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Chapter book

Friendship appears where it’s least expected in this heartwarming Little Gem from award-winning author Lisa Thompson.

When Sidney spots a wishing well in the long grass on his way to school, he thinks he might have found the answer to the problems he’s having with his friend Billy. If he can just wish for exactly the right thing, then surely Billy will want to be friends with him again?

But as Sidney makes his wishes, what he doesn’t realise is that the friend he’s longing for has been beside him all the time …

Chapter book

Lewis loves football more than anything else in the world, so he’s thrilled when his talent is spotted by a local coach.

But there are some big obstacles in his way. His mum doesn’t want him to have anything to do with the game because of what happened to his dad on the pitch. And even if Lewis can persuade her to let him give it a go, there’s no way they can afford the kit.

Can Lewis beat the odds to have a chance of following his dream?

Picturebook

Yes, you can, Cow! We believe in you! READY . . . STEADY . . . GO . . .

It’s the Nursery Rhyme’s big performance, but Cow is having second thoughts. She’s too scared to jump! What if she crashes? Will everyone laugh?

The curtain’s almost up and the audience are waiting. Can Cow overcome her fear of failure and become the star of the show?

A gorgeous, heartwarming story about believing in yourself and doing your best based on the ever-popular nursery rhyme ‘Hey Diddle Diddle’.

Picturebook

When a tiger comes to stay at Valentine’s guest house, the human visitors all check out in a rush. Luckily, the hotel soon starts to fill again – but with a very different collection of residents, all with new and differing needs. Elsie and Valentine make lots of changes to accommodate the new guests, and a very popular, accessible and unusual guest house results! A beautiful debut picture book about diversity, inclusivity and empowerment.

Picturebook

Nobody notices the Queen on the corner. Nobody, that is… except one young girl. Through her eyes, the woman who dwells in the abandoned plot is a warrior queen, with many battles fought and won. When, one day, danger comes to the street and the Queen on the corner sounds the alarm, the little girl must find a way to thank her. Can she bring the community together to turn the Queen’s corner into a home?

Picturebook

A Not Now Bernard for the modern generation. A child’s imaginative adventures are ignored by an adult engrossed in their phone. Heartbreakingly the child says, ‘I know you’re right here… but sometimes you feel far away.’ Happily the adult notices the child’s feelings and joins in the fun.

Picturebook

Sometimes I Am Furious is a hilarious and reassuring story about how tough it can be being – and having– a toddler, from bestselling duo Timothy Knapman and Joe Berger.

Life is all fun and games when everything’s going your way. But some days, suddenly, something becomes horribly UNFAIR. A melting ice cream, a too-tight t-shirt, a boy who doesn’t share . . . it’s enough to make you FURIOUS. But, as this little girl discovers, it’s nothing that a deep breath, a happy song and a good cuddle can’t sort out.

A funny, friendly and relatable book for young children (and their parents) about big emotions and how to handle them.

Picturebook

Today I’m a baby bear
I want to hug.
I wouldn’t mind a cuddly squeeze.
I’m baby bear, so yes, please!

Developing emotional and social intelligence is a huge part of young children’s development, and parents are often left grappling with how best to discuss feelings of shyness, social anxiety and physical boundaries with their children. In Sometimes I’m a Baby Bear, Sometimes I’m a Snail, author Moira Butterfield deftly broaches the many different feelings children face – from feeling cuddly like a baby bear or playful like a puppy, to wanting some peace and quiet alone, like a snail curled up in its shell. Through these charming animal comparisons, we see that all feelings are valid and are given tools for how to respect boundaries. Gwen Millward’s lively illustrations bring every emotion vividly to life. A final spread provides extra tools to parents and carers to help young children express their feelings in a calm and constructive way.

empathy lab blog tour

Empathy Collection Blog Tour

What is EmpathyLab?

empathy labEmpathyLab is the first organisation to build children’s empathy, literacy and social activism through a systematic use of high-quality literature. Their strategy builds on new scientific evidence showing the power of reading to build real-life empathy skills, driven by a belief that empathy is a beacon of hope in a divided world.

 

This month, Empathy Lab has launched the 2023 Read for Empathy collection of children’s books to build empathy. The primary collection features 40 books for 3-11-year-olds; the secondary collection has 25 books for 12-16-year-olds. They include picture books, novels, poetry, non-fiction and graphic and verse novels. Each offers young people different ways of experiencing, understanding and building empathy – ranging from inspiring social activism to exploring the power of empathy to heal difficult relationships. Many help young readers gain insight into different life experiences, from homelessness to hearing loss.  

 

EmpathyLab’s founder, Miranda McKearney OBE, said: Each of the collection’s wonderful books has been chosen to do a specific empathy-building job, giving educators practical tools to raise an empathy-educated generation. Imagine the power of every child being inspired to learn about the importance of empathy, and develop this critical life skill – the future would be in safe hands.” 

 

Free Guides to the primary and secondary collections are available here https://www.empathylab.uk/RFE

Empathy-Boosting Book Choice: Our Tower

our tower

 

The team at Empathy Lab invited us to choose one of the titles in the collection to showcase as a brilliant empathy-boosting recommendation. We’ve selected Our Tower by Joseph Coelho & Richard Johnson, which was chosen by our Review Panel as one of our Books of the Month back in December.

Our Tower tells the story of three children living in a tower block. Viewing their environment as “concrete and grey”, they decide to seek out the glimpse of green they can see high up from their window.

Finding the tree they have longed to see reveals a secret world of magic. Tumbling deep inside, they find “a world deeper than anything Our Tower has ever seen.” But the most significant discovery is the tree-grown man living within, who opens their eyes to the true magic. With his words, the children see that magic is everywhere, including in their tower. A tower full of love and community.

This is a beautiful story inspired by author Joseph Coelho’s own experience of growing up in a tower block and the author’s real-life experiences weave a deep element of empathy through the story, offering insight into the literal highs and lows of an urban upbringing.

The new Children’s Laureate brilliantly showcases the diversity and the incredible sense of community that living in a tower block is able to provide, showing how the real community is so much more magical than the boring, hard and grey high-rise flats that appear to dominate urban skylines. The tale brings a message about urbanisation, where there’s a perceived distinction between countryside and urban spaces, yet this reminds us that nature is all around us, wherever we live, and everyone should have access to it.

Every page is a feast for the eyes with stunning and sumptuous illustrations by Richard Johnson. The colours perfectly reflect the mood of the poetic narrative, changing from dull greys to magical purples to vibrant, magical technicolour.

As always, the talent of Joseph Coelho’s writing expertly combines writing in verse and poetry with inspiring rich vocabulary.

Author Joseph Coelho says, “Writing is itself a form of empathy, as writers and illustrators we put ourselves into the shoes of our characters hoping to share something fundamental about human nature and the inevitability of our togetherness” How about pairing this story with other stories set in tower blocks or flats? Ask your pupils to explore whether the other books share the same sense of community and ‘inevitability of our togetherness’? Some of our favourites include Boy in the Tower, High Rise Mystery and The Extraordinary Gardener.

 


 

our towerOur Tower is available to purchase online from Amazon or from Bookshop.org.

For more information about the Read for Empathy collection, please visit the EmpathyLab website.

Where next?
> Visit our Reading for Pleasure Hub
> Browse our Topic Booklists
> View our printable year group booklists.
> See our Books of the Month.

vita and the gladiator ally sherrick blog

Guest Post: Ally Sherrick

Author of Vita and the Gladiator

ally sherrick

The World of the Gladiator

In my new historical adventure, the world of the gladiator into which my hero, Roman magistrate’s daughter, Vita is unexpectedly pitched after the murder of her beloved father, is an alien one to us – barbaric and cruel-seeming. But for Roman society across the Empire, the arena was the place where imperial justice was seen to be served and a sense of order reinforced – a reminder of the power of the Emperor in Rome and the meaning and worth of Roman citizenship.

Though some volunteered to fight in the arena, the majority of gladiators were a mix of criminals sentenced to die by the sword (damnati ad gladium) or condemned to the games (damnati ad ludos), prisoners-of-war, or else slaves sold to the gladiator-school by their masters for being disobedient or unruly. Like actors, dancers and certain other groups in society, gladiators were classed as infames, despised and segregated from ordinary citizens. However, if they fought bravely in the arena and died well (if the games’ organiser had decreed it should be a fight to the death), they were capable of winning admiration and even adulation from the crowd. In my own story, the fearsome Cronos the Skull-Crusher is one such ‘celebrity’ fighter.

Searching For Justice

vita and the gladiator On a more personal level, in spite of being sold as a slave to a gladiator school by one of her father’s assassins, Vita is determined to bring those responsible to justice. Meanwhile her cell-mate, the fierce beast-hunter and native Briton, Brea is on a quest to be avenged for what the Roman army, or ‘Eagle-men’ as she calls them, have done to her own family.

The pair argue about what justice means for each of them as the story unfolds and they learn more about each other’s pasts. For example:

 ‘… now my path has crossed with his, I will hunt him down and take his lifeblood from him as surely as he took it from our father.’

Vita shivered and turned her head away.

‘What is wrong? You must want the same thing for your father. Your mother and brother too?’

‘Yes, but … but not like that.’

‘How then?’

‘By arresting the one responsible, bringing him to trial and proving him guilty in a court of law. Then, after that is done, he will be sentenced to death and executed.’

The wolf-woman gave a loud snort. ‘The Roman way! … You know the snake’s guilt. We both do. Better to strike quickly and have done with it.’

‘But that wouldn’t be just. Or fair either.’

‘Was it just or fair when he ordered my father’s throat cut and yours butchered?’

(Vita and the Gladiator pp185-186)

 

Exploring the Theme of Justice in the Classroom

To explore this theme of justice in the classroom, why not encourage students to research gladiatorial games? Then ask them to stage a debate exploring the rights and wrongs of gladiatorial contests and some of the other practices that took place in the arena – for example beast hunts (the venatio) and the execution of those termed ‘criminals’.

Alternatively, or in addition, pairs of students could adopt and explore Vita and Brea’s positions on what justice means to each of them and see if they can shift the other person’s point of view through the power of argument. Then switch characters to gain an insight into things from the other person’s perspective.

 


 

 

vita and the gladiator
Vita and the Gladiator is available to purchase online from Amazon or from Bookshop.org.

 

Where next?
> Visit our Reading for Pleasure Hub
> Browse our Topic Booklists
> View our printable year group booklists.
> See our Books of the Month.

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Stone Girl Bone Girl

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