Felix has a double problem

Eleven-year-old Felix Twain’s life revolves around TWO. He skips every second step when he takes the stairs, he taps door handles twice and positions objects in pairs. The problem has become so bad that Felix, who suffers from autism and OCD, is on the verge of being expelled. The principal has had enough of trying to run the school around his pupil’s very specific rules.

Then Charlie Pye arrives and turns Felix world upside down. She’s grown up with very few rules – of which two wasn’t a part. She eats cereal for lunch, calls a boat home, and has a very loose interpretation of school uniform. The question is, can Felix ever learn to be wrong when he is so obsessed with being right.

This is a new edition of a bestselling title by Sally Harris and illustrated by Maria Serrano, which includes a whole new section on how to make a comic. Compiled by the husband and wife team behind Quickdraw Stories, it shows how readers can easily learn how to create their own version – like Felix Twain and Charlie Pye do in the story!

Double Felix is for 7+ and published by Wacky Bee Books

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It’s World Book Day

Today is World Book Day with loads of events in schools, libraries, bookshops, online promotions, even a new office and warehouse announcement from a major publisher in Glasgow.

Thankfully, there are reports that some schools are encouraging parents to ditch the dressing up theme in order to reduce costs for families. This is a welcome development. The emphasis should always be on books and encouraging reading. My local primary school saw a steady stream of mini Harry Potters (can’t they think of anything else) and princesses today. The parents I spoke to tell me either that he/she doesn’t like to read: they would rather watch on a tablet or TV or there weren’t any books in the house! I know of many adults like that too.

The World Book Day charity is supporting parents with easy solutions to unlock the benefits of reading for fun for children. Numerous studies show that reading for enjoyment has life-changing benefits, but research also confirms reading it is at its lowest levels since records began in 2005 – with only 1 in 3 UK children saying they enjoy it (National Literacy Trust).

New research among 1,066 children aged 8-14 years old and their parents reveals that children are much less likely to grow up as readers if their parents don’t read. Parents who don’t consider themselves as readers are much less likely to read with their children, with only 59% saying they do, compared to 71% of those who identify as readers. Additionally, parents who were not encouraged by their own parents to read, are twice as likely to say they don’t encourage their child to read.

There is a generational decline in reading for fun. Reading avoidance is being passed down, with the children of non-readers almost twice as likely to hold negative attitudes towards reading. Almost a third of this group say they avoid reading as much as possible, and that they don’t read for fun as books are boring. On the converse, three-quarters of children who think their parents enjoy reading for fun want to read more themselves. In a world of multiple distractions over half (56%) of parents of 11-14-year-olds say their child would rather go online than read, rising to 94% among kids who are non-readers. Over a quarter (26%) of kids also say they would read more if books were as engaging as computer games.

Sadly, unless there is a massive shift in reading, the children of Gen Z are even less likely to know what a book is, let alone read one is!

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LBF 2025 Author line-up

Authors of the Day line-up for the London Book Fair, will feature: best-selling novelist and chair of judges for the Women’s Prize for Fiction 2024, Monica Alias – Adult Author of the Day; Argentine novelist and screenwriter Claudia Piñeiro, who was shortlisted for the International Booker Prize – International Author of the Day; the current Waterstones Children’s Laureate (2024-2026) Frank Cottrell-Boyce – Children’s Author of the Day; comics artist and British Book Awards winner Jamie Smart – the first ever Creative of the Fair.

More at LBF

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