Fantabulous volumes ā a childrenās bookworm trail for Roald Dahl Day
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Happy Roald Dahl Day! We donāt need much of an excuse to celebrate at Pitchup.com, as it is a fact universally acknowledged that we are geeky about books. Especially kidsā books, which we read while washing down lashings of ginger beer, a phrase that was never actually used in the Famous Five books but that became famous after the Comic Stripās Five Go Mad in Dorset. (See, we told you we were geeky.)
So we've decided to celebrate this yearās Roald Dahl Day with an addition to our British bookwormās trail blogĀ just for kids and us big kids ā and a look at some of the best festivals and events for bookwormy youngsters. And we might do some colouring inĀ too ā and take a Roald Dahl quizā¦
First up is of course the swishwifflingly scrumdiddlyumptious Roald Dahl Museum and Story CentreĀ in Buckinghamshire, which is holding Roald Dahl Celebrations this SundayĀ (15 September) at the museum and in Roald Dahlās garden: expect swashboggling storytelling sessions, fantabulous facts and marvellous magic as well as a picnic in the orchard and a peep inside Danny's caravan.
Also in Buckinghamshire, the County MuseumĀ at Aylesbury has a Roald Dahl Childrenās GalleryĀ withĀ original Quentin Blake drawings, Matildaās Library and a Great Glass Elevator to the Imagination Gallery (very lucky youngsters with top parents can even book a Whizzpopping birthday party).
Stay near both with a tent pitch at Home Farm Camping and Caravan Park from £30 for 14 and 15 September.
Next, to Oxford: the quad at Christ Church College was used in the Harry Potter films and the college and city are packed with references to Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (author Lewis Carroll taught at Christ Church for 26 years and the deanās daughter Alice Liddell provided the inspiration for the inadvertent traveller).
Oxford was also the home of Narnia author CS Lewis who taught at Magdalen College and set up literary group The Inklings with JRR Tolkien.
Oxford has an Alice DayĀ and Alice exhibitions; Aliceās ShopĀ (the āold sheep shopā in Through the Looking Glass); Alice walksĀ and a Mad Hatters Tea Party cruiseĀ to start off with ā āDrink meā tea and āEat meā cake included.
Once youāre all Aliced out, take the Pottering in Harry's Footsteps TourĀ for more Hogwarts hijinks, go on a a CS Lewis walkĀ then stroll to the blossoming Story Museum, recently set up to celebrate children's stories and with year-round events for all ages.
OxfordshireĀ also has the Wind in the WillowsĀ exhibition at Henley-on-Thames's River and Rowing Museum, with 3D models and audio guides telling the tale of Ratty, Mole, Badger and the very naughty Mr Toad (the part Matt Lucas was born to play).
The museum is half a mile from Swiss Farm Touring and Camping, which has pitches from £14.
DorsetĀ next for some sleuthing: the countryside and villages around Poole and Purbeck were haunts of the Famous Five as they tracked down criminals and found a staggering amount of secret tunnels.
Corfe CastleĀ was the inspiration for Georgeās Kirrin Castle, and Whispering Island in Five Have a Mystery to Solve is Brownsea Island in Poole Harbour.
The Enid Blyton TrailĀ [pdf] starts from PooleĀ or WarehamĀ and goes to Swanage via Corfe Castle: stop off at Corfe for the Ginger Pop Shop to pick up toys, Blyton-era memorabilia and out of print Enids.
Then, as you want the above Ā to have fired up the offspring enough to later write a bestselling kidsā book series that will earn enough to buy you a mansion and a boat, take them to The Scottish Storytelling CentreĀ in Edinburgh with kidsā and storytelling events all year round.
(Stop off at Cumbriaās The World of Beatrix PotterĀ and broomstick training at Northumberlandās Alnwick Castle, aka Hogwarts, on the way north; then buy a trolleyworth of tomes at The Edinburgh Bookshop, now merged with The Childrenās Bookshop to provide a wizard collection of bairns' books).
Festivals
Childrenās book festivals are the very bestest, and weāre not just saying that because weāre off to the Bath Childrenās Literature Festival this year to meet Malorie Blackman and watch Lord of the Flies (anyone who knows kids also knows that story never gets old). Hereās our roundup of whatās on offer:
Bath Childrenās Literature Festival
From 28 September to 6 October in lovely Bath. Michael Rosenās there with Fluff the Farting Fish; Lyn Gardner talks about her fictional theatre series, and there are dozens of events like horror writing workshops and a look at āthe blood and gore of ancient Romeā. Fab.
Stay two miles from the city centre at Newton Mill Holiday Park, with pitches during the festival from £10 a night.
Peek a Book! Childrenās Literature Festival, N Ireland
Authors including Poet Laureate Carol Ann Duffy and former Childrenās Laureate Anne Fine OBE will be in City of Culture Derry from 1 ā 5 October at the Waterside Theatre.
The LegenDerry Zombie WalkĀ is on 5 October too: itās never too early to educate the anklebiters about a possible zombie apocalypse.
Henley Literary Festival
The Henley festival from 30 September āĀ 5 October has several children's events including Gareth Edwards's Disgusting Sandwich, pranks with Sharky and George, and a Young adult crime fiction panel. (Irvine Welsh is there too for literary grownups.)
Festival at the Edge
An international storytelling festival that takes place on the third weekend of each July in Much Wenlock, Shropshire, and which celebrated its twenty-second year in 2013.
The childrenās festival runs concurrently with the main one and mixes specially commissioned childrenās performers with some performers from the main event.
Manchester Childrenās Book Festival
Devised by Carol Ann Duffy and held in schools, community settings, theatres, museums, galleries and libraries all over Manchester. The festival is biannual and the next one is 26 June ā 6 July 2014; the full programme is due to be announced in January.
Edinburgh International Book Festival
Thereās been a Childrenās Programme at the Edinburgh International Book Festival since it all started in 1983, with events on children's fiction, ebooks, comics and poetry.
Next yearās festival is from 9 ā 25 August and the programme will be announced in June.
See also
Childrenās Book Week:Ā from Booktrust, 7 ā 11 October: events and activities around the country celebrating books and reading.
The Childrenās Bookshow: annual tour of childrenās authors and illustrators, starting in London on 23 September and ending in Southport on 21 November.
Anything we've missed out? Leave your splendiferous suggestions below!
First image courtesy of www.roalddahl.com; all other images Ā© Quentin Blake. All images used with permission.