BBC TEACH do a Live Lesson based on The Tale of a Toothbrush

Screenshot 2020-10-19 at 09.06.12.png

As you may know, I am a big part of the campaigning movement Authors4Oceans, which inspired my picturebook The Tale of a Toothbrush, which is illustrated by Daniel Rieley who campaigns for Surfers Against Sewage.

So I could not be more proud that BBC Teach has chosen to build a live lesson around the picturebook, which is read by Kate Humble.

Screenshot 2020-10-17 at 19.18.26.png
Screenshot 2020-10-19 at 09.08.49.png
Screenshot 2020-10-19 at 09.11.17.png
Screenshot 2020-10-19 at 09.09.49.png

AWARDS! Short lists and long lists

I’m so delighted that The Highland Falcon Thief has been shortlisted for the Books Are my Bag 2020 Readers Award for Children’s Fiction.

This is the great thing about these awards, is that YOU get a say in who wins.

I’d be ever so grateful if you’d click on the button and vote for us. If you do you may win £100 of book tokens!


ukla_white_on_blue_400x400.jpg

The Highland Falcon Thief has been long-listed for the UKLA award, which is judged by teachers.

It’s a fierce list of awesome books and I’m delighted we’re amongst them.

Screenshot 2020-10-05 at 17.13.22.png
Screenshot 2020-10-05 at 17.13.40.png

Cover Reveal for Murder on the Safari Star

EjakWv8XYAA42lV.jpg

This is the third book in my Adventures on Trains series with Sam Sedgman, Murder on the Safari Star.

Uncle Nat is taking Hal on the journey of a lifetime - on a Safari Train from Pretoria to Victoria Falls. Drawing Africa's amazing wild animals from on board a spectacular steam train described as a luxury hotel on wheels, should be enough excitement for anyone. But something suspicious is happening on board the Safari Star and when a passenger is found mysteriously killed inside a locked compartment, it's up to Hal, along with his new friend Winston and his pet Mongoose, Chipo, to solve the murder mystery.

Coming February 2020.


Twitch - My first solo fiction in 3 years is coming in summer 2021

MGLeonard_birdwatching1.jpeg

Twitch is a twelve-year-old with three pet chickens, four pigeons, swallows nesting in his bedroom and a passion for bird-spotting. On the first day of summer holidays, he arrives at his secret bird-watching hide in the local nature reserve to find police everywhere: a convicted bank-robber and murderer has broken out of prison and is hiding in Aves Wood. Twitch soon finds himself entangled in the hunt for the dangerous prisoner. Can he turn his talents for bird-spotting to detective skills, and find the missing loot?

TWITCH - COMING SUMMER 2021

Kidnap on the California Comet steams into the Children's Bestseller List

Bestsellers2.jpg

It is with great gratitude and delight that I can say that Kidnap on the California Comet is already a bestseller! I’d like to say a huge thank you to everyone who preordered the book and helped it achieve it’s chart position at number 12 in the Children’s and YA fiction chart, exceeding the sales of The Highland Falcon Thief in week one. I hope you all enjoy reading our thrilling adventure riding the railroads of America.

KoCC1stweekchart.jpg

Hornby partnership for Adventures on Trains

Hornby X trains.png

To celebrate the publication of Kidnap on the California Comet, we’ve begun a wonderful partnership with Hornby. You can find out all about it here. There’s a special kid’s zone with activity sheets to download, videos and competitions.

Hornby has given trainsets to ten independent bookshops around the United Kingdom, who are holding competitions enabling readers to win one. So if you spot a trainset in your bookshop window, pop in and find out how you could win it!

fun_top2_1.png

Kidnap on the California Comet is here!

Comet-Twitter-Date.jpg

The new Adventure on Trains book, Kidnap on the California Comet is in your local bookshop now!

The Daily Mail said it’s: ‘Wildly funny, with hairpin plot bends and inventive characters, this series is firmly on track to become a bestseller.’

If you’re quick, you can get your hands on a special signed copy of the book from Waterstones, but you’ll have to hurry, they only have a limited number.

Find more information about Adventures on Trains.

CLPE Creates FREE Teaching Notes for The Tale of a Toothbrush

Screenshot 2020-07-01 at 13.44.27.png

The Centre for Literacy in Primary Education has worked with Walker Books to create FREE teaching notes for The Tale of a Toothbrush .

These notes were written by their expert teaching team in association with Walker Books and support the cross-curricular topic of environmentalism with a focus on plastic waste.

They recommend using these notes in Early Years and KS1, but some of the themes also resonate with KS2.

DOWNLOAD 

Rex the Rhinoceros Beetle has arrived for National Insect Week!

This week sees the publication of my second picturebook, Rex the Rhinoceros Beetle - for younger beetle fans everywhere - and it’s just in time to celebrate National Insect Week.

Deep in the rainforest, Buster and Rex are rhinoceros beetles carrying a banana back to the beetle tree. But the more Buster tells Rex about his incredible strength and daring, the less rhinoceros-y Rex feels. Then, when danger arrives, can Buster live up to the stories he's told or is it up to Rex to save the day?

There are lots of great resources to accompany this picture book. You can draw along with Duncan Beedie (the fab illustrator who created the pictures) and make your own Rex in this video.

Scholastic is holding a competition offering bug hunting swag and a free copy of the book. All you have to do is draw your favourite beetle!

Screenshot 2020-06-22 at 17.34.28.png

And there’s plenty more to come. I’ll add the resources here as they go live.

Why not make the most of National Insect Week and get out in the sunshine to hunt for bugs, then settle under a shady tree and read Rex the Rhinoceros Beetle.

No #Insectinction Campaign

Screenshot 2020-06-18 at 12.44.03.png

Buglife’s campaign

‘No Insectinction’ is a call for action, a coming together of people and organisations with a shared endeavour to heal our planet’s life support system.

We must achieve three things:

1) Room for insects to thrive – we need to make space for wildlife and reconnect the wild parts of our landscapes

2) Safe spaces for insects – we must free our land and freshwaters from pollutants and invasive species

3) Friendlier relationship with insects – We need to act now to stop insectinction. However, the scale and quality of that action is still limited by our lack of understanding and awareness.

Plastic Monsters to highlight #WorldOceansDay

Today is World Oceans Day 2020, a perfect time to highlight the problems of plastic in our oceans.

Please admire these wonderfully creative plastic monsters. They’ve all been made from rubbish during the lockdown by super imaginative children.

The monsters symbolise the problems we have with plastic in our oceans and are the response to a ten-minute making challenge I set on Authorfy based on my picture book Tale of a Toothbrush, which was inspired by my work with #Authors4Oceans.

But, if you’re going to make a difference, and try to cut down the amount of plastic you use, July is a great month to do it, as it’s Plastic Free month.

You can join millions of people around the world reducing their plastic waste. FIND OUT MORE.

M. G. Leonard becomes Vice President of insect charity Buglife

MGLeonard4.jpeg

It is with great pride that I can announce that I am the new Vice President of Buglife, joining Steve Backshall, Nick Baker, Germaine Greer, Alan Stubbs, and Edward O Wilson to campaign for our invertebrate friends.

Buglife is the only organisation in Europe devoted to the conservation of all invertebrates. We’re actively working to save Britain’s rarest little animals, everything from bees to beetles, worms to woodlice and jumping spiders to jellyfish.

Right now, our new campaign is called NO INSECTINCTION

‘No Insectinction’ is a call for action, a coming together of people and organisations with a shared endeavour to heal our planet’s life support system.

We must achieve three things:

1) Room for insects to thrive – we need to make space for wildlife and reconnect the wild parts of our landscapes

2) Safe spaces for insects – we must free our land and freshwaters from pollutants and invasive species

3) Friendlier relationship with insects – We need to act now to stop insectinction. However, the scale and quality of that action is still limited by our lack of understanding and awareness.

EZF2JouXsAAEdeI.jpg