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Sarah Crossan Books

This is the first picturebook from award-winning author Sarah Crossan. A Totally Big Umbrella is a heartwarming story about Tallulah, who doesn’t like the rain. The rain ruins things for her. So to overcome her dislike of the rain, she carries around an umbrella to avoid it ruining her days.

However, walking around with an umbrella has its challenges! Soon Tallulah comes to realise that by worrying so much about the rain, when no one else is affected by it a much, she is missing out on so much more.

This is a great story to explain big feelings to smaller children and how sometimes it can take time to overcome these feelings, but sharing feelings ensures that people can help us manage them. An important lesson for all of us!

A sensitive and thoughtful story all about anxieties and the impact they can have before overcoming them. The book would be useful for PSHE and discussions about feelings and anxiety with children. An easy read with fantastic pictures to help tell the story and all of the emotions involved.

The outstanding novel from the Carnegie Medal-winning, former Laureate na nÓg Sarah Crossan; thought-provoking and moving, it explores love and family during The Great Hunger.

Ireland, 1846. Nell is working as a scullery maid in the kitchen of the Big House. Once she loved school and books and dreaming. But there’s not much choice of work when the land grows food that rots in the earth. Now she is scrubbing, peeling, washing, sweeping for Sir Philip Wicken, the man who owns her home, her family’s land, their crops, everything. His dogs are always well fed, even as famine sets in.

Upstairs in the Big House, where Nell is forbidden to enter, is Johnny Browning, newly arrived from England: the young nephew who will one day inherit it all. And as hunger and disease run rampant all around them, a spark of life and hope catches light when Nell and Johnny find each other.

This is a love story, and the story of a people being torn apart. This is a powerful and unforgettable novel from the phenomenally talented Sarah Crossan.

Sarah Crossan never fails in addressing the more gritty issues that reflect the realities of some teenagers’ lives. Crossan does for the young teen what Jacqueline Wilson did for the pre-teen reader.

The story of Apple and Rain touches on a wide range of themes: friendship, bullying, family, love, attachment and mental health, to name a few. The reader is pulled through the story, empathising with different characters through the book and in particular with Apple, the main character, whose mother re-enters her life after nearly 15 years. The English teacher at school and the poetry that he introduces Apple to provide a sanctuary and opportunity for her to express the complex feelings that accompany the return of her mother and the deep desire for it all to work out for them as a family. In addition, poetry provides Apple with a chance to express the loss of her best friend to another girl in the class and the beginnings of her feelings for the boy Del, a neighbour.

Crossan is fabulous at showing how the unusual or ‘outcast’ characters have the greatest depth, care and charm, and this is evident in the behaviours of Apple’s new stepsister and the home-schooled ‘boy next door’, Del. All the characters are carefully crafted by Crossan, including Nana, who has looked after Apple since birth.

This is a super read for any teen.

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