Author: | Katy Hounsell-Robert | ISBN: | 9781911086277 |
Publisher: | Onwards and Upwards Publishers | Publication: | February 18, 2016 |
Imprint: | Onwards and Upwards eBook | Language: | English |
Author: | Katy Hounsell-Robert |
ISBN: | 9781911086277 |
Publisher: | Onwards and Upwards Publishers |
Publication: | February 18, 2016 |
Imprint: | Onwards and Upwards eBook |
Language: | English |
When Sophie is assigned the role of Little Miss Muffet’s spider in a youth group drama game, she is very disappointed. But when she finds herself magically transformed into her play character, she makes new friends and discovered that there is much to love about spiders. Soon she finds herself whisked off to Zimbabwe on an exciting adventure.
Katy Hounsell-Robert has always been curious about the lives and essential spirituality of people and animals and wanted to share this through writing plays and stories.
She first wrote scripts on history for BBC children's education, one of which, Colonel Blood and The Stealing of the Crown Jewels, she had later performed at the Tower of London. She also wrote a Jackanory series on Vietnamese folklore and dramatised Tam and Cam (The Vietnamese Cinderella), which was produced at the Unicorn Children's Theatre, London. As well as teaching Drama and English and bringing up her family, she has had six plays performed professionally, including Look What They've Done to my Play, Ma! (first produced for the Edinburgh Fringe Festival), Augustine of Hippo (performed in churches and cathedrals in Hampshire) and Gilt of Rumpelstiltzkin (in churches in London and Surrey). The Case of Kate Webster was published by Macmillan Education.
She is now a journalist writing on Arts and Culture for Church times, Catholic Life, Catholic Herald and the Stage. She wrote a number of articles on people and life in Tunisia, which she later had published as a book, Katy in Tunisia. (pub. Nigel Day). She continues to write plays and books.
She has won two national awards, one for playwriting and one for poetry, and her fascination for bees began when she wrote a series of poems about creatures in the garden and read them with children at a junior school in Claygate. They liked the bee poems very much, and she began to explore the life of bees, by reading and by watching them at Quarr Abbey where she goes on retreat. She became so captivated that she has created Ben's Bees, an adventure story taking place in the real world of bees. She has another story planned about a creature that lots of people don't like and are afraid of!
When Sophie is assigned the role of Little Miss Muffet’s spider in a youth group drama game, she is very disappointed. But when she finds herself magically transformed into her play character, she makes new friends and discovered that there is much to love about spiders. Soon she finds herself whisked off to Zimbabwe on an exciting adventure.
Katy Hounsell-Robert has always been curious about the lives and essential spirituality of people and animals and wanted to share this through writing plays and stories.
She first wrote scripts on history for BBC children's education, one of which, Colonel Blood and The Stealing of the Crown Jewels, she had later performed at the Tower of London. She also wrote a Jackanory series on Vietnamese folklore and dramatised Tam and Cam (The Vietnamese Cinderella), which was produced at the Unicorn Children's Theatre, London. As well as teaching Drama and English and bringing up her family, she has had six plays performed professionally, including Look What They've Done to my Play, Ma! (first produced for the Edinburgh Fringe Festival), Augustine of Hippo (performed in churches and cathedrals in Hampshire) and Gilt of Rumpelstiltzkin (in churches in London and Surrey). The Case of Kate Webster was published by Macmillan Education.
She is now a journalist writing on Arts and Culture for Church times, Catholic Life, Catholic Herald and the Stage. She wrote a number of articles on people and life in Tunisia, which she later had published as a book, Katy in Tunisia. (pub. Nigel Day). She continues to write plays and books.
She has won two national awards, one for playwriting and one for poetry, and her fascination for bees began when she wrote a series of poems about creatures in the garden and read them with children at a junior school in Claygate. They liked the bee poems very much, and she began to explore the life of bees, by reading and by watching them at Quarr Abbey where she goes on retreat. She became so captivated that she has created Ben's Bees, an adventure story taking place in the real world of bees. She has another story planned about a creature that lots of people don't like and are afraid of!