Tag Archives: book-review

Some books are really ‘smart’

During my visit to the 2025 London Book fair I can across a very small stand located at the rear of the main hall. The company was Peasoup and it was manned by two Danish guys, Soren Jonsson and Kristian Dreino – perhaps two of the nicest people you would wish to meet.

Soren Jonsson & Kristian Dreino

They were promoting their colourful game books, but game books with a difference. Maybe you recall the type of book (usual a handy size paperback) were you are given a persona, or could choose one, before setting out on a quest.

I remember my first ones were I had to choose a page number to visit. There I would be given a task to complete, or a decision to be made. Whichever I chose I would suffer the inevitable dire, and usually fatal, consequences!

Peasoup’s books are different. They feature Augmented Reality (AR), a technology that integrates computer-generated content, such as video or audio, into the reader’s environment, in real time. Not to be confused with VR (virtual reality) which is a fully digital. With the Peasoup books, this is achieved via an easy down-loadable app.

So the reader starts the adventure, visits the designated page where they find a scannable illustration. Here they use their smartphone camera via the app to discover what awaits them. Each book has its own app from eithe Google Play or the App Store.

My first copy of the the books (pictured right) featured fold-down covers, so the book would lie flat. This was a great help with the phone – although this facility singularly failed to prevent me from getting wasted by the waiting ogre, in a very short time!

Peasoup began 7 years ago, but the team behind it have been involved with computer games design for younger players for over 25 years. Illiteracy is a growing problem among children (just look at the figures in the UK), so innovation is needed to motivate reluctant readers at school and home. They discovered that children in the 10-14 years range, in Denmark, were reading less and less. The link between the traditional fantasy games and AR meant the images could divert reader’s attention and the books would provide more experience of reading and maths – making it more fun.

Danish children liked the books. Slow readers in the 8-10 group, who find it hard, can scan the text too. While small game elements can help kids be in their own space, such as with autism sufferers, which keeps them reading.

At this years’ London Book Fair, I found the same stand and the same two guys, this time with a spectacular new book in the series, Outtatown. Written by Soren Jonsson and lavishly illustrated by Brian Bak Jensen, it’s a standalone book, like the rest of the series. Readers, in this case aged 9+, need the Outtatown app too – this can’t be used alone.

“In Outtatown, you join a secret society of daring and resourceful adventurers calles the Tricksters. Use your street savvy and take daring risks to free the city of Outtatown from the reign of the terrible Bug King, who controls the minds of his innocent citizens..”

A report in Denmark suggests that: ‘the books can be used either with a single child or in a group, both ways work with no problems at all, and there is no better way of reading to book. It is excellent for all who can read. That’s why it is difficult to put a age group on the book, simply because the difference between children who are good at reading is really big in the 7-10 year age group. But when the children are reading in a group, they read together, and the best skilled child reads and that creates a dynamic group’.

They summarised by saying that the reading experience is for everyone who appreciates the “Choose your own adventure” genre, and is really genuinely fun – even for the adult co-reader.

Peasoup can be found at at www.peasoup.dk. More plans are in the pipeline to extend the range of titles which I’ll be covering in due course.

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Following Black History

You may recall that October was Black History Month. It was a very busy time for publishers and authors, so much so that I’m still waiting for feedback from some of them! However, a trawl through my own library produced three particular books I’d like to share.

The first is Propa Propaganda by the late Benjamin Zephaniah, writer, dub poet, actor and musician as well as professor of poetry and creative writing at Brunel University London. It was a huge loss to the world when he died aged 65 less than a year ago.

Propa Propaganda (Bloodaxe Books 1996) is a few years old now, but right from the start carries the distinctive BZ voice we all came to know. This collection is short treasure, if you’ve never read any of his poems: Terrible World based on Louis Armstrong’s memorable song, White Comedy (I waz whitemailed/ By a white witch,/Wiz white magic), De Queen an I and his three part Acts of Parliament which loses nothing with time and could have been written yesterday!

Acknowledging Black Authors: A couple of years ago I met Garfield Robinson at an event and spent some time talking about the work of black authors, poets, songwriters, all types of storytellers.

His book Keepers of the Flame (POH Books, 2022) is an excellent collection saluting the work of 100 Black authors – all the way from Shirley Anstis, a mental health counsellor, to Lyndon Wissart a professional chef. Every one of the hundred has a story to tell – inspirational, heart-warming, inquisitive, passionate. The illustrations, printed like engravings or woodcuts, provide an image to accompany the voice explaining their reasons for writing. Some writers you may know, many you will not.

If you want to investigate further, this is the place to start. A ready-made reference compile by Garfield Robinson – bookseller, author and publisher.


My third choice is The Perseverance by British-Jamaican poet Raymond Antrobus. I had the pleasure of interviewing Raymond back in 2019 at the London Book Fair, where he was performing readings from this debut collection.

Beginning with his deafness he merges masculinity, race his mother’s dementia and his father’s death – with a lot of focus on his father. There’s a wonderful series of poems ‘Samantha’ based on an interview he did with a deaf Jamaican woman about her arrival in England. As we might expect his own deafness and communication, his identity (Jamaican British or Jamaican, British? choose) run throughout these poems.

The Perseverance is published by Penned in the Margins 2018.

That’s just a small but belated contribution to Black History month. All well worth a read.

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