In the Reading Corner

Jasmine Richards

April 09, 2023 Nikki Gamble
In the Reading Corner
Jasmine Richards
Show Notes Transcript

Jasmine Richards is an author, editor and entrepreneur. She's the founder of Storymix, a company with a mission to increase the visibility of characters of colour in children's books and to mentor writers of colour in the early stages of their writing careers.

Jasmine's books include Oliver Twisted and The Unmorrow Curse and Oliver Twisted (under the pseudonym J D Sharpe).

Books from the Storymix studio include Aziza and the Fairy Door,  Future Hero and Granny Jinx.

Jasmine joined Nikki Gamble In the Reading Corner to talk about her career in publishing and her hopes for the future of Storymix.

All books are available from our partner bookseller Best Books for Schools


Support the Show.

Thank you for listening.

If you enjoyed this podcast, please support us by subscribing to our channel. And if you are interested in the books we have featured, purchasing from our online bookshop Bestbooksforschools.com

In the Reading Corner is presented by Nikki Gamble, Director of Just Imagine. It is produced by Alison Hughes.

Follow us on Youtube for more author events YouTube.com/@nikkigamble1

For general news and updates, follow us on Twitter @imaginecentre

Full details about the range of services we provide can be found on our website www.justimagine.co.uk

Speaker 1:

Hello, I'm Nikki Gamble, director of Just Imagine and host of In The Reading Corner. I'm looking forward to chatting with Jasmine Richards today, an author, editor and entrepreneur. She's the founder of Story Mix, a company that has had a visible impact on children's publishing. We'll be delving into that later. But first I wanted to know more about where Jasmine's own story started.

Speaker 2:

I think sometimes you are sort of born into certain situations and people might have expectations about where you'll go, right? And there's that Dr. Sue quote about the more books you read. And I think when I look at my life and the things that I've achieved, it all starts and ends with books really. So I grew up in council housing in a place called Hornsey, which is in North London. And I think what's really interesting is the proximity to the library. So a Straud Green Library was my closest library and even with Little Legs, it took two and a half minutes to get there. Running down the hill very quickly from the block of flats are at the top of the hill. And I was there all the time because I, I was a good reader, quite an advanced reader. So the children's section wasn't as varied as it is now. So very quickly I was going into the adult section and trying to recap and Cookson and other things. I remember once I picked up a Harold Robbins and the librarian plucked it out my hand said, that is not for you young lady. Like they were really watching what I was reading and giving me this diet of books. There were books at home. My mom was a great reader of romance books, so lots of mills and Boone around the place and I definitely saw her reading and I think that is key. Like I don't think we need to be snobby about what we read. It's the act of reading and seeing those grownups in your life actually reading books like yeah, definitely lots of books in the house and lots of cookbooks as well. And I still love reading cookbooks almost as fiction. I feel like they're great records of our times in terms of what was available to me to read, I was a great fan of books like Anna Green, Gables, Matilda, a lot of those books where it was a strong young female protagonist. I think I was aware that I didn't see myself directly in those books, but I would catch glimpses of myself in terms of personality traits. Do remember that the first time I felt like I'd properly saw myself was in a book called Roll of Thunder, hear My Cry and that was at school and a really wonderful book, but quite a traumatic book. And I remember maybe feeling sadness that that was the first time I saw a little girl on the cover that looked like me. I tended to see myself more on television. So something like X-Men, which was a, was a really popular cartoon at the time. Really sort of identifying with Storm to the point where I imagined I could control the weather. So you know, this whole idea of seeing yourself and then reenacting that stuff is absolutely key in terms of engagement. I think I was a complete bookworm and I saw enough of myself to feed the appetite, but I think for other children not seeing themselves has an effect on their reading engagement.

Speaker 1:

Mm, that's really interesting. I know that some writers of color that I've spoken with over the years have talked about reading the classics of children's literature and recognizing aspects of themselves in those stories. These characters are like a template onto which they superimpose themselves. But of course for many readers the lack of characters of color will be completely off-put. As concerning, perhaps even more concerning is what you're saying about the potentially traumatic experience of encountering negative narratives even when they're written from the very best of intentions.

Speaker 2:

I hundred percent agree, yes. Like it needs to be a balance, doesn't it? And I feel like so often introduction to Black history comes from a place of trauma instead of all the things that are also celebratory. So at least give us balance. And I think it's great. There's lots of really urgent conversations about how we teach history in the uk, but I would still want balance. Like it's not all trauma and you are right. You know, certain children wouldn't have seen themselves framed in that way. So they're like, oh there's all this bad stuff that is connected with my heritage and my ethnicity and, and that could happen at school, not in the home environment. And that's coming to them out of nowhere.

Speaker 1:

You studied English literature, uh, Oxford. Mm-hmm<affirmative>. What's getting there? Straightforward.

Speaker 2:

No, getting there was not straightforward. So I had this aspiration of being an author from when I was quite a small person. One of my favorite authors actually was Philip Pullman and Ruby in the Smoke Series. And I remember reading the bit about the author in the back of the book and it said Philip Pullman went to Oxford and that planted a little seed because I thought obviously incorrectly that to be an author you had to go to Oxford. So I made things much harder for myself than that. Imagine you needed to. And I had gone to a school in Hornsey Hornsey School for Girls, which was an amazing school in terms of kids on the higher paper there were only very few of us and it was quite hard for them to teach that part of the curriculum in class. So teachers would give up their lunchtimes and after school to teach us to make sure we got through everything. And I got to the end of sort of GCSEs and I said to my school, okay, see you later. I'm going off to this school in Co Fosters, which is a quite affluent place in Enfield. And they were like, please don't go Jasmine stay. And I was like, I'm sorry. Like we could always been quite a pragmatic person. I was like, the facilities at this school is amazing and I wanted to do a media studies a level and they've been this amazing editing suite. So I left now at this new school, they didn't know me at all. They knew nothing about me. And so when I said to them I want to apply to Oxford, they were like, well you know, don't be ridiculous. You've done the wrong A levels, you've done psychology, English and media studies. So they refused to um, support my application. So I did the whole thing by myself to the point that even when I went to my interview at Oxford, because in the back of the prospectus it said that there were 30 people that did English at Lady Margaret Hall. I assume that was 30 people per year. It was only when I was at<laugh> interview week and I'm talking to the other young people from all over the country and they're going, gosh, it's so competitive. There's not a lot of spaces. And I'm like, oh there's 30 spaces for English. And they're like, no, it's 10 tops. Uh, suddenly felt very much out of my depth. I think I was extremely lucky in terms of the college that I chose. Lmh always ahead of its time in terms of state school access and the people who interviewed me were really kind. And I remember having a conversation in our interview, been studying the wife of Bar, which I loved, I loved. And then my essay had been on The Handmade Tale and my tutor, who's still a very dear friend now, uh, Dr. Helen Bar, professor Helen Barish, she's now just asked me a question that for the first time I was making all these connections between the wife of Bath and the Handmade Tale. And I think my little 17 year old brain must have just, I think she must have seen it on my face. And what she would say is, that's all you wanna see is someone who teaches is that excitement. You know, you may not have had all of the preparation that other students had, but that appetite for learning is the thing

Speaker 1:

It's uplifting to hear and of course things are changing and they were probably beginning to change around the time that you were a student. In fact, you went on to do some of the access work at Oxford. Tell us about that.

Speaker 2:

So after I finished my degree, I went and ran something called the Oxford a Scheme, which was a university led organization that was all about going into inner city state schools and encouraging kids to apply to higher education, but Oxford in particular and the university funded my salary. So basically it was my first job. I remember the real light bulb moment for me cause I'd always thought, you know, come from social housing inner city London, you know, I'd had certain challenges getting to Oxford but we would go to other parts of the country and I remember being in Manchester and doing this talk with these kids and they were like, oh but Miss, which felt ridiculous cause I was like 21, but they were like, but you sound like you and we sound like us. So like of course you got into Oxford. And it was the first time I realized that sort of regional divide and the privilege that comes with being Southern, everyone has challenges but there's different layers of challenges. So that was really illuminating for me.

Speaker 1:

It reminds me of a video that we used to show students on our varieties of English course. Bob Hoskins, the wonderful working class actor who was raised in Finsbury Park, was talking about visiting an exclusive London club with a black friend. He was concerned that they would not gain entry and indeed they did have difficulty, but it was Hoskins accent that was the problem. His RP speaking friend had no difficulty at all. So it's really nuanced. Let's talk about editing. I first met you when you were working as a commissioning editor at Oxford University Press. What did editing teach you about writers and writing?

Speaker 2:

And my first job was at Penguin where I got to do some editorial and that's when I knew I wanted to be an editor, but there wasn't a role for me there. So then I went to work for a packager called Working Partners. And it was there that I actually learned the craft of editing and plotting and structure. The thing I feel like I learned at O U P was around care. So my boss, wonderful editor called Lis Cross and I feel like what I learned from her is how you are the sort of custo an a custodian of an or this career and how you are there for them. Not just in their text but in all parts of their career really. And I used to share an office with a wonderful editor called Ron Heep and I remember having a conversation with him, I think I was having quite a tricky edit, just couldn't get the book where it needed to be. And he said, Jasmine, sometimes what you need to do is like, you know, the book is like a kid and sometimes you're just out of time and you've gotta send them off to school. So you've just gotta wipe their faces down, give them a little kiss and send them out into the world. Like the time is up, you do the best that you can.

Speaker 1:

You're also a writer books such as The Secrets of Val Halla, uh, the Amoro Curse. It has to be said that you're full of surprises. I recall when Oliver Twisted was published under the name JD Sharpe probably about 10 years ago. And it wasn't at all what I expected.

Speaker 2:

Well, do you know that is the easiest book I've ever written. I've written 15 books, I've written books for teenagers, I've written picture books, I've written lots of different types of books. Oliver Twisted what I saw was an, was an opportunity so that there had been a lot of conversations around Dickens making Dickens, uh, relevant to teenagers finding a way in for them. And at the same time time there was a real trend for all of these mashups. I'm sure you remember them. Um, Nikki. So pride in Prejudice and Zombies, which was an adult trend, not something that we'd seen, uh, for kids or for teens. And I just remember thinking, goodness me, there's a, there's an opportunity here to explore something. Like I was sort of did the ring, do I commission someone to write this or do I just write it? Because I have such a clear idea in my head about what this thing can and should be. And I've never tried the genre of horror, but I do enjoy reading horror and I just started writing it and I kind of used the original text as the launchpad. It was actually quite an academic exercise in terms of what you kept and what you didn't keep. And then in terms of that character of Oliver Casting No Shade on Mr. Dickens, but Oliver does not change as a character, right? Oliver affects other people, but he's quite a stationary, I would even say stagnant character. So I really wanted to play with this idea of change for Oliver and Choices and all of these things that weren't in the original text. Now what was so wonderful about that work is I'd go into schools and do school visits and some kids would be outraged, really outraged that I'd taken Oliver Twist and I'd done this, that I'd kind of twisted the narrative and would come out fully in defense of Charles Dickens. I was like, well this is done. Exactly the thing that we sort of set out to do is for them to engage. And actually there's a lot of conversations now about whether you leave things alone, right? Do you leave it exactly how that writer wanted it to be? Do you update things? Do you change things? That is a great way to engage young people in books because they have very strong opinions. It can be quite righteous in their belief.

Speaker 1:

Of course a lot of your other books do have this thread of myth running through them, including the Omoro Curse, which was published last year. Mm-hmm Was myths something that you were reading all those years ago in that library as a child? Or did that come to you later through your studies?

Speaker 2:

Oh no, a hundred percent that that small kid in the library in North London, I was absolutely obsessed with myths, Roman myths, Greek myths, Egyptian mythology. And actually the first book that I ever wrote was called The Book of Wonders and was inspired by 1,001 Nights. And I remember reading those stories and sort of feeling outraged by the end of the stories. After 1,001 ni nights Sheard has changed the saltan through her stories, he's become a better man. He's no longer gonna lock people's heads off and they live happily ever after. And I remember thinking, well what about all of those people he did kill? How is this a happy ending? Like I felt it wasn't the ending I wanted. So that's maybe a theme<laugh> rewriting history. So I just had this idea that instead of Zdi telling these stories about Simbad, she maybe went on those adventures and was trying to find a way to topple this dictator in her kingdom. That was the first one. And it's interesting cause you mentioned the Ammo curse, but even that book went on its own epic quest. So it was originally published in the States because I have this really strange situation where I had a whole career as a writer in America and I had a career as an editor in the uk but those two things didn't cross massively because my fantasy books didn't sell in the uk but they did sell in the US So it was like this career as an author was happening to someone else. It was very strange.

Speaker 1:

Tell me why you think you were able to break through in the US as a writer when you weren't in the uk?

Speaker 2:

Truth to be told, when my agent sent out Book of Wonders, we got lovely feedback and we got other types of feedback. Like Jasmine is a wonderful writer, I'm not sure where this would sit in the market. Do you think she could write something a bit more urban? Whereas in the States, I think they were just a little bit ahead in terms of being a black writer, what you're allowed to write, I'm doing aloud in quotation marks, we are there now, but it actually took quite a long time. I'm not the only writer of color who's had feedback like that we're talking about back in 2011. So things have changed massively in that time.

Speaker 1:

You mentioned there with uh, your interest in mythology, you talked about Egyptian myths and Roman myths and we've got no myths in there. Mm-hmm. Didn't really mention much about African mythology but that does crop up in one of the series for story mix. I'm sort of jumping ahead a little bit, but as we're talking about the myth side mm-hmm It's Aziz's secret Fairy door does pull in some of the ideas from African mythology.

Speaker 2:

It's interesting cause when I was a kid those big books on myths, there wasn't a book called African Mythology. You had Egyptian mythology but you didn't have mythology from West Africa or South Africa or East Africa really. I'm sure if they existed I would've gobbled those up as well, but they didn't exist, which is interesting and it's kind of testament to how much things have changed that when I was coming to creating new series, there wasn't a wealth of books where I could delve into West West African mythology in particular. And so both in Aziza and in Future Hero, I really do delve into some of those mythologies. So Aziza is actually a type of West African ferry that you find in forests. So I just had this idea about a little girl who was obsessed with fairies, um, who's named after a ferry and who is given a ferry door, which she decorates and it ends up taking her on all of these fantastical adventures into a new land called Shimmington. And she's basically multicultural fairy tale and myth mythological creatures. It's almost like, like this utopia of all of these creatures from all of the world living together in harmony.

Speaker 1:

Let's talk about story mix from what you've told us so far. I can see the seeds from your time with working partners and Oxford University press ready to bloom into this exciting new venture, which is in my opinion, one of the most exciting developments in children's book publishing for a generation.

Speaker 2:

There were two things. I had a little foray after my second child was born, I did some editing or celebrity fiction. I had an a an epiphany where I was using all these skills that I'd built up over many, many years to help execute a vision for a celebrity. And I remember having this moment of, okay, they have their agenda and I'm one cog in that, but what's my agenda? Am I really going to use these skillsets? Am I realized that actually what I can do in terms of conceived story, edit story, all of those things are actually quite precious cause I have this unique uh, combination of skills of ideating and that way of editing and nurturing writers to get the best out of their voice. So that was one of the epiphanies. At the same time my son was moving from picture books to chapter books. So he was about five or six. We went to the bookshop, we're looking at the shelves in water stones in that five to eight section. And I could see Horrid Henry and I could see Beast Quest. I was in the room when we came up with Beast Quest. I'd edited many of those books. I'd written many of those books. I could see Rainbow Magic again. I was a lead editor on Rainbow Magic. So I had this moment, could not see my son in any of these books. And I had this moment of uh, real anger but it wasn't just anger at publishing, it was anger at myself. I was and am publishing, I edited those books. I didn't put my hand up and say, Hey guys, we're coming up with a new series. It's a fantasy series. Why don't we make our protagonist a kid of color like a British Asian kid or a black kid? It didn't occur to me to even say it. And if I had on a series like something like Beast Quests, we'd have over a hundred books. And at the same time the C L P E report had come out and I was thinking, gosh, if we'd had a hundred book series, we had a little black boy or Asian boy protagonist, this number would look quite different. So I had a moment there where I had to decide where I was gonna spend my time and I could carry on writing books. I'm not the fastest at writing books. I could maybe do one book a year and that would be my impact or I could take everything I'd learned working at a packager, working at OUP P, where I actually set up our own in-house ip, sorry IP means intellectual property. But where we would come up in house with stories. And I knew that if I really wanted to take up space on the shelf series, fictional was the way to do it. But write one middle grade a year or I could sell multiple series where I was gonna center kids of color in stories full of joy and adventure. And then also I knew that it was a great way to give new writers their first chance, you know, as an entry point into the industry. So I always see our projects as a launchpad or new talent and I remember I had writers say to me in the past, working for a packager is like being paid to go on a writing course because you get supported editorially in quite an intensive way at the beginning of your career. And then you can move on and write your own stuff and take all of that learning with you. So this whole idea of apprenticeship, this whole idea of volume was really important. I was like right, I'm just gonna start my own packager and I'm gonna be really clear and intentional about what that is. And that's gonna be about centering kids of color in those stories and it's gonna be about creating publishing opportunities or writers from marginalized communities. And in 2018 that felt like quite a brave thing to say, to be that focus. And I applied for a grant from the Arts Council, it was called the D Y C P Fund, which is Develop your Creative Practice. And I said in my application, you know, I'm an author, I'm an editor, I want to segue into becoming a producer, I wanna set up my own company and this would be the seed money to do it. And I got the 10,000 pounds and it just gave me a bit of breathing space to start the work. And then I did freelancing around the side. That's when I sort of fell into screenwriting cuz screenwriting paid really well. So I'd just invest that money back into the business and we got started. It's,

Speaker 1:

It's a stunning story and, and you've answered one of my questions was, sorry, how on earth can you be so productive and so perfect And of course it's about teamwork.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, a hundred percent. So you know, when I started story Mix I would often write alongside the writers that I work with just so we could get that head of steam. But now I, I don't do that now I have a team of people that I work with who are completely invested in the e ethos of what we do. I do less of the hands-on line editing than I used to, but I still love coming up with the ideas and I'm more that strategic piece. Now

Speaker 1:

This may be an obvious question, but tell us why you use pseudonyms for these books. Is it because there's more than one writer working on a series?

Speaker 2:

Yes, so there's a few reason I want it to be the case. Our writers graduate from writing on our series and go on to do their own things. So if we take the example of Aziza and I work with a wonderful writer on that called To Kok who's written an amazing series con on the Acre and the Academy of the Sun. If you haven't read it, go and read it. And we worked on five books in the Aziza series and Taller at the same time, sold her own middle grade novel. Now if we decided that there were gonna be more Aziza novels, I don't, I can't speak for taller but I'd imagine he's probably got too much on. So what the pen name allows is for me maybe to work with another writer on that series in the future and then they too might also move on and write their own middle grade or team. And so it's, it's a way of being able to continue a series cause you put a lot of work into building the characters and the world and the setup and all of those things. So it allows for that graduation. It also Future Hero, we have multiple writers on that series, so I write on that series Isaac Hamilton Mackenzie does and so does Shameika nicely. So the pen name allows for that.

Speaker 1:

I expect you get from time to time people saying can Lola Mare or Remi Blackwood come and talk to children in our school?

Speaker 2:

In the past there hasn't always been absolute honesty about who these pen names are and I've said from the very beginning and publishers have been really sort of amenable to this is that we're just really honest about the process because I'm really proud of the process and I'm proud of story mix. So you know, normally packages sculpt around in the shadows and we are definitely not doing that. And then the other thing is it's not the same for every single title. There's a wonderful series called the Lian Bell Mysteries where I work with a writer called Joanna. But really story mixed us far less in that that really is Joanna driving that. But we are maybe the catalyst to get it started. So that's different to something like FU Future Hero, which is storyline in incredible detail and there is much more editorial support there because those writers also at different stages in their career like Joanna was there fully formed. She just needed the door to be open just to crack. And then she was off.

Speaker 1:

Just tell us Joanna's surname so listeners can look her up,

Speaker 2:

She's called JT Williams and she's a writer and she's a teacher and she's just fabulous. Lian Ries are recently shortlisted for the Waterstones book prize. I'm just so proud that we are a part of their journey and and those books journey,

Speaker 1:

The Lidian Bell mysteries are fantastic. Tell us a little bit more about how they came to be.

Speaker 2:

So I actually met Joanna, I was masquerading as a teacher so that I could go to this event at the British Library and it was all about black history and figures from black history and it was for teachers. And I sat in Joanna's session and she spoke about a man called Ignatius Samho who was probably the first black man to vote in the uk. He owned a tea shop in Mayfair, he was a composer, he was a man of letters, he was key in terms of the movement to abolish slavery. And she had all this paraphernalia on the table that was from the archives from the British Library and she spoke about Ignatia Sancho with such love and knowledge and the way she spoke. You could tell she's a storyteller. So once you've been editing for a very long time you get your spider senses. So I knew she was a writer while she was talking. I just had a thought of what an amazing precinct for a mystery that tea shop would be. So after the session I went and spoke to her and I said, do you write? And she went, oh ye yes I do actually. And in my head I'm like, of course you write, you're a natural born storyteller. And I just told her a bit about story mix, which was still just a little kernel of an idea and I said to her, you know, have you thought about this idea of history and mystery and this T shot would be a great setting. And that was the beginning of the conversation.

Speaker 1:

Another series that you've devised, I'd love to know more about the background to is Granny Jinx. What can you tell us about that?

Speaker 2:

Granny Jinx was inspired by a video that I'd watched from YouTube about a real life magician called Jenny Myers. She was the first black woman to be admitted to the Magic Circle and it was a lovely video of her talking about her career and that just got me thinking about an older woman who might be a magician and her relationship with her granddaughter. And I always describe those books as just like a big warm hug. It's about the magic of family. Lots of the series that come out of Story Mix have a high concept idea. Granny Jinx isn't really that. I just really wanted to explore the idea about grandparents and how precious they are because also we were going through the pandemic as well and you weren't getting to see grandparents. So it was my granny was very important to me as well.

Speaker 1:

It seems to me that you have lots of ideas sparking off all the time, left, right center. Do you have too many ideas? Do you know what to ditch

Speaker 2:

<laugh>? That is such a good question and it's why I think I'm not like a proper author because I feel like a proper author can sit with an idea for many, many months and be okay with that. Whereas the bit where I get my joy is the spark of the idea. And now I realize that my job is to capture one and then find exactly the right writer to sort of flesh it out. I find it very hard to let an idea go, but I realize I can't do all of them. So I am quite ambitious in what I think I can get done in a certain amount of time or ambitious or optimistic depending on your point of view.

Speaker 1:

It works cuz you get a lot done. I know you're really keen about meeting readers where they are and I wonder whether this takes you into other kinds of media as well as books.

Speaker 2:

Books will always be the heart of what I do and what we do at Story Mix, but children might come into stories in different ways. So you know, if they were to come at it as a TV show and then they're like, right, I really enjoyed that TV show, let me go and read the book. I'm really interested in exploring things like that. So I think watch this space.

Speaker 1:

So what's coming up for Story Mix that we should be really excited about?

Speaker 2:

Well, in June we have the launch of series called Fable House, which is written by the supremely talented em Nori or El Nori Fable House, uh, was inspired by the story of Britain's brown babies and these were babies that were born after World War ii, born to white British women and African, African-American gis. And I remember reading an article on the BBC website about these kids and lots of these children grew up to be adults and some of them had quite unhappy lives, but a group of them sort of spoke about this place called Hol House in Sunset, which was a house set in amazing grounds that was near the sea in Near Forest. And they said it was like a magical place where they had family brothers and sisters that looked like them. And immediately as often the way with me, I was sort of transported to that place and I thought, you know, near forests, I love forests and woods, like they're always feel really magical to me. And I knew that Samat had a connection to Aian legends. So then those two things sort of started to sort of pollinate in my mind. And I had this thought about a group of children who discover a night from the round table and then I remember from my English degree, uh, reading La Mort Arthur and I remember there was a black knight called Pedis a Sara. I was like, well what if they meet him, these kids that maybe have never seen a black man in their, in their lives, right? So they're kids in care. And that was the beginning, oh, we didn't talk about this earlier, but I used to run a writer's retreat with friends called Book Bound. And one of the writers I'd had who had sort of mentored in this writer's retreat was called Emma Norrie. And she'd written an amazing book for teenagers about being in care and I knew that was her background and she's also mixed race as well. So I felt she would be the perfect person to tell this story and I loved her writing. So I approached her with the sort of conceit and the idea and she said yes. And we've got a Fable House published by Blooms Spree coming out in June and she took what was a brilliant idea, but she's taken it and elevated it and made it something so special and poured so much of her own lived experience and love for these children. And it just gives me goosebumps every time I read it. Yeah, she's just extraordinary. Wow,

Speaker 1:

You've really wetted my appetite for that. My goodness. Can't wait. Are you able to tell us in the immediate next step what might be coming for story mix?

Speaker 2:

So I think story Mix is really interested in childhood all the way through. So our core work is five to 12, but I'm really interested in doing books for older children and for teenagers. And I'm really interested in doing books for smaller children, so not to five. So I think in terms of our next phase, it's sort of thinking about those two ends of the market. Also really interested in about how you tell stories with pictures. So we're thinking a lot about that and how we tell stories as audio firsts as well because going to the library was a key part of my development, but there was another part to it also, which was this amazing collection called The Storyteller. You get the magazine every week and there'd be a cassette taped to the front and it was Pat full with stories and I would listen to that every night. And actually looking back now, it had some really sort of famous, um, actresses and actors reading their stories, but that access to storytelling came through audio. And I want to explore that a bit more because not all children have access to books, but I feel like access to audio there might almost be less barriers in some ways.

Speaker 1:

Interesting. Well, Jasmine, I am so thrilled that you decided not to stick with the police force. I know you had the dalliance therefore a little while, but what a loss that would've been to a Children's publishing<laugh>. Uh, it's been such a delight talking to you.

Speaker 2:

Thank you.