Jelly is the sort of heart-warming story that so many children (and adults) will find it very easy to relate to. It is the story of the class clown, who is using humour to hide their insecurities.
Jelly's impressions are legendary. She has the class in fits. She's voted by the class to take part in the talent show. She has great friends; is always picked for the sports team.
But now in the last year of primary school, Jelly's self-awareness in growing. She starts to recognise that she mainly plays up and tries to get people to laugh with her because she feels it will stop people laughing at her. Despite all her popularity, she is very insecure because she is fat, so her self-belief is very low.
It's clever of Jo Cotterill to have the insecure main character as being one of the popular girls. It so neatly draws attention to the fact of how much everyone plays a part and that the public face people show may not be who they truly feel to be inside. And it emphasises that to show our true feelings is exposing and uncomfortable and takes an awful lot of bravery, as Jelly finds out.
Another really great feature of the story that the person who notices Jelly's unhappiness is her mum's new boyfriend, Lennon. Seeing such a positive male role model in a story is a very neat twist, rather than using the new man in Mum's life as a source of uncomfortable conflict, and I loved this storyline.
Lennon is they key that gives Jelly the confidence to face up to her fears.
Jelly starts to question whether she really even likes performing. She loves writing poems, which she never even shows to her closest friends. And when her friends start telling her than her impressions are crossing a line from being funny into being cruel, a crisis looms.
Jelly is such a warm and thoughtful character and the reader is really rooting for her as she wonders if she will be brave enough to reveal a new Jelly, one who admits their true feelings and acts more like the person she feels she is inside. Lennon, Jelly's lovely mum and her friends surround Jelly with so much goodness, creating a really feelgood story.
It really is a cracking tale about how outwardly confident people are often as insecure as everyone else and should give plenty of food for thought as well as being a joy to read.
Nicki Thornton
Showing posts with label Jo Cotterill. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jo Cotterill. Show all posts
Wednesday, 11 July 2018
Friday, 9 May 2014
3D review –Looking at the Stars- Jo Cotterill – editor interview
We took the chance to talk to Ruth Knowles, Editorial Director, Fiction, Random House about her favourite books and about editing Jo Cotterill's 'Looking at the Stars'.
What
was your favourite children’s book as a child?
I
was a keen ballet dancer and so read and re-read Ballet Shoes and the Drina series. But, like so
many of my generation, it was Enid Blyton who got me properly into reading. I
love Mallory Towers.
What
is your favourite children’s book as an adult?
The
classic book that has stayed with me is The Silver Sword. I read it first age
11 - when I did enjoy it - but have come back to it many times since and I can
remember the journey of Ruth, Edek and Bronia so vividly and with such emotion.
It's a wonderful, haunting WW2 novel that still feels fresh.
The
more modern book I've loved and that stays with me (and I should say that I'm
purposely not choosing a Random House title or a book I worked on at Andersen.
There are so many of those that I love, but I don't want to choose one author
and their work over another!) is Martyn Pig by Kevin Brooks. Phil Earle, who
was then part of the RHCP sales team, gave me it to read when I was in my first
week as the editorial assistant at RHCP. It really showed me what teen books
could be like - gritty, pacy and with such vivid, real characters. It really
changed the way I thought about my new job.
Recently,
I've also loved Rooftoppers by Katherine Rundell.
What
do you think makes children’s books so inspirational?
For
any adult who was a child bookworm as I was, the thought of going anywhere
without a book is unthinkable. I know - first hand from my TA days - this isn't
the experience every child has, by any
means, but I do think that the thought that there could just be one book out
there that changes a child's mind about reading is so very inspirational. It
means that everybody involved in writing and making children's books could play
a part in changing a person for ever.
What
do you love about this book and what makes it stand out?
I
think Jo has got the perfect balance between showing us the reality of war and
all its hardships and brutality, with hope and imagination. What makes the book
stand out for me from other children's books that are set in wartime is Amina's
storytelling. There's the most wonderful scene - Jo read it at her launch party
- where a young boy who has been stunned mute by the horrors he's seen is able
to talk again thanks to his engagement in the stories Amina (the book's heroine)
is telling and the world she's created. I read the book so many times but it
still gives me goosebumps.
How
many people have worked on this book and for how long?
I
know that Jo has been working on it off and on for many years, but my
involvement started in the summer of 2010. Jo's Sweet Hearts series had just
launched, and we were having lunch in Queen's Park. I asked Jo what else she'd
been working on when she came up with the idea for Sweet Hearts, and she told
me about this book she had in her bottom drawer - Looking at the Stars. I loved
the sound of it and said to Jo that when she was happy to share it I'd love to
read it.
I
bought the book for Random House and did my first edit in the Autumn of 2011.
Then I went away for a year - on a secondment to Andersen Press - and Jo had
her second daughter. We carried on working on it at the start of 2013, but it
didn't need much more doing to it at all, just a few tweaks here and there.
In
addition to me, there is obviously a wonderful designer and publicist involved.
A sales team, who loved the book, a production department who made it, and also I had support from a lovely RH
editor who is now at Orchard books, Jessica Clarke.
What
made you want to work in children’s publishing?
I
always knew I wanted to work with words, and for a long time thought Journalism
was the route for me. Then I went to a graduate talk and heard horror stories
about journalists rooting through bins to find a gossip story and decided
against it! I then thought about teaching, and spent a wonderful year working
as a Teaching Assistant in the SEN department of a high
school. I ended up doing a lot of work with teenage boys who had behavioural
issues and dyslexia. I couldn't find things they wanted to read really - other
than car magazines! - and suddenly everything fell into place and I thought
that if I could be involved in the making of books that one day teenage boys
just like the ones I'd worked with might find the right book to turn them into
a reader.
Ruth
Knowles, Editorial Director, Fiction, Random House
Wednesday, 7 May 2014
3D review –Looking at the Stars- Jo Cotterill – author interview
What
was your favourite book as a child?
I
had so many! But there were two that made a big impression on me: 'The Ordinary
Princess' by M M Kaye, and 'The Dark Is Rising' by Susan Cooper. The first one
is a story of a girl born a princess but who is desperately bored by her duties
and so runs away to become a kitchen maid in another castle. She also builds
her own cabin in the woods. It combined my love of all things fairytale with my
innate sense that girls wanted adventure and challenge, not just to sit around
looking pretty. The Susan Cooper book has remained a firm favourite through my
adult life too. It mixes Arthurian legend and dark magic in a modern setting
and is simply one of the best children's books ever written.
What is your favourite children’s book as an adult?
That's an excellent question, and one I haven't been asked before! 'Holes' by Louis Sachar is a book I regard as absolute perfection in storytelling. The structure and characterisation are as polished and gleaming and perfect as a diamond.
Why
did you start writing for children?
I've always loved writing, and I've always loved children's books. I would prefer to read a children's book (particularly a teen or Young Adult book) than one written for adults. I'd like to think it's because children's books encapsulate great storytelling in its purest form, but possibly it's because I haven't quite grown up yet.
I've always loved writing, and I've always loved children's books. I would prefer to read a children's book (particularly a teen or Young Adult book) than one written for adults. I'd like to think it's because children's books encapsulate great storytelling in its purest form, but possibly it's because I haven't quite grown up yet.
What
is your favourite aspect of writing for children?
Meeting
them. Kids are directly enthusiastic and emotional about books in a way that
adults aren't. School visits are always so exciting and rewarding. I have to
say though that I also love the quiet creative magic that happens when I'm
writing a book.
What
do you think makes children’s books so inspirational?
Children
aren't fully formed. Their opinions and knowledge wavers and changes, and they
are so open to new ideas. It is a real privilege and challenge to write for
children because your book can have a powerful impact on a young mind. All
adults will recall stories they read in childhood. The stories we read then can
quite literally change our path through life, and that's very exciting.
You
are best known for your ‘Sweethearts’ series of books. ‘Looking at the Stars’
is quite different. What made you want to write this book?
I
wrote 'Looking at the Stars' before I'd even had the idea for 'Sweet Hearts'.
At the time the news was full of the war in Iraq and Afghanistan, and it made me
wonder what qualities a child needs to come through such horrors. I started
writing it without any real idea of where it was going, and discovered over the
years (as it went through various re-writes) that it was becoming my vehicle
for saying so many things about my belief in the importance of imagination.
'Looking at the Stars' is, if you like, the closest I have yet come to
expressing what is most personal to me in a wider context. Family, loyalty,
compassion, generosity, independence of spirit and being able to see beyond
yourself: these are all things that matter greatly to me and that's why
'Looking at the Stars' is a book of which I am very proud.
Friday, 2 May 2014
3D review –Looking at the Stars- Jo Cotterill - reviews
I
LOVED this triumph of simple, powerful storytelling. It's a story within a
story about Amina and Jenna, two
spirited, independent - and very different - sisters. When foreign troops
arrive in their country, the excitement of liberation quickly turns sour and
events spiral terrifyingly out of control. Yet in spite of the bad things that
happen, Amina discovers that her ability to tell stories offers much more than
just hope to her family and the people around her. At times sad, it is entirely
appropriate for 10+ readers who will be gripped and uplifted with how the
sisters survive and craft a hopeful future with the power of stories.
We will be interviewing Jo on Monday and asking where the inspiration for such a different book for her came from.
Mark
Thornton from Mostly Books
Our
children’s-view review is from Katherine Burns from Didcot Girls School, where Jo Cotterill visited on World
Book Day. Katherine is already a big fan of Jo’s through the ‘Sweetheart’
series and read the book in a day!
"It’s
an absolutely stunning book which can hit hard and make you cry. I know I
certainly did! The author’s writing is so creative and powerful in this, that I
this is one of the best books that I've ever read. I would definitely recommend
it."
We will be interviewing Jo on Monday and asking where the inspiration for such a different book for her came from.
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