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Les Ellison
Only the works of Mao Tse-tung separate the world’s bestselling book ever from what, primarily, is a book for children. At 3.9 billion copies, nothing comes close to the Bible for total worldwide sales. Mao’s iconic little red book, while outselling at 820 million copies the top placed work of fiction, probably has more limited global penetration.
So why, in a world awash with new books for adults in every genre and format, is the number 3 bestselling book ever, with 400 million sales, an 11 volume children’s story?
From its first instalment, Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone, the book not only hit with the mark with the author’s target audience, it struck home with adult readers too.
J K Rowling’s boy-wizard adventures in the halls and towers of Hogwarts were so popular with adults that the whole series was republished in adult editions with darkly brooding, grown-up covers.
Adults, confessing to almost fanatical devotion, suffered almost as much criticism for their childish habits as the subject matter received for its undertones of magic and the supernatural.
Whatever criticism may or may not be justified, Harry Potter is wildly successful with the estimated 1 in 4 adults who would never otherwise read a book of any description.
Yet this was a children’s story book. Set in a world that locked adults out of the main adventure. Constructed on simple themes of good versus evil: with vicious, unredeemable villains and honourable, courageous heroes.
There are sub-plots of treachery and betrayal, the underlying mystery of who exactly Harry Potter is and a world of dark secrets and incomplete revelation. Much is left to the reader’s creative exploration – at least until the film versions replaced it with the imposition of spectacular special effects.
It’s a world that grown-ups wish was real. A world where they know where they stand, and where their decisions and actions make a real, life and death difference.
J K Rowling is not the only children’s author to benefit from sales to adults. Philip Pullman (His Dark Materials series) is also increasingly read by adults. From first to last these are, of course, simply made up stories. But within the covers and in the head of the reader, they are real.
It hasn’t gone unnoticed that in these ‘real’ worlds, there is no God – at least not in the sense that people of faith would recognise. And that’s one of the big questions that commercial-world children’s authors seem reluctant to face.
One Christian children’s author responding directly to the success of fantasy and supernatural novles is G P Taylor, creator of the ‘Shadowmancer’ and ‘Dopple Ganger’ stories.
Cleric turned writer, G P Taylor, set out to engage the 95% of children who are Biblically illiterate. With his fresh, new concept of ‘illustra-novellas’ – part text and part manga-style graphic-novel, Christian themes of forgiveness, redemption and grace are made attractive and accessible to pre-teen readers.
For the brightest on line choice of age appropriate well written, well illustrated and well presented Christian reads for children – including books the illustra-novellas of G P Taylor, click the children tab at Eden.co.uk and follow the links.
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