Poetry |
Children’s
Fiction Going to Egypt (1992) Julia MacRae: London. In the Mon£y (1993) Julia MacRae: London. Fatal Error (1996) Yearling Books: London. Go Fox illustrated by Colin Meir (1996) Young Corgi: London. Amina’s Blanket illustrated by Paul Dainton (1996) Heinemann: London. Allie’s Apples illustrated by Simone Lia (1997) Mammoth: London. Clyde’s Leopard illustrated by Gerry Ball (1998) Cambridge University Press: Cambridge. Great-grandma’s Dancing Dress illustrated by Sam Thompson (1998) Cambridge University Press: Cambridge. Brother, Brother, Sister, Sister (1999) Scholastic: London. Unabridged audio from Chivers. Allie’s Rabbit illustrated by Simone Lia (1999) Mammoth: London. Aliens Don’t Eat Bacon Sandwiches (2000) Mammoth: London. Short stories. Allie Away illustrated by Simone Lia (2000) Mammoth: London. Unabridged audio from Chivers. Zillah and Me (2000) Scholastic: London. Unabridged audio from Chivers. The Zillah Rebellion (2001) Scholastic: London. The Ugly Duckling by Hans Christian Andersen, retold by Helen Dunmore, illustrated by Robin Bell Corfield (2001) Scholastic: London. The Silver Bead (2003) Scholastic: London. The Lilac Tree (2004) (previously released as Zillah and Me) Scholastic: London. Seal Cove (2004) (previously released as The Zillah Rebellion) Scholastic: London. Tara’s Tree House illustrated by Karin Littlewood (2004) Egmont: London. Other Works Critical introductions to Robert Louis Stevenson’s Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (2003) and Emily Bronte’s Poems of Solitude (2004), both published by Hesperus Press: London. Other Resources Bookreporter.com provides detailed reviews and reading group guides for some of Helen Dunmore’s novels. Guardian Unlimited has the transcript of an interview by Robert McCrum of Helen Dunmore from June 2001, which coincided with the publication of The Siege. The British Council’s Contemporary Writers site includes a detailed section on Helen Dunmore. The Literary Moose, a personal website devoted to literary fiction, has two ‘chapters’ on the works of Helen Dunmore. The Penguin Readers Group website includes a transcript of a session in which Helen Dunmore met the Institute of Cancer Research reading group in November 2000 to discuss Talking to the Dead. Talking to the Dead is also the focus for a transcript of a live online ‘chat’ with Helen Dunmore from November 2001 on the BBC Talk website. On the Bloodaxe Books website there is an interview with Helen Dunmore about her poetry collection Out of the Blue. |
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