Why You Should Read Children's Books, Even Though You Are So Old and Wise
(Author) Katherine Rundell__ A pocket-sized, unmissable essay on the importance of children's literature by the bestselling and award-winning author, Katherine Rundell. __ 'It's a very short book but it packs a real punch... A real delight' - Financial Times 'Rundell is the real deal, a writer of boundless gifts and extraordinary imaginative power whose novels will be read, cherished and reread long after most so-called "serious" novels are forgotten' - Observer 'Rundell's pen is gold-tipped' - Sunday Times ___ Katherine Rundell - Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford, and prize-winning author of five novels for children - explores how children's books ignite, and can re-ignite, the imagination; how children's fiction, with its unabashed emotion and playfulness, can awaken old hungers and create new perspectives on the world. This delightful and persuasive essay is for adult readers.

Katherine Rundell
Katherine Rundell, born on 10 July 1987, is an English author and academic known for her celebrated children's books and literary contributions. Her book Impossible Creatures was named Book of the Year in 2023. Another notable work, Rooftoppers, won both the Waterstones Children's Book Prize and the Blue Peter Book Award in 2015 and was a Carnegie Medal finalist. Rundell, a Fellow at All Souls College, Oxford, has appeared on BBC Radio 4 programs like Start the Week and Poetry Please.
Her other books include The Girl Savage (released as Cartwheeling in Thunderstorms in the U.S.), which won the 2015 Boston Globe–Horn Book Award for fiction, The Wolf Wilder, and The Explorer, winner of the 2017 Costa Book Award for children’s books. In 2022, her book Super-Infinite: The Transformations of John Donne won the Baillie Gifford Prize, making her the award’s youngest recipient.