Book Review: Goddesses and Heroines – Meet More than 80 Legendary Women from Around the World

Title: Goddesses and Heroines: Meet More than 80 Legendary Women from Around the World

Written by: Jean Menzies

Illustrated by: Katie Ponder

Published by: Dorling Kindersley (a subsidiary of Penguin Random House)

Goddesses and Heroines: Meet More than 80 Legendary Women from Around the World by Jean Menzies and Katie Ponder is a carefully crafted, hard-back illustrated non-fiction in the style of AA Publishing’s The Woman Who Rode a Shark and 50 More Wild Female Adventurers by Ailsa Ross and Amy Blackwell and A Galaxy of Her Own Amazing Stories of Women in Space by Libby Jackson, published by Century , which is another subsidiary of Penguin Random House. I found this to be a slight diversion from Dorling Kindersley usual familiar encyclopaedic format.

Jean Menzies has divided the book into four chapters: Goddesses, Magical Being, Mortals and a final shorter chapter entitled About the Myths, which discusses how the stories have been shared over the eras through story telling and art work and how they have been recorded in scrolls and famous books like The Mabinogion, often in poetry form. This chapter briefly gives a mention to some of the temples, monuments and festivals there are to worship the goddesses.

The first three chapters have been segmented into sections for example there are sections on creator goddesses, goddesses of the stars, moon and sky and goddesses of animals to name a few. Each of these sections has an introduction and then a couple of the mentioned women from each introduction are elaborated upon with a significant story about the heroine or goddess to explain why they were worshipped. Katie Ponder’s pastel coloured illustrations compliment the stories and highlight the main parts bringing the stories alive. There is also a useful pronunciation guide, glossary and index to help the readers at the back of the book.

Unlike other books of this calibre the women included have not been confined to a double page spread of facts, which makes it stand out as unique. Jean Menzies has been given the freedom to explore why the female entries were revered and often feared just as much as their male counterparts, throughout the ages. It contributes to filling the gap of equality in the world of myths and legends and highlights the diverse nature by showing how each culture worshipped similar goddesses or idealised strong female heroines each one with their own story and achievements.

Goddesses and Heroines: Meet More than 80 Legendary Women from Around the World would be a fantastic resource in the classroom and ideal for any young reader interested in myths and legends. The sections can be read in any order and is great for dipping into and for exploring the stories. Individual stories could be read aloud during story time, in assemblies or even at the end of the day before bedtime.

A beautiful celebration of the contribution women have made to their heritage.

Spotlight – The King’s Coronation and the Kohinoor Diamond

Sisters and TV presenters Anthea and Wendy Turner have revived their successful writing partnership after almost three decades, relaunching their endearing tales of Underneath the Underground – with a modern twist.


The King’s Coronation and the Kohinoor Diamond is the first title in a brand new series of children’s stories set among the communities of mice living busily below the capital’s bustling Tube stops. The whole world was caught up with the Coronation of King Charles III on May 6, 2023 but now they’ll be able to learn the real story of what happened that day…

The story begins two weeks before the Coronation to find the British Asian mice at Hounslow Underground Station planning a fabulous party to celebrate the royal occasion.

But disaster strikes when a huge glitter ball spins around in the ballroom and fails to shine! Soon, a daring plan is made – to take the Kohinoor Diamond from the Royal Crown and add it to the glitter ball, making it sparkle and giving the diamond back to the Indian community, where it belongs. The mice work hard to replace the diamond with a piece of glass… but will King Charles and Queen Camilla notice?

Wendy said:

“We’ve absolutely loved writing about the wonderful mice of the London Underground once again. It’s been like catching up with a group of old friends and finding that you still have so much to say after all these years!

The King’s Coronation and the Kohinoor Diamond is a particularly special story because it’s completely up to date and will hopefully engage a whole new generation of young readers.”

Wendy Turner

To discover the true story of the Kohinoor Diamond take a look at: Smithsonian Magazine – The True Story of the Kohinoor Diamond.

Blog Tour – If I had a Polar Bear

The latest addition to the wildly popular series of bedtime stories imagines what it would be like to have a polar bear for a pet.

What would it be like to have a polar bear as a pet? It might be an unconventional
choice, but it would be sure to give the best bear hugs…

Polar bears are cuddly but they’re also very strong. As marine mammals, they can swim for days at a time – that’s serious perseverance! So if Santa ever needed help delivering his presents, guess who he would call?

Join our funny female protagonist as she wonders ‘what would life be like… if I had a
polar bear?’

Blurb for If I Had A Polar Bear by Gabby Downay and Alex Barrow

Gabby Dawnay is a writer and poet. She is a regular contributor to OKIDO magazine
and a script-writer for children’s television.

Alex Barrow is a London-based illustrator, and the art director for and a regular
contributor to OKIDO magazine.

Alex and Gabby are the duo behind children’s picture books If I had a dinosaur, A House
for Mouse
and A Song for Bear, all published by Thames & Hudson.

My stop on the tour takes the form of a book review.

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Title: If I had a Polar Bear

Written by: Gabby Dawnay

Illustrated by: Alex Barrow

Published by: Thames & Hudson

If I Had A Polar Bear by Gabby Dawnay and Alex Barrow is a heart-warming picture book about love and imagination. A young girl dreams of owning a polar bear and all the things they could do together. As well as being a lovely story it is full of interesting facts about polar bears.

I enjoyed the way the illustrations are part of the text. This worked perfectly on the pdf I was sent but not so well in the e-book as my e-reader did not format the pages properly. This meant the illustrations were all out of place so the text unfortunately did not make sense.

Written in rhyming couplets this book was easy to read aloud. The illustrations of the polar bear as a faint pencil outline gives the desired effect of the polar bear being imaginary. but also highlights how a polar bear’s fur is translucent not white. I particularly liked the addition of double-page spreads with no text. The pastel colours add to the magical feel of the story.

A highly entertaining read. A great book for reading at bedtime and for encouraging young children to use their imagination.

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To follow the rest of the tour please see the schedule below:

You can buy copies of  If I Had A Polar Bear by Gabby Dawnay and Alex Barrow from your local bookshop, or online at uk.bookshop.org which supports local, independent bookshops.

I would like to thank Anne Cater from Random Things Tours for inviting me to take part in this blog tour. Thank you.

To read my other reviews of children’s books published by Thames and Hudson see:

Blog Tour – Nameless Queen by Marie Sinadjan

Today I am joining the blog tour for the Nameless Queen by Marie Sinadjan, which is a prequel to The Prophecies of Ragnarök trilogy by Meri Benson and Marie Sinadjan, and a retelling of the myths involving Hel, the Norse goddess of death and the queen of the underworld.

Blurb: 

All things end, and all must die.
But death is not always the end.

When Geiravor Lokisdottir was stripped of her name and cast out of Asgard, torn from her family and the life she had known, she thought she’d lost it all. But in the shadows of Niflheim she discovers the path to her destiny, and what it truly means to be queen.

Nameless Queen by Marie Sinadjan

Author Bio:

Marie Sinadjan is a Filipino fantasy author, singer-songwriter, and musical theatre actress. She is the co-author of The Prophecies of Ragnarök series, and her short stories have appeared in anthologies, magazines, and literary journals. She mainly writes fantasy of the mythology, fairytales, and folklore variety.

When not crunching numbers for her full-time job or spending time with her family, she’s traveling, drinking coffee, reading and reviewing books, dreaming up more worlds, writing more songs, or serenading vegetables. She currently lives in the United Kingdom with her husband.

My stop on the blog tour takes the form of an author interview.

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Hi Marie,

Welcome to my blog. I am really pleased to have been invited to take part in your blog tour for your latest book in The Prophecies of Ragnarök series, Nameless Queen.

Tell us a little about yourself and what inspired you to use Norse mythology for your novella Nameless Queen.

Hi Anita, thank you so much having me today! I’m Marie, a Filipino fantasy author currently living in the United Kingdom. I’m an avid reader of YA and SFF, and a big supporter of indie books. I also love music, coffee, traveling, and collecting bunny plushies.

I like reading and writing about mythology and folklore in general, but I ended up with a Norse mythology series simply because it was the common ground my co-author Meri Benson and I found when we decided to collaborate on a novel. I have a whole post about it and our co-authoring process on my blog, if anyone’s interested: Teamwork Makes the Dream Work: How I Published A Novel Trilogy By Co-Authoring

My interest in Norse mythology actually sprung from the videogame Valkyrie Profile. It’s a roleplaying game that follows a Valkyrie named Lenneth as she travels through Midgard, collecting the souls of slain heroes so they might serve Odin as Einherjar. I really liked the thought of the Norse gods not being immortal, and that, like regular people, they feared meeting their doom at Ragnarök, which is the prophesied end of all nine realms.

The Norse pantheon also has some really hilarious stories, like the construction of Asgard’s wall — which ends with Loki getting pregnant and giving birth to an eight-legged horse. They’re such a delightfully weird bunch, and I love it.

Did you have to do a lot of research for this series and if so what was the most unusual research?

I did, yeah. And it’s research in the form of “this is what the myths say,” “this is what history says,” and “this is what other books/films/TV shows have already done before.” The series is set in the modern world where the gods are real after all, but you really shouldn’t believe everything you read/hear because Loki probably just made those stories up. That approach gave us some leeway to use our creative license, but we also wanted to try things other fiction works have not done before, and that involved lots of reading and listening and watching.

If I hadn’t already been watching the MCU films, I’d have said putting myself through a franchise that massive would be the most unusual form of research. But I would have to say it’s researching on other mythologies and folklore that we wanted to incorporate into the series. Sure, a lot of the choices we made stemmed from personal preference (and inside jokes), but I still wanted them to make some sense.

Which of the characters in Nameless Queen do you relate to the most and why?

I love Hel. I’ve been so excited to write this story because she’s one of my favourite characters in the series. She has a tight-knit family, like I do, and she’s particularly close with her younger brother, which I am. She’s also married to her best friend, which, aside from (childhood/best) friends to lovers being one of my favourite romance tropes, I’m likewise married to my best friend. I just wish I’m as clever and as resilient as she is!

What part of Nameless Queen was the most fun to write?

Adding in minor characters that I named after friends and supporters! I didn’t even plan any of it. I just ran into one character that I absolutely had to name because it’s relevant to the story… and then I realized I could do that, just name them after people I know and I’m grateful for. It then became a game of trying to fit in as many of them as I could, haha!

What other myths, legends and folktales do you find yourself drawn to?

As a Filipino, I enjoy the variety of myths, legends, and folktales from back home. I’ve written and published several short stories about them, with some full-length novels in the works, including a Prophecies of Ragnarök spinoff. Because, yeah, I took the opportunity to introduce Filipino mythology and folklore in our series. Silje, the trilogy’s female protagonist, is half-Filipino, and in book 2, Monster Ridge, some of the characters spend time in the Philippines and get tangled with the local deities.

Do you have any writing rituals?

Lots of white coffee, though that applies to every day of my life regardless if I’m writing or not, haha! I do like making playlists when I start a new story. I don’t have one for Nameless Queen specifically since we already have a bunch of playlists for the different books in our series, and even one for her and [SPOILER]. But she has her own song, titled Helfire. You can listen to it and read the lyrics on Spotify: Helfire by Marie Sinadjan and watch on YouTube.

Who has been the biggest supporter of your writing? 

A tie between my husband and mother. They both support me in anything and everything I try to do, and for that, I will always be grateful. My husband even does chores for me so I can work on my writing deliverables instead, watches the things I want to watch and puts up with my random excursions “for research purposes,” and he doesn’t mind when I disappear into my own world every now and then and completely ignore him, haha. And my mother, all the way in the Philippines, has read everything I’ve ever written and published. She’s even a big fan of the series and posts about me and my writing on her social media.

Is there anything else you would like to tell readers about your books?

If you like the Percy Jackson series, Norse mythology, and the Thor films, our series might be for you. We have some unusual spins on the myths, pantheon crossovers, humour, adventure, family drama, romance, and lots of characters to love. Despite the dark themes, the books are not graphic, so they can be read by young adults and adults alike. We’ve also done our best to be inclusive and diverse.

The Ragnarök trilogy might have come to an end but we’ve got prequels and spinoffs waiting to be written, so there should be something in the series for everyone!

What are your social media links where can people find out about you and your books?

I’m @marienettist on all the major platforms, though I’m most active on Instagram, X/Twitter, and Facebook. People can also check my Linktree, which I regularly update with new links: https://linktr.ee/mariesinadjan.

Where is the best place for people to buy your book?

Nameless Queen is available in digital from the usual online retailers, and soon also in paperback! https://books2read.com/NamelessQueen

Plus we’re part of the Winter Wonderland indie sale this weekend, which means the other books in the Prophecies of Ragnarök series are available digitally at discounted prices:

Thank you Marie. It has been fun having you on my blog and finding out more about Nameless Queen and your passion for Norse mythology.

Special Guest Q & A with Sue Klauber

I am happy to host on my blog today Sue Klauber who is going to tell us a little about her children’s book Zinc, which is a family story based on the extraordinary experiences of Sue’s Hungarian Jewish father, uncle and aunt’s secret lives, each of whom played key roles during World War Two.

Zinc looks at the remarkable lengths three young people would go to protect their family and their adopted country.

It is 1939 and the Nazis are menacing Europe and planning to invade Britain. What can brothers John and George do to make a difference?

Soon John is cracking codes at Bletchley Park and George is parachuting into enemy territory.

But what of their sister Eva? What will she do in this time of unimaginable danger?

Blurb for Zinc by Sue Klauber

Sue is an experienced fundraiser and former media educator. She has produced films made by refugee children from Columbia, Kurdistan, Kosovo, Afghanistan, Eritrea, Iran, Armenia and Romania, worked as a fundraiser in arts and social care charities and is now the Trusts and Foundation Lead for a charity where she monitors grants across areas of residential care, community centres, physical disability and Holocaust survivors’ services.

Zinc is her first children’s book. The second book in the series is Cobalt and due for release next year, 2024.

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Hi Sue, welcome to my blog.

Tell us a little about yourself and the inspiration for your book, Zinc.

Zinc is a novel born out of my passion for finding out about my family’s recent history. It is based on the World War Two adventures of my father called John, his brother George, and their sister Eva. They died when I was young, and couldn’t tell us about what they got up to because they had signed The Official Secrets Act which barred them for telling anyone, anything, for the rest of their lives.

What I did know was that my dad was a code-breaker of the messages the Nazis sent to each other which detailed their battle plans. He was based at a centre called Bletchley Park, which is now a fascinating, family oriented, museum. George was a secret agent for Special Operations Executive (SOE) which parachuted agents into Nazi-occupied countries to sabotage their plans. Eva meanwhile was stuck in Hungary because they were a Hungarian Jewish family who had come to live in London before the war started, but she had married a Hungarian man and gone back to live there. The Hungarian government was an ally of the Nazis.

I know these things because my granny, their mum called Ilonka, had put all the family photos, letters, and official documents in a big wooden chest which I now have in my home. Since childhood I have loved to look at all the pictures and read everything in it, and that was the inspiration for writing Zinc for my son who was a young teenager when I started  researching and is now in his early twenties!

From the chest and from my historical research I was able to piece together a lot of info about what they did and who they were. For example, there were many photos of uncle George playing football which showed me that he was a physically fit and active person unlike my dad, John, who liked nothing more than sitting down with a book and thinking.

Why did you decide to write a book about WW2 for children?

I started with the idea that the adventures of John, George and Eva would make a really exciting book for my son, Benjy, who was eleven. As time went on, I realised it was not just about their exploits in World War Two but also about their relationships with each other, the games they played in childhood, and what made them the people they became. Zinc is a mixture of both parts of their lives, and it appeals to both children and adults. I have given talks over the last year to year six and seven classes in schools, and also to groups of adults such as book clubs, older people’s day centres, and even to Holocaust survivors of the death camps.

Talk us through your writing process.

The first step, looking at how I wrote the sequel, is to think about what John, George, and Eva might have done next. Zinc finishes in 1941 so it is still the middle of the war. I wanted to extend their experiences into new territory without repeating what has gone before, and give greater depth to their childhood relationships. When I have the seeds of ideas, I go and research the historical topics, which takes a lot of reading time, while I look for pearls of history that will aid my story. I can then start to sketch out a plot although it is supplemented by a lot more research.

As I’m a new author, I have a full time job as a charity fundraiser so my writing practise is squeezed into weekends. It’s a funny way to work and it means that writing novels takes much longer than if I had more concentrated time, but so far it has been okay and I am crossing my fingers that, with the little time I have, I can pull off the promotion of Cobalt through giving talks and using social media, whilst considering a third book. I’m really excited about it!

Can you share a tiny bit about your plans for the sequel, Cobalt?

At the time of writing this I am making the final edits to Cobalt before it goes off for copy editing. I am discussing the cover with Martin West at Troika Books, which I can’t wait to see!

Cobalt is a sequel, as when Zinc ends John, George and Eva still need to continue to fight to overthrow fascism and protect their Jewish family in any way that they can. John is sent by the code breakers at Bletchley Park to the Sahara desert, which did indeed happen to my dad, the real John. George goes on another mission, and Eva is finding ways to resist, even though she is still trapped in Hungary. John and George recall an incident from when they were children, which they must come to terms with to repair their relationship and restore their self belief.

Did you have to do a lot of research for this series and if so what was the most unusual research?

I have found out as much as I possibly can about the siblings’ activities in World War Two by going to the National Archives in London which holds all the previously classified secret documents about World War Two for the public to see. It was such a thrill to read George’s application form for joining Special Operations Executive, in which his sloping writing details the languages he spoke, the countries he had visited, the sports he did, the school he went to and the job he did before the war started. I have also read the accounts he wrote when the war was over about the SOE operations to Hungary, Poland, and what became the Czech Republic.

There was little about John in the National Archives so I got in touch with Bletchley Park, which has been tremendously helpful. There was nothing that I could find out about Eva except for her letters and photos in granny’s wooden chest. I have visited the house that she lived in which is now in Slovakia (the borders of Hungary and Slovakia changed after the war) and that was a hugely emotional experience.

I’ve also read loads of books and I suppose the most unusual thing that I came across was that their father, Izidor, who is also in Zinc, started a football team in Budapest in 1888 called MTK which is still in their premier league! It has won it many times over the years, and is known as the Jewish team after the twelve Jewish men who started it with Izidor. I have been to a match in their stadium and was treated as a VIP! I can see where George got his love of football from.

What writing advice would you give to people aspiring to be a children’s book writer?

Write about things that are close to your heart so that you care about the book(s) so much that you will stick with it through all the inevitable ups and downs. If a publishing deal doesn’t come off, you will at least have achieved something wonderful, which you can pass onto your family as a legacy of what matters to you.

Who has been the biggest supporter of your writing? 

That has to be my mum, who will celebrate her 100th birthday in February 2024. She has been an invaluable sounding board for ideas and read the manuscript of Zinc and Cobalt before anyone else.

I also owe a great deal to Melissa Balfour, the editor who championed Zinc. Her thoughts and ideas were always spot-on. More recently, the author Penny Joelson has read Cobalt and given me tremendously useful feedback.

Is there anything else you would like to tell readers about your books and writing for children?

Buy Zinc and look out for Cobalt in 2024!! I don’t have a publication date yet. I love to be in touch with my readers so you can reach out to me via social media (links below).

What are your social media links where can people find out about you and your books?

Instagram is @Sueklauber and X is Sue_Klauber  (make sure you put the _ because I have an old account that I cannot use of delete!) I am also on Facebook although I don’t post much.

Where is the best place for people to buy your books? My local bookshop in Muswell Hill The Children’s Bookshop London (childrensbookshoplondon.com) or please go into your local bookshops to order it if they don’t have it already, as they might decide to stock it and bring it to the attention of more children and young people that way, It is also available on Amazon and most online outlets.

Thank you Sue for an enlighting insight into the background of Zinc.

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Blog Tour – Jiddy Vardy Full Sail by Ruth Estevez

Today as part of Ruth Estevez’s blog tour, I am pleased to be shining a spotlight on the third book in the Jiddy Vardy series, Jiddy Vardy Full Sail, which is due for release tomorrow the 2nd December 2023.

This historical fiction for young adults is a thrilling tale of one girl’s search for identity and love, set against a backdrop of wild seas, smuggling and violence.

1796

When the sea can’t be put on trial for murder, who must pay the price?

A smuggler with a conscience, the defiant and contradictory Jiddy Vardy sets out to find choices and freedom for local girls worn thin by poverty.

Caught in the net that is Robin Hood’s Bay, Jiddy looks to majestic York, little realising that even loved ones can cage you when they think they are offering the chance of a lifetime.

Head inland to the promise of work, out to sea to the unknown, or stay in a close-knit community of smugglers and familiar faces?

What’s it to be for our endlessly curious, yet ultimately open-hearted Jiddy Vardy?

Blurb for Jiddy Vardy Full Sail by Ruth Estevez

Yorkshire author Ruth Estevez previously worked as a scriptwriter for major BBC young people’s programming. She was born in Yorkshire and often uses the much loved landscape is a third character in her novels. Her career in theatre, TV and a subscription library have influenced her work.

Script writing for Bob the Builder morphed into novel writing. Very much a Northern writer with Latin touches, Ruth is interested in social differences, the outsider and finding our place in the world.

For those not familiar with Ruth’s Jiddy Vardy series here is the blurb for the first book.

1779

On tumultuous waters a girl is born as pirates board the ship . . .
Jiddy Vardy is a survivor.

Rescued at birth, she grows up in Robin Hood’s Bay, a community which harbours a dangerous secret that could get you killed.

Always the outsider, with her dark skin and hair, at sixteen Jiddy is clever, brave and headstrong, soon risking her life and freedom to play her part in the Bay’s clandestine activities.

Then, just as romance blossoms and Jiddy finally feels like she belongs, figures from the past threaten to tear her world apart, and she has to decide where her loyalties truly lie.

A thrilling tale of one girl’s search for identity and love, set against a backdrop of wild seas, smuggling and violence.

Blurb for Jiddy Vardy by Ruth Estevez

To find out more about Ruth Estevez and her Jiddy Vardy series you can take a look at her website: www.artgoesglobal.wordpress.com, follow her on x/Twitter: @RuthEstevez2 and follow her on Instagram: @ruthestevezwriter

To read reviews of the Jiddy Vardy series check out Goodreads and Amazon.

I would like to thank Dave from The Write Reads for inviting me on this tour. Thank you.

Book Review: A Very Curious Christmas

Title: A Very Curious Christmas

Written by: Maddie Moate

Illustrated by: Paul Boston

Published by: Puffin Books

A Very Curious Christmas by Maddie Moate and Paul Boston is full of a wide range of Christmas trivia divided into four sections:

  • Traditions and Cultures
  • Animals and Nature
  • Food
  • Fun and Decorations

Told from the viewpoint of YouTuber, Maddie Moate, with the assistance of Nigel the abominable snowman, Puddles the Adélie penguin and Big Elf this book is a fun read that you can dip in and out of with no need to read it from cover to cover. There are also twenty-five gingerbread men hidden within the pages and some extremely corny Christmas jokes.

If you want something to keep the children amused during the weeks leading up to Christmas this is the perfect book. There are plenty of activities for them to get engrossed in such as a folded magazine Christmas tree, Birdseed cakes, Snowy Owl pine cones, a table top ice hockey rink and a cool quiz at the end of each section.

A Very Curious Christmas incorporates information on environmental issues such as the effects of climate change and has a fantastic multi-cultural approach to celebrations around the same time as Christmas. At the back of the book Maddie Moat lists her many sources and there is a useful glossary.

Ideally this book should be bought and shared with your children before Christmas. It would also make a great classroom resource for activities to do at the end of the winter term, where you can compare different celebrations, discuss pantomimes and do your own performances or try some of the many craft ideas.

A treasure trove of information.  

You can find out more about A Very Curious Christmas by Maddie Moate and Paul Boston in my Spotlight here: Spotlight – A Very Curious Christmas.

Book Review: A Bad Day For Bear

Title: A Bad Day For Bear

Written and Illustrated by: Duncan Beedie

Published by: Templar Books

A Bad Day For Bear reunites readers with a character favourite from Duncan Beedie’s picture book The Bear Who Stared, which was shortlisted for the Waterstone Children’s Book Prize 2017 and No Sleep for Bear published by Templar Books in 2022.

Bear has an important job to do. He has to build the bonfire for the forest party. But he is having a bad day as he gets a splinter, a bump on the head, rained on and slips in a muddy puddle.

It takes a visit to his friend Frog to help put his problems into perspective. The illustrations are bold and simple with some brilliant facial expressions.

A Bad Day For Bear highlights an important message of how talking about your problems can help. It would be suitable for use in a PSHE lesson to encourage discussion on the children’s bad days and how their problems were solved. This book would also be ideal for stimulating memory games and literacy lessons on making lists.

With an underlying themes of being positive, A Bad Day for Bear is an ideal book for young readers at pre-school and in KS1.

You can buy copies of A Bad Day for Bear by Duncan Beedie from your local bookshop, or online at uk.bookshop.org which supports local, independent bookshops.

This book has previously been reviewed on Amazon .

Spotlight – Say My Name by Joanna Ho and Khoa Le

From New York Times bestselling author Joanna Ho comes a powerful new picture book released in the UK by Harper Collins on the 12th October 2023. It is about the beauty, meaning, and history behind the names of six different children – exploring their cultures and ethnicities, and emphasizing the importance of identity and saying names correctly.

My name is full of tones and rhythms,

melodies and harmonies, chords and cadences.

Each syllable, each sound, is a building block in architecture

constructed over oceans and across generations.

SAY MY NAME.

Say My Name by Joanna Ho and Khoa Le

In Say My Name, with illustrations from Khoa Le, six children from different backgrounds introduce themselves and convey the rich histories of their names. These captivating kids of Chinese, Tongan, Iranian, Navajo, Mexican, and Ghanaian descent also honour their ancestors and cultural histories.

Readers are taught the importance of saying a person’s name correctly, a key issue, particularly in communities that have often had their names shortened because they are viewed as too hard or complex to say. This lyrical story explains how saying a person’s name is the only way we can truly know one another.

  • Hé Xiao-Guang (huh SHEE-ow g-oo-ah-ng)
  • Ofa Kivaha Tupoumalohi (OH-fah key-va-ha too-ph-mah-low-hee)
  • Bijan Hosseini (bee-SZAN hoh-say-NEE)
  • Nizhoni Yazzie (nih-ZHOH-nih YAW-zee)
  • Xóchitl Luna (SOH-cheet LOO-nah)
  • Akosua Acheampong (ah-KO-see-ah a-CHUM-pong)

Joanna Ho, who is of Chinese and Taiwanese heritage and lives in the San Francisco Bay Area, is passionate about equity in books and education. She has been an English teacher, a dean, a vice principal, and a professional development mastermind. Homemade chocolate chip cookies, outdoor adventures, and dance parties with her kids make Joanna’s eyes crinkle into crescent moons.

She is the New York Times bestselling author of Eyes that Kiss in the Corners, Eyes that Speak to the Stars, Playing at the Border: A Story of Yo-Yo Ma, The Silence that Binds Us, and One Day. 

The illustrator Khoa Le is the award-winning author and illustrator of numerous picture books, based in Ho Chi Minh, Vietnam. Her work can be described as whimsical, dreamy and with a bit of fantasy.

She is the winner of the Grand Prize Samsung KidsTime Authors Award 2015 (Singapore) and the second runner up the The Scholastic Picture Book Award 2017 (Singapore).

This book is very much a celebration of differences.

You can follow Joanna Ho on X @JoannaHoWrites and on Instagram @JoannaHoWrites

You can view more of Khoa Le’s beautiful artwork on Instagram @khoa.le.artwork

Book review – Hello Winter

Title: Hello Winter

Written and Illustrated by: Jo Lindley

Published by: Harper Collins

This is another of the beautifully illustrated picture books in the Hello Seasons series about four friends who take it in turns throughout the year to wear the crown and lead the games they play. Now it is Winter’s turn but instead of passing her the crown, Autumn passes it to Spring instead.

As you can imagine Winter is very upset and trundles off to play her games by herself only to discover they are not as much fun when she has no one to play with. Her friends miss her and feel guilty about missing her turn. So they set about trying to find Winter, visiting all her favourite places to go.

They eventually find her sad and miserable on top of the Slippy Slopes. Their quest to find her is made more interesting with the addition of a map at the back and front of the book. The children are able to follow their route around the Season Isle, developing their comprehension skills.

This is a brilliant book to discuss friendship, takin git in turns and how it makes you feel when you are left out out. It encourages empathy and consideration. I found the children’s interactions and reactions to be realistic and the illustrations portray each character’s personality expertly.

Another magical book from author-illustrator Jo Lindley.

To read my review of Hello Summer by Jo Lindley go to: Book Review: Hello Summer

You can buy copies of Hello Winter by Jo Lindley from your local bookshop, or online at uk.bookshop.org which supports local, independent bookshops.

I will like to thank Sarah Sleath for sending me a review copy. Thank you.