Graham Oakley

Graham Oakley (born 27 August 1929) is an English writer and illustrator best known for children's books. According to the 2008 Modern Classics edition of The Church Mice, he lives in Lyme Regis, Dorset and is "mostly retired". In his spare time, Graham currently coaches and occasionally plays for Redingensians Rugby football club in Reading.[1]

Graham Oakley
Born (1929-08-27) 27 August 1929
Shrewsbury, England
OccupationAuthor, illustrator

Early life

Oakley was born to Thomas and Flora (Madelay) Oakley in Shrewsbury, Shropshire, England. He currently resides in Bracknell with his wife and children.

He served 1947–49 in the British Army.

Art career

Oakley attended the Warrington Art School in 1950. He worked for London repertory theatre companies as a scenic artist from 1950 to 1955; as a design assistant at the Royal Opera House in Covent Garden, 1955 to 1957; at Crawford's Advertising Agency, 1960 to 1962; at BBC-TV as a set designer for films and series, 1962 to 1967. At BBC he worked on How Green Was My Valley, Nicholas Nickleby, Treasure Island, and Softly, Softly.

Children's books

Oakley is best known for the Church Mice series of picture books (1970 to 2000), next for the Foxbury Force series (1994 to 1998). He also won a Boston Globe–Horn Book Award Special Citation in 1980 for the picture book Graham Oakley's Magical Changes.[2] It features detailed scenes drawn on pages that are cut in half, permitting the user to "turn" the top and bottom halves separately. The combinations are surreal; the original whole-page drawings are already strange. In 2001 it was republished in France, entitled 512 for the number of different combinations possible.

The Church Mice
  • The Church Mouse - Atheneum, 1972
  • The Church Cat Abroad - Atheneum, 1973
  • The Church Mice and the Moon - Atheneum, 1974
  • The Church Mice Spread Their Wings - Macmillan (London), 1975
  • The Church Mice Adrift - Macmillan (London), 1976
  • The Church Mice at Bay - Macmillan (London), 1978
  • The Church Mice at Christmas - Atheneum, 1980
  • The Church Mice in Action - Macmillan (London), 1982
  • The Diary of a Church Mouse - Macmillan (London), 1986
  • The Church Mice and the Ring, 1992
  • Humphrey Hits the Jackpot - Hodder Children's Books, 1998
  • The Church Mice Take a Break - Hodder Children's Books, 2000

The Church Mice Adrift and The Church Mice in Action were Highly Commended runners-up for the 1976 and 1982 Kate Greenaway Medals from the Library Association, recognising the year's best children's book illustration by a British subject.[3][lower-alpha 1]

gollark: > > App behavior changes slightly if they know you're trying to figure out what they're doing> this sentence makes no sense to me, "if they know"? he's dissecting the code as per his own statement, thus looking at rows of text in various format. the app isn't running - so how can it change? does the app have self-awareness? this sounds like something out of a bad sci-fi movie from the 90's.It's totally possible for applications to detect and resist being debugged a bit.
gollark: > this is standard programming dogma, detailed logging takes a lot of space and typically you enable logging on the fly on clients to catch errors. this is literally cookie cutter "how to build apps 101", and not scary. or, phrased differently, is it scary if all of that logging was always on? obviously not as it's agreed upon and detailed in TikTok's privacy policy (really), so why is it scary that there's an on and off switch?This is them saying that remotely configurable logging is fine and normal; I don't think them being able to arbitrarily gather more data is good.
gollark: > on the topic of setting up a proxy server - it's a very standard practice to transcode and buffer media via a server, they have simply reversed the roles here by having server and client on the client, which makes sense as transcoding is very intensive CPU-wise, which means they have distributed that power requirement to the end user's devices instead of having to have servers capable of transcoding millions of videos.Transcoding media locally is not the same as having some sort of locally running *server* to do it.
gollark: That doesn't mean it's actually always what happens.
gollark: Legally, yes.

See also

  • Movable books

Notes

  1. Today there are usually eight books on the Greenaway Medal shortlist. According to CCSU, some runners-up through 2002 were Commended (from 1959) or Highly Commended (from 1974). There were 31 highly commended runners-up in 29 years including Oakley and two others for 1976, Oakley alone for 1982.

References

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