Verna Wilkins

Last updated
Verna Allette Wilkins

Verna Wilkins.JPG
Born1940s
Occupation(s)Publisher and author of children's books
Known forFounder of Tamarind Books
Notable workDave and the Tooth Fairy (1993)
Children2

Verna Allette Wilkins FRSL (born 1943) [1] is a Grenada-born publisher and author, now resident in London. In 1987 she founded the children's books imprint Tamarind Books, "producing quality inclusive literature that featured Black, Asian and minority ethnic children and children with disabilities" out of her concern about the effect on children who did not see themselves represented in books. [2] [3] Tamarind was acquired 20 years later by the Random House Group and became part of Random House Children's Books. Wilkins is also the author of more than 40 picture books and biographies for young people.

Contents

Background

Wilkins was born in Grenada, where her father was a head teacher who was instrumental in introducing Caribbean History to a curriculum dominated by Britain's past. [4] Wilkins has said: "He told us stories relevant to our lives. Stories from Africa and the Caribbean – stories that included people like us. He worked hard to give his children and his pupils self-worth. He used the imported European stories to broaden our horizons outside our small tropical island." [5]

Publishing

Wilkins, a former further education teacher, [6] [7] realised the powerful impact of early learning material after one of her two sons, soon after starting school as a five-year-old, came home with a "This is Me" booklet in which he had coloured himself pink. However, when she offered him a brown crayon to use instead, he refused, saying that the image he had drawn of himself had to have pink skin because it was for a book: "He had already learned, at that early age, that he did not qualify for entry into the world of books." [3] [8] When she researched the matter further, she arrived at the conclusion that her child and other children from the ethnic minorities were so under-represented in children's books that they were being denied an important stage in their learning, so Wilkins was motivated to begin producing books to meet that need. [9]

Starting Tamarind Books in 1987, Wilkins ran the company from her home, writing many of the books herself. New titles were published only when there was enough money in the company bank account, and in the early years she sold the books herself. [10] As she later wrote: "On the kitchen table, with the support of my partner and our sons, we began a business which lasted for a quarter of a century. I was aware of the discourse on race and cultural diversity as early as the 1960s, in response to the UK's growing population of immigrants from the Caribbean, India, Pakistan and Bangladesh, with discussions abounding about 'multicultural education'. So I went to schools and spoke with teachers; there was a captive audience of hundreds of thousands of children, attending schools that were advised to produce an inclusive curriculum. At that time, I was also working as a lecturer." [11]

As Tamarind Books found success, Wilkins decided that the imprint needed "growth, expansion and a committed team to take it to the next stage of development as an international publishing concern", and in 2007 it was acquired by Random House Group Ltd and became an imprint of Random House Children's Books (UK), [12] with Wilkins retained until she handed over to a new team in 2009. [13]

In 2008, Tamarind Books was awarded the Decibel Cultural Diversity Award in the British Book Awards (Nibbies). [8] [14]

Building on her achievement with Tamarind, in 2016 Wilkins set up Firetree Books, [11] which she ran as a pilot venture until 2017. [15] As part of the Firetree project, which had Arts Council support, Wilkins produced the books A Visit to City Farm and Abdi's Day in collaboration with primary school children, who featured as co-publishers and whose names were included within the books. [16] [17] Wilkins has also worked in schools in Uganda, involving children there in the editorial process of books in which they could see themselves portrayed. [5]

Writing

Wilkins is the author of more than 40 picture books and biographies for young people, [18] and her books have featured on the National Curriculum and on BBC children's television, and been among titles chosen as Children's Books of the Year. [19]

Wilkins wrote two of the best-known titles published by the Tamarind Books imprint: The Life of Stephen Lawrence (2001), [20] and Dave and The Tooth Fairy (1993), which featured a black tooth fairy and sold more than 200,000 in its first edition. [6] Tamarind also published biographies written by Wilkins for a series called Black Profiles, celebrating the lives of role models such as Malorie Blackman, Benjamin Zephaniah, Rudolph Walker, Baroness Scotland, Chinwe Roy, David Grant and Samantha Tross. [21]

Wilkins contributed an essay to the 2019 anthology New Daughters of Africa (edited by Margaret Busby) in which she explains that she began her work creating books in diverse classrooms in the belief that the process must start with children: "They should see themselves as the authors, editors, designers, illustrators and publishers of the future." [22]

Other literary work

Wilkins chaired the former trade association Independent Black Publishers (IBP), with a view to sharing experiences and maximising mutual strengths so as to increase the impact of UK black publishers, with Margaret Busby as patron. [23] [24] [25] [26] In 2007 at the London Book Fair a joint IBP stand showcased the books of Bogle-L'Ouverture Press, Tamarind Books, the X Press, Ayebia Clarke Publishing, Joan Anim-Addo's Mango Press, Jessica Huntley's Bogle-L'Ouverture Publications and other Black ventures. [27]

Wilkins has served as a judge for literary prizes including the Burt Award for Caribbean Literature [28] and the Jhalak Prize, and is also internationally regarded as an acclaimed speaker, facilitating conferences in the UK, Europe, Africa and the Caribbean. [29]

She was elected as a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in 2021. [30]

Awards

Selected bibliography

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References

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  2. Serroukh, Farrah; Karen Sands O'Connor (21 February 2020). "Go deeper: Reflecting on Black presence in children's books". Discovering Children's Books. British Library . Retrieved 16 February 2021.
  3. 1 2 Agnew, Kate (7 October 2008). "Imaginary worlds where everyone is the same colour". The Guardian.
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  6. 1 2 "Beyond Janet and John | My big break". The Guardian . 20 November 1999.
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  9. "Tamarind Books' Verna Wilkins talks to Michelle Brooks about Making her Mark on Children's books – OHTV interview". YouTube . 24 August 2010.
  10. Shercliff, Emma (18 August 2014). "Books for the Masses? Publishing Genre Fiction in Africa: Africa Writes, 13 July 2014". Africa in Words. Retrieved 16 February 2021.
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  20. McGavin, Harvey (20 April 2001). "Life and death of a south London schoolboy". TES .
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  22. Busby, Margaret (9 March 2019). "From Ayòbámi Adébáyò to Zadie Smith: meet the New Daughters of Africa". The Guardian.
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  24. 1 2 Publishing News, 2008. Archived 13 April 2008 at the Wayback Machine
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  26. Cox, Debbie (13 July 2020). "Blazing a trail for Black British writing: Jacaranda's Twenty in 2020". English and Drama Blog. British Library.
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