (2002)
*''Mr. Skip'' (2002)
*''The Last Wolf'' (2002)
*''The Sleeping Sword'' (2002)
*''Gentle Giant'' (2003)
*''[[Private Peaceful]]'' (2003)
*''Sir Gawain and the Green Knight'' (2004)
*''I Believe in Unicorns'' (2005)
*''The Amazing Story of Adolphus Tips'' (2005)
*''Albatross'' (2006)
*''It's a Dog's Life'' (2006)
*''[[Alone on a Wide, Wide Sea]]'' (2006)
*''[[Beowulf]]'' (2006), illustrated by Michael Foreman
*''Born to Run'' (2007)
*''The Mozart Question'' (2007)
*''Hansel and Gretel'' (2008)
*''This Morning I Met a Whale'' (2008)
*''Kaspar: Prince of Cats'' (2008)
*''The Voices of Children'' (2008) (play)
*''The Birthday Book'' (editor, with Quentin Blake) (2008)
*''Running Wild'' (2009)<ref>[http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2009/nov/07/running-wild-michael-morpurgo-review The Guardian review]</ref>
*''The Kites Are Flying!'' (2009)<ref>[http://www.walker.co.uk/The-Kites-Are-Flying-9781406317985.aspx Walker Books]</ref>

==Radio broadcasts==
*''The Invention of Childhood'' (2006) (with Hugh Cunningham), [[BBC Radio 4]] <ref>[http://www.open2.net/theinventionofchildhood/meetthepresenter.html Open2,net]</ref>

==Biographies==
* Carey, Joanna (1999). ''Interview with Michael Morpurgo''. ISBN 9780749738662
* Fox, Geoff (2004). ''Dear Mr Morpingo: Inside the World of Michael Morpurgo''. ISBN 9781840466072
* McCarthy, Shaun (2005). ''Michael Morpurgo''. ISBN 9780431179957

==References==
{{reflist}}

==Further reading==
* Morpurgo, Michael et al. ''La Revue Des Livres Pour Enfants'' Number 250, December 2009: "Michael Morpurgo" pp 79–124. {{fr icon}}
*{{cite news | last =Franks | first =Alan | coauthors = | title =Courses for horses | work = | pages = | language = | publisher =The Times | date =2007-09-22 | url =http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/stage/theatre/article2483974.ece | accessdate =2007-09-23 }}
*{{cite news | author = Paul Arendt | title = Children's author Michael Morpurgo on 'Beowulf'| publisher = The Guardian | date = 2007-11-20 | url =http://books.guardian.co.uk/departments/childrenandteens/story/0,,2213973,00.html |accessdate=2007-11-27}}

==External links==
*[http://www.michaelmorpurgo.org Official website]
*[http://www.egmont.co.uk/contributor.asp?contid=104 Website at Egmont]
*[http://www.michaelmorpurgo.com Website at HarperCollins]
*[http://www.contemporarywriters.com/authors/?p=auth03D30K142212635714 Profile at Contemporary Writers]
*[http://thebrowser.com/books/interviews/michael-morpurgo Interview with Michael Morpurgo on Books for Children]

{{start box}}
{{s-culture}}
{{succession box
|title=[[Children's Laureate|Children's Laureate of the United Kingdom]]
|before=[[Anne Fine]]
|after=[[Jacqueline Wilson]]
|years=2003{{endash}}2005}}
{{end box}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Morpurgo, Michael}}
[[Category:1943 births]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Old King's Scholars]]
[[Category:Alumni of King's College London]]
[[Category:Associates of King's College]]
[[Category:Fellows of King's College London]]
[[Category:English children's writers]]
[[Category:British children's writers]]
[[Category:Officers of the Order of the British Empire]]
[[Category:Fellows of the Royal Society of Literature]]

[[de:Michael Morpurgo]]
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[[he:מייקל מורפורגו]]
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[[sv:Michael Morpurgo]]

Revision as of 15:05, 26 March 2010

Michael Morpurgo
Michael Morpurgo at a book fair in Paris, France, in March 2009.
Michael Morpurgo at a book fair in Paris, France, in March 2009.
OccupationNovelist
Notable worksWar Horse, Why the Whales Came, Private Peaceful
Website
http://www.michaelmorpurgo.com

Michael Andrew Bridge Morpurgo OBE FKC AKC (born 5 October 1943) is an English author, poet, playwright and librettist, best known for his work in children's literature.

Biography

Early life

Michael Morpurgo was born in St Albans, Hertfordshire, in 1943, the son of Tony Bridge, an actor. His stepfather, Jack Morpurgo, was a writer and professor of literature at Leeds University. His grandfather, Émile Cammaerts, was a notable Belgian poet and his uncle, Francis Cammaerts, a Special Operations Executive (SOE) agent with the French Resistance.[1]

During the last years of World War II he was evacuated to Cumberland; he later moved back to London, and then on to Essex. He attended schools in London, Sussex and Canterbury (his unhappy experiences at boarding school would inform his novel Alone On A Wide, Wide Sea, one of his more famous works). When he attended The King's School, Canterbury, he was once described as being "rather stupid but great at rugby". He later trained for the British Army at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst but returned home after a painful injury.

From teaching to writing

Following an early job as a school caretaker, Michael studied English and French at King's College London, and went on to teach primary school pupils in Kent. While he was teaching, in his late twenties, he discovered his talent for storytelling, stating "I could see there was magic in it for them, and realized there was magic in it for me."

His writing career was inspired by Ted Hughes's Poetry in the Making, Paul Gallico's The Snow Goose and Hemingway's The Old Man and the Sea.[2] Poets Sean Rafferty and Ted Hughes were influential in his career, with Hughes becoming a friend, mentor and neighbour.

Morpurgo's work is noted for its "magical storytelling",[3] for recurring themes such as the triumph of an outsider or survival, for characters' relationships with nature, and for vivid settings such as the Cornish coast or World War I. His ambitions for writing shows in all of his stories.

In 2009, he donated the short story Look At Me, I Need a Smile to Oxfam's 'Ox-Tales' project, four collections of UK stories written by 38 authors. Morpurgo's story was published in the 'Water' collection.[4]

Farms for City Children

In 1976 Michael Morpurgo and his wife, Clare Morpurgo (née Lane), established the charity Farms for City Children,[5] with the primary aim of providing children from inner city areas with experience of the countryside.[6] The programme involves the children spending a week at a countryside farm, during which they take part in purposeful farmyard work.[7]

50,000 children have taken part in the scheme since it was set up, and the charity now has three farms in Devon, Gloucestershire and Wales. In 1999 the couple were created Members of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in recognition of these services to youth. Michael Morpurgo was raised to Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) on 17 June 2006 for services to literature.

Children's Laureate

Morpurgo was involved in the development of the Children's Laureate award as, "The idea for the Children's Laureate originated from a conversation between (the then) Poet Laureate Ted Hughes and children's writer Michael Morpurgo."[8] He was the third person to become Children's Laureate and held the title from 2003 to 2005.

Illustrators

Michael Morpurgo has worked with a number of illustrators, including Quentin Blake, Christian Birmingham, Emma Chichester Clark, Michael Foreman, Shoo Rayner and Tony Ross.

Adaptations

Gentle Giant was presented as an opera by composer Stephen McNeff and librettist Mike Kenny at the Royal Opera House in 2006. Film versions have been made of Friend or Foe (1981) and When the Whales Came (1989), the latter also being adapted to a stage play. My Friend Walter (1988) and Out of the Ashes (2001) have both been adapted for television and War Horse has been adapted as a stage play and radio broadcast. His story War Horse has now been made into a west end play and has been awarded several prizes, it has been called "the theatrical performance of the decade."

Literary awards and prizes

Shortlisted

  • 1991 Carnegie Medal: Waiting for Anya
  • 1995 Carnegie Medal: Arthur, High King of Britain
  • 1996 Carnegie Medal: The Wreck of the Zanzibar
  • 2002 W. H. Smith Award for Children's Literature: Out of the Ashes
  • 2003 Blue Peter Book Award: The Book I Couldn't Put Down: Cool!
  • 2003 Carnegie Medal: Private Peaceful
  • 2004 Whitbread Children's Book Award: Private Peaceful'

Awarded

  • 1993 Prix Sorcières (France): King of the Cloud Forests
  • 1995 Whitbread Children's Book Award: The Wreck of the Zanzibar
  • 1996 Nestlé Smarties Book Prize (Gold Award): The Butterfly Lion
  • 1999 Prix Sorcières (France): Wombat Goes Walkabout
  • 2000 Red House Children's Book Award: Kensuke's Kingdom
  • 2001 Prix Sorcières (France): Kensuke's Kingdom
  • 2002 Nestlé Smarties Book Prize (Bronze Award): The Last Wolf
  • 2004 Red House Children's Book Award: Private Peaceful
  • 2005 Blue Peter Book of the Year Award: Private Peaceful
  • 2005 Hampshire Book Award: Private Peaceful
  • 2007 California Young Reader Medal: Private Peaceful[9]

Bibliography

  • It Never Rained: Five Stories (1974)
  • Living Poets (compiler with Clifford Simmons) (1974)
  • Long Way Home (1975)
  • Thatcher Jones (1975)
  • The Story-Teller (compiler with Graham Barrett) (1976)
  • Friend or Foe (1977)
  • Do All You Dare (1978)
  • What Shall We Do with It? (1978)
  • All Around the Year (with Ted Hughes) (1979)
  • Love at First Sight (1979)
  • That's How (1979)
  • The Day I Took the Bull By the Horn (1979)
  • The Ghost-Fish (1979)
  • The Marble Crusher and Other Stories (1980)
  • The Nine Lives of Montezuma (1980)
  • Miss Wirtle's Revenge (1981)
  • The White Horse of Zennor: And Other Stories from below the Eagle's Nest (1982)
  • War Horse (1982)
  • Twist of Gold (1983)
  • Little Foxes (1984)
  • Why the Whales Came (1985)
  • Words of Songs (libretto, music by Phyllis Tate) (1985)
  • Tom's Sausage Lion (1986)
  • Conker (1987)
  • Jo-Jo, the Melon Monkey (1987)
  • King of the Cloud Forests (1988)
  • Mossop's Last Chance (with Shoo Rayner) (1988)
  • My Friend Walter (1988)
  • Albertine, Goose Queen (with Shoo Rayner) (1989)
  • Mr. Nobody's Eyes (1989)
  • Jigger's Day Off (with Shoo Rayner) (1990)
  • Waiting for Anya (1990)
  • And Pigs Might Fly! (with Shoo Rayner) (1991)
  • Colly's Barn (1991)
  • The Sandman and the Turtles (1991)
  • Martians at Mudpuddle Farm (with Shoo Rayner) (1992)
  • The King in the Forest (1993)
  • The War of Jenkins' Ear (1993)
  • Arthur, High King of Britain (1994)
  • Snakes and Ladders (1994)
  • The Dancing Bear (1994)
  • Blodin the Beast (1995)
  • Mum's the Word (with Shoo Rayner) (1995)
  • Stories from Mudpuddle Farm (with Shoo Rayner) (1995)
  • The Wreck of the Zanzibar (1995)
  • Robin of Sherwood (1996)
  • Sam's Duck (1996)
  • The Butterfly Lion (1996)
  • The Ghost of Grania O'Malley (1996)
  • Farm Boy (1997)
  • Cockadoodle-doo, Mr Sultana! (1998)
  • Escape from Shangri-La (1998)
  • Joan of Arc (1998)
  • Red Eyes at Night (1998)
  • Wartman (1998)
  • Kensuke's Kingdom (1999)
  • The Rainbow Bear (1999)
  • Wombat Goes Walkabout (1999)
  • Billy the Kid (2000)
  • Black Queen (2000)
  • Dear Olly (2000)
  • From Hereabout Hill (2000)
  • The Silver Swan (2000)
  • Who's a Big Bully Then? (2000)
  • More Muck and Magic (2001)
  • Out of the Ashes (2001)
  • Toro! Toro! (2001)
  • Cool! (2002)
  • Mr. Skip (2002)
  • The Last Wolf (2002)
  • The Sleeping Sword (2002)
  • Gentle Giant (2003)
  • Private Peaceful (2003)
  • Sir Gawain and the Green Knight (2004)
  • I Believe in Unicorns (2005)
  • The Amazing Story of Adolphus Tips (2005)
  • Albatross (2006)
  • It's a Dog's Life (2006)
  • Alone on a Wide, Wide Sea (2006)
  • Beowulf (2006), illustrated by Michael Foreman
  • Born to Run (2007)
  • The Mozart Question (2007)
  • Hansel and Gretel (2008)
  • This Morning I Met a Whale (2008)
  • Kaspar: Prince of Cats (2008)
  • The Voices of Children (2008) (play)
  • The Birthday Book (editor, with Quentin Blake) (2008)
  • Running Wild (2009)[10]
  • The Kites Are Flying! (2009)[11]

Radio broadcasts

Biographies

  • Carey, Joanna (1999). Interview with Michael Morpurgo. ISBN 9780749738662
  • Fox, Geoff (2004). Dear Mr Morpingo: Inside the World of Michael Morpurgo. ISBN 9781840466072
  • McCarthy, Shaun (2005). Michael Morpurgo. ISBN 9780431179957

References

  1. ^ The Guardian: "The great oak in our family has fallen" by Michael Morpurgo
  2. ^ http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2008/jun/12/michael.morpurgo The Guardian
  3. ^ http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2008/jun/12/michael.morpurgo The Guardian
  4. ^ Oxfam: Ox-Tales
  5. ^ "Farms for City Children, registered charity no. 325120". Charity Commission for England and Wales.
  6. ^ AdventureBox Books Interview on Farms for Children
  7. ^ Farms for City Children
  8. ^ Children's Laureate: About the Award
  9. ^ California Young Reader Medal
  10. ^ The Guardian review
  11. ^ Walker Books
  12. ^ Open2,net

Further reading

Cultural offices
Preceded by Children's Laureate of the United Kingdom
2003–2005
Succeeded by