Michael Rosen Popular Books

Michael Rosen Biography & Facts

Michael Wayne Rosen (born 7 May 1946) is a British children's author, poet, presenter, political columnist, broadcaster, activist, and academic, who has written over 200 books for children and adults. Select books for children include We're Going on a Bear Hunt (1989) and Sad Book (2004). He served as Children's Laureate from June 2007 to June 2009. He won the 2023 PEN Pinter Prize, awarded by English PEN, for his "fearless" body of work. Early life and education Michael Wayne Rosen was born into a Jewish family in Harrow, Middlesex, on 7 May 1946. His ancestors were Jews from an area that is now Poland, Romania, and Russia, and his family had connections to The Workers Circle and the Jewish Labour Bund. His middle name was given to him in honour of Wayne C. Booth, a literary critic who was billeted with his father at Shrivenham American University. Rosen's father, educationalist Harold Rosen (1919–2008), was born in Brockton, Massachusetts, but grew up in the East End of London from the age of two after his mother left his father and returned to her native England. Harold attended Davenant Foundation School and then Regent Street Polytechnic. He was a secondary school teacher before becoming a professor of English at the Institute of Education in London and publishing extensively, especially on the teaching of English to children. Rosen's mother, Connie (née Isakofsky; 1920–1976), worked as a secretary at the Daily Worker and later as a primary school teacher and training college lecturer. She had attended Central Foundation Girls' School, where she made friends such as Bertha Sokoloff. She met Harold in 1935, when both were aged 15, as they were both members of the Young Communist League. They participated in the Battle of Cable Street together. As a young couple, they settled in Pinner, Middlesex. They left the Communist Party in 1957. Rosen never joined, but his parents' activities influenced his childhood. At around the age of 11, Rosen began attending Harrow Weald County Grammar School. He attended state schools in Pinner and Harrow, as well as Watford Grammar School for Boys. He also spent time as an exchange student at Winchester College in 1964, which he recalls fondly. Having discovered Jonathan Miller, he thought, "Wouldn't it be wonderful to know all about science, and know all about art, and be funny and urbane and all that?" His mother was then working for the BBC. Producing a programme featuring poetry, she persuaded him to write for it and used some of his material. He later said, "I went to Middlesex Hospital Medical School, started on the first part of a medical training, jacked it in and went on to do a degree in English at Oxford University. I then worked for the BBC until they chucked me out and I have been a freelance writer, broadcaster, lecturer, performer ever since—that's to say since 1972. Most of my books have been for children, but that's not how I started out. Sometime around the age of twelve and thirteen I began to get a sense that I liked writing, liked trying out different kinds of writing, I tried writing satirical poems about people I knew." Career In 1969, Rosen graduated from Wadham College, Oxford, and became a graduate trainee at the BBC. Among the work that he did while there in the 1970s was presenting a series on BBC Schools television called Walrus (write and learn, read, understand, speak). He was also scriptwriter on the children's reading series Sam on Boffs' Island, but Rosen found working for the corporation frustrating: "Their view of 'educational' was narrow. The machine had decided this was the direction to take. Your own creativity was down the spout." Despite previously having made no secret of his leftist views when he was originally interviewed for a BBC post, he was asked to go freelance in 1972, though in practice he was sacked despite several departments of the BBC wishing to keep employing him. In common with the China expert and journalist Isabel Hilton, among several others at this time, Rosen had failed the vetting procedures that were then in operation. This longstanding practice was only revealed in 1985, and by the time Rosen requested access to his files, they had been destroyed. In 1974, Mind Your Own Business, his first book of poetry for children, was published. In due course, Rosen established himself with his collections of humorous verse for children, including Wouldn't You Like to Know, You Tell Me and Quick Let's Get Out of Here. Educationalist Morag Styles has described Rosen as "one of the most significant figures in contemporary children's poetry" and one of the first poets "to draw closely on his own childhood experiences and to 'tell it as it was' in the ordinary language children actually use". Rosen played a key role in opening up children's access to poetry, both through his own writing and with important anthologies such as Culture Shock. He was one of the first poets to make visits to schools throughout the UK and further afield in Australia, Canada and Singapore. His tours continue to enthuse and engage school children about poetry in the present. We're Going on a Bear Hunt is a children's picture book written by Rosen and illustrated by Helen Oxenbury. The book won the overall Nestlé Smarties Book Prize in 1989 and also won the 0–5 years category. The publisher, Walker Books, celebrated the work's 25th anniversary in 2014 by breaking a Guinness World Record for the Largest Reading Lesson. In 1993, Rosen gained an MA in Children's Literature from the University of Reading and subsequently gained a PhD from the University of North London. Margaret Meek Spencer supervised his work and continued to support him throughout her life. Rosen is well established as a broadcaster, presenting a range of documentary features on British radio. He is the presenter of BBC Radio 4's regular magazine programme Word of Mouth, which looks at the English language and the way it is used. The English Association gave Michael Rosen's Sad Book (2004) an Exceptional Award for the Best Children's Illustrated Books of its year in the 4–11 age range. The book was written by Michael Rosen and illustrated by Quentin Blake. It deals in part with bereavement and followed the publication of Carrying the Elephant: A Memoir of Love and Loss, which was published in November 2002 after the death of his son Eddie (aged 18), who features as a child in much of his earlier poetry. Rosen's This Is Not My Nose: A Memoir of Illness and Recovery (2004) is an account of his ten years with undiagnosed hypothyroidism; a course of drugs in 1981 alleviated the condition. In 2011, he collaborated with his wife, Emma-Louise Williams, to produce the film Under the Cranes, with Rosen providing the original screenplay (a play for voices called Hackney Streets), which Williams took as a basis with which to direct the film. It premiered at the Rio Cinema in Dalston, London, on 30 April 2011, as part of the East End Film Festival.... Discover the Michael Rosen popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Michael Rosen books.

Best Seller Michael Rosen Books of 2024

  • Cloud Busting synopsis, comments

    Cloud Busting

    Malorie Blackman

    Davey is the new boy in class and Sam can't stand him. He thinks Davey is a Grade A moron. But when the two are thrown together Sam discovers that Davey's eccentric way of looking ...

  • Collected Poems synopsis, comments

    Collected Poems

    Tony Harrison

    Tony Harrison published his first pamphlet of poems in 1964 and for over fifty years has been a prominent force in modern poetry. His poetic range is truly farreaching, from the in...

  • Talking Turkeys synopsis, comments

    Talking Turkeys

    Benjamin Zephaniah

    A reissue of TALKING TURKEYS by street poet Benjamin Zephaniah. Talking Turkeys is an unconventional collection of straighttalking poems about heroes, revolutions, racism, love and...

  • Soon synopsis, comments

    Soon

    Morris Gleitzman

    Winner CBCA Book of the Year Awards 2016Winner YABBA Children's Choice Awards 2016Winner KOALA Children's Choice Awards 2016Shortlisted Indie Book Awards 2016Shortlisted Speec...

  • The Puffin Book of Nonsense Verse synopsis, comments

    The Puffin Book of Nonsense Verse

    Quentin Blake

    Ever eaten Poodle Strudel? Slain a Jabberwock? Bathed in Irish Stew? Quentin Blake is one of the best loved of children’s illustrators. In this brilliant book he has selected and i...

  • The Jenius synopsis, comments

    The Jenius

    Dick King-Smith

    Dick KingSmith, creator of 'Babe the SheepPig', presents the cleverest guinea pig in the world!Judy's classmates snigger when she claims guinea pigs are brainy. But, when her guine...

  • The Works of the Gawain Poet synopsis, comments

    The Works of the Gawain Poet

    Ad Putter & Myra Stokes

    A new volume of the works of the Gawain poet, destined to become the definitive edition for students and scholars.This volume brings together four works of the unknown fourteenthce...

  • The Great Monster Joke Book synopsis, comments

    The Great Monster Joke Book

    Amanda Li

    What sort of jokes do werewolves like best?Howlers!What's worse than being surrounded by huge great scary monsters? Being surrounded by AWFUL JOKES ABOUT MONSTERS! Think you can st...

  • The Satires of Horace and Persius synopsis, comments

    The Satires of Horace and Persius

    Horace & Persius

    The Satires of Horace (658 BC), written in the troubled decade ending with the establishment of Augustus' regime, provide an amusing treatment of men's perennial enslavement to mon...

  • The Crew synopsis, comments

    The Crew

    Bali Rai

    Meet Ellie, Jas, Della, Will and Billy. They're tough. They're streetsmart. They're the Crew, and they live in what they call the Ghetto the estates round the city centre where ev...

  • The Penguin Book of Hebrew Verse synopsis, comments

    The Penguin Book of Hebrew Verse

    T. Carmi

    This stunning anthology gathers together the riches of poetry in Hebrew from 'The Song of Deborah' to contemporary Israeli writings. Verse written up to the tenth century show the ...

  • Irish Male At Home And Abroad synopsis, comments

    Irish Male At Home And Abroad

    Joseph O'Connor

    The Irish Male at Home and Abroad is the hilarious sequel to Joe O'Connor's bestseller The Secret World of the Irish Male. From flirting lessons in downtown Manhattan to being offe...

  • White Rose Rebel synopsis, comments

    White Rose Rebel

    Janet Paisley

    Anne Farquharson is a Highland girl – tempestuous, bold, determined to be her own woman. Yet the clan Farquharson is threatened. The Highlands suffer at the domineering hand of Eng...

  • Love Visions synopsis, comments

    Love Visions

    Geoffrey Chaucer & Brian Stone

    Spanning Chaucer's working life, these four poems build on the medieval convention of 'love visions' poems inspired by dreams, woven into rich allegories about the rituals and emo...

  • Loving and Losing You, Azaylia synopsis, comments

    Loving and Losing You, Azaylia

    Safiyya Vorajee

    'Azaylia was guiding me every day and I loved being able to look up to the sky and tell her: "I want to be like you, Azaylia. You're my hero and my inspiration. You taught me this...

  • Spud synopsis, comments

    Spud

    Alison Prince

    Spud is a scruffy dog with a big heart and an even bigger belly. He loves scrounging in dustbins, scaring cats and, of course, scoffing as much food as he can find. But what Spud ...

  • Tales of Ancient Egypt synopsis, comments

    Tales of Ancient Egypt

    Roger Green & Roger Lancelyn Green

    Michael Rosen, Professor of Children's Literature at Goldsmiths, University of London, and bestselling author, poet and broadcaster, introduces these great myths and legends of Anc...

  • The Penguin Book of Victorian Verse synopsis, comments

    The Penguin Book of Victorian Verse

    Daniel Karlin

    Daniel Karlin has selected poetry written and published during the reign of Queen Victoria, (18371901). Giving pride of place to Tennyson, Robert Browning, and Christina Rossetti, ...

  • The Poetry Of Edward Thomas synopsis, comments

    The Poetry Of Edward Thomas

    Andrew Motion

    When Edward Thomas died at Arras in 1917 few people thought of him as a poet. Yet in the two years before his death, after a lifetime writing prose, Thomas wrote some of the most e...

  • Wrapped in White synopsis, comments

    Wrapped in White

    Kevin Brooks

    PI John Craine still struggling to cope with the weight of his past is forced to finally confront it in his most personal and frightening case yet.PI John Craine is hired to inve...

  • Lizzie Zipmouth synopsis, comments

    Lizzie Zipmouth

    Jacqueline Wilson

    Lizzie refuses to speak. She doesn't want to talk to Rory or Jake, her new stepbrothers. Or to Sam, their dad. Or even to her mum. She's completely fed up with having to jo...

  • The First Poems in English synopsis, comments

    The First Poems in English

    Michael Alexander

    This selection of the earliest poems in English comprises works from an age in which verse was not written down, but recited aloud and remembered. Heroic poems celebrate courage, l...

  • How to Make Children Laugh synopsis, comments

    How to Make Children Laugh

    Michael Rosen

    'A WORK OF GENIUS' Chris EvansJokes, a jackinthebox, jelly and jumping beans make children laugh.As do practical jokes, peekaboo, pantomine and poetry that makes no sense.Why and ...

  • The Penguin Book of Modern African Poetry synopsis, comments

    The Penguin Book of Modern African Poetry

    Gerald Moore

    'Poetry, always foremost of the arts in traditional Africa, has continued to compete for primacy against the newer forms of prose fiction and theatre drama.' This wonderfully compr...

  • Robinson Crusoe synopsis, comments

    Robinson Crusoe

    Daniel Defoe

    'I walk'd about on the shore, lifting up my hands, and my whole being, as I may say, wrapt up in the contemplation of my deliverance ... reflecting upon all my comrades that were d...

  • AFP 2012 Conference E-book Sampler synopsis, comments

    AFP 2012 Conference E-book Sampler

    Wiley

    Whether you are new to the field of fundraising and need to get quickly up to speed or you’re a seasoned professional looking for fresh ideas on how to reach donors in a connected ...

  • The Tip Of My Tongue synopsis, comments

    The Tip Of My Tongue

    Robert Crawford

    Robert Crawford's new collection is an exhilarating celebration of the world he lives in: his family, his fellow Scots, his country and his country's languages. Beginning with a gr...

  • Literature and Evil synopsis, comments

    Literature and Evil

    Georges Bataille & Alastair Hamilton

    'Literature is not innocent,' stated Georges Bataille in this extraordinary 1957 collection of essays, arguing that only by acknowledging its complicity with the knowledge of evil ...

  • Ladybird Songs and Rhymes for Every Day synopsis, comments

    Ladybird Songs and Rhymes for Every Day

    Ladybird

    A beautifully illustrated collection of over 100 wellloved classic songs and nursery rhymes for every part of your child’s day."Every time we share these songs and rhymes with chil...

  • Football Fever synopsis, comments

    Football Fever

    Tony Bradman

    Tenn TopScoring Soccer StoriesTake a grandstand seat for some great soccer action: a barefoot boy who beats the odds and amazes everyone with his stunning skills; a goalie called T...

  • The Long Hello synopsis, comments

    The Long Hello

    Cathie Borrie

    A powerful, groundshifting account of caring for a parent with Alzheimer's about which Maya Angelou exclaimed, "Joy!"Since Cathie Borrie delivered her keynote performance at the Wo...

  • The Young Mind synopsis, comments

    The Young Mind

    Mike Shooter & Sue Bailey

    Sadly, millions of children today are affected by mental health problems, almost a doubling of the number of sufferers in just one generation. Now, in this timely new book, mental ...

  • Selected Poems synopsis, comments

    Selected Poems

    Matthew Sweeney

    Representing the best of ten books and twenty years' work, Matthew Sweeney's Selected Poems is a magical mystery tour into his strange, unsettling world. Readers familiar w...

  • Slapstick synopsis, comments

    Slapstick

    Roger McGough

    If Philosophy is the Why?And Science is the How?Then Poetry is the Wow!In this stunning, brandnew volume, you'll discover poems about poems, poems about life, poems about kangaroos...

  • Home at Grasmere synopsis, comments

    Home at Grasmere

    Dorothy Wordsworth & William Wordsworth

    A continuous text made up of extracts from Dorothy Wordsworth's Journal and a selection of her brother's poems. Dorothy Wordsworth kept her Journal 'because I shall give William pl...

  • Selected Poems synopsis, comments

    Selected Poems

    Roger McGough

    An updated selection of Roger McGough's finest, bestloved verse. The complete span of McGough's writing, from the 1960s to the new millennium, is represented. 'McGough's ...

  • The Lymond Poetry synopsis, comments

    The Lymond Poetry

    Dorothy Dunnett

    A beautiful collection of Renaissance poetry, assembled by one of the world's finest historical novelists.Dorothy Dunnett died in November 2001. She left behind this anthology, cho...