Key marketing points:Expected coverage in Juno Magazine and other parenting magazines.Expected coverage in BBC Wildlife magazine and Countryfile magazine.Integrated email campaign. Integrated social media campaign with retweets and competition and article with Folklore Thursday.
Folk tales from Britain’s many forests and woodlands selected for 7-11 year olds
Key marketing points:Expected coverage in Juno Magazine and other parenting magazines.Expected coverage in BBC Wildlife magazine and Countryfile magazine.Integrated email campaign. Integrated social media campaign with retweets and competition and article with Folklore Thursday.
Folk tales from Britain’s many forests and woodlands selected for 7-11 year olds
Nestled within our green and pleasant land lies pockets of emerald trees. Their roots search deep into the ground and the branches reach high towards the sun. For centuries some of these have stood, watching and listening to the human creatures living among them, hearing their stories and remembering. What stories could these woodlands tell if the trees could speak? Stories of brave deeds, foolish men and star-crossed lovers, of monsters, giants and witches. Discover someof the tales of our forests in this engaging collection of folk tales selected for readers aged 7-11. AUTHOR: Tom Phillips is a professional storyteller who spent 15 years as a teaching assistant and qualified teacher in primary education. During his 10-year storytelling career he has performed across the country at schools, festivals, storytelling groups and children's parties. He works at Moira Furnace Museum in the heart of the National Forest and lives in Hinckley, Leicestershire. He is the author of Leicestershire Folk Tales for Children. 30 b/w illustrations
TOM PHILLIPS is a professional storyteller who aims to bring traditional stories to young and old. Born and raised in Leicestershire, Tom started working with children from a young age in many settings from scouting to football coaching. He completed a degree in Primary education in 2008 and spent several years teaching across the key stages. During this time he began storytelling, initially to children and then to adults. Whether telling stories to children in a school or adults at a heritage setting, folk tales are a constant. He has appeared on several podcasts discussing them and, in 2023, led a panel discussion about the importance of folk tales at the Cheltenham Literature Festival. Alongside this, he has written many children’s stories, begun a novel aimed at 8–12-year-olds and writes articles for Folklore Thursday on various folk tales from around the world. He is the author of Leicestershire Folk Tales for Children and Forest Folk Tales for Children, both published by The History Press.
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