Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Roald Dahl stories to be on millions of cereal boxes

Excerpts from Roald Dahl books will appear on tens of millions of cereal boxes over the next few weeks as part of an ambitious attempt to encourage more children to read.
By Harry Wallop, Consumer Affairs Editor, The Telegraph,09 Apr 2011

The publisher has realised that children, from even before the age they can read, pick up cereal boxes from the breakfast table and scan the back for games and information. By replacing the games and adverts with an excerpt from a book, it hopes to spark an interest in literature.

A Quentin Blake illustration from The BFG, a Roald Dahl classic.

The innovation is being pioneered by Puffin, which has struck a deal with the estate of Roald Dahl, the much loved children's author, and Asda, the supermarket. The excerpts from The Witches; The Twits, The BFG; Danny, the Champion of the World and Charlie and the Chocolate Factory will appear on at least ten million boxes of cereal sold in Asda over the next few weeks. They will appear on the back of all of the supermarket's own-brand children's cereals, such as rice pops, frosted flakes and honey hoops.
The extracts are only a couple of hundreds of words long, but Francesca Dow, the managing director of Penguin's children books, which owns Puffin, said she hoped many would be intrigued enough to track down the whole book after reading the boxes: "The great thing about a cereal box, is that it potentially is reaching millions of households that just don't read any literature outside of school.

"There could be an enormous number of children discovering Roald Dahl for the first time, bleary eyed over the breakfast table."
They have chose extracts that are "the most immediately exciting bit, something that plunges you straight into the story," she said

Read the full Telegraph piece.

1 comment:

Penelope said...

A great idea - just a shame to use Roald Dahl who is already incredibly well known. This would be an ideal way to introduce new authors to children.