Showing posts with label Mike the Knight. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mike the Knight. Show all posts

Monday, 10 June 2013

#ReadItMD13 Theme Week - "Licensed Characters in Children's Books"

Mike the Knight - Coming to an authorless paperback near you soon!
This week we thought we'd tackle the knotty subject of licensed characters in Children's Books for our #ReadItMD13 Theme Week.

When I was young, annuals were the thing. You could almost guarantee that come christmas, at least one well-meaning relative would second-guess whatever you were into at that particular moment in time, and buy you an annual (usually from Fleetway) about it.

Annuals were almost always crushingly disappointing. You'd get the usual mix of puzzles (a crossword, a dot to dot, probably a spot the difference thing) and some comic strips, a few text stories (usually poorly illustrated in all but a few cases) and some tantalising snapshots of whatever TV series or pop group the annual was about.

Christmas present 1978. At least this one spared us the artsy 70s covers!
Aside from annuals, some TV series spawned book series too. Much as they do today but it seems the main difference is that whereas you'd get a decent novelisation of, say, a Grange Hill story...

Surprisingly harrowing stuff from Robert Leeson
This is another book we've got stashed away in the loft somewhere and it stuck in the memory because A) it contained Gripper Stebson and B) had a really quite disturbing sub-plot involving Gripper and Nazis (if anyone's ever read Apt Pupil by Stephen King, either King borrowed from Leeson or vice versa!)

I think the point I'm trying to get to in a roundabout way was that we had the rough and the smooth as kids, and we still do in children's licensed character books and annuals. The Grange Hill book was interesting, here was a fairly high profile writer (who penned quite a few Doctor Who novelisations as well as Grange Hill) who got his name on the cover, and wrote something fairly tight but true to the series. Nowadays, if we look at a "Mike the Knight" book, it's often impossible to figure out whether an author was even involved in some way. The series has writers, there's a design team tasked with putting the artwork together but it almost feels like the human element has been lost along the way. Subsequently these books are often one shot deals for us. Charlotte reads them once, perhaps twice if we're lucky, and then they're discarded in favour of the wealth of other children's books she has access too.

It's not really an issue until you start to look at how important licensed characters are when it comes to reluctant readers, or indeed engaging kids as they're starting out on their learning journey and want books that have the immediacy and familiarity of TV shows or films they might've already seen.

Are licensed characters in books just a means to making a fairly easy and fast buck from children's books? Let us know your thoughts below. We'll be looking at some of the good and the bad this week on the blog.
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Tuesday, 15 January 2013

Mike the Knight and the Real Sword (Simon and Schuster Children's Books / HIT)














He's fearless, he's four foot tall, he's Mike the Knight and the second of our TV Tie-In reviews today. Charlotte was ridiculously excited about this when it turned up for review and dived straight into it with @thestrollingmum.

In this adventure, Mike is about to pose for a royal portrait. But how can a knight (even a mini-one!) pose with nothing but a fishing rod in his scabbard?

Mike sets out with his spellcasting sister Evie for an adventure, to try and find a real sword - but gets distracted when the palace's two dogs run off and get lost in the dark woods.

Stranded in the middle of a mud patch, it's up to Mike (with a little help from Evie) to rescue the dogs before they end up enjoying a muddy bath.

Charlotte and her mum really enjoyed practicing their 'Knightly poses' (I think Mummy's recent habit of watching 'Merlin' probably helped a lot with this, but thankfully we don't see Mike the Knight getting his top off every five seconds!)

A great little TV tie in, and if your mini ones are avid Mike the Knight fans, they'll love this to bits! One thing we did find though, at times the text is pretty poorly laid out and can be difficult to follow as it seems to lack a bit of 'flow' - also, dark text on a dark background is a very bad idea for bedtime reading when the lights are low and you're trying to relax your little ones before snuggling down to bed.

Charlotte's best bit: Practicing Knightly Poses with mummy

Daddy's favourite bit: Mike's fishing rod sword, how cool is that!

(Kindly sent to us for review by Simon and Schuster Children's Books)
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