Margaret Wallace-Jones

Published: Nov. 5, 2020, 2 p.m.

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Margaret Wallace-Jones grew up in Cheshire, in a village with a well stocked library (there even were copies of Spare Rib magazine in the back room). 

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She studied English literature at Royal Holloway and Bedford New College before moving to London. She worked at many various jobs (she was very bad at them all) before starting on her bookselling career (and made a success of it).

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In 2015 she co-founded \\u2013 with Tony West \\u2013 the children\\u2019s bookshop The Alligator\\u2019s Mouth in Richmond, South West London. 

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This is where I caught up with Margaret on a cool October night for an interview amidst books. Bliss! 

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Margaret shares with us how she fell in love with reading thanks to C.S. Lewis\\u2019 The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, how her love of poetry anthologies was born with Other Men\\u2019s Flowers, her first steps into feminism with Atwood\\u2019s Handmaid\\u2019s Tale and Angelou\\u2019s I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings and how she can identify with Stephen King\\u2019s description of childhood places, such as Derry\\u2019s bracken in It

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On this podcast Margaret also mentions the following books: Nosy Crow\\u2019s two beautiful poetry anthologies curated by Fiona Waters, I Am the Seed that Grew the Tree, illustrated by Frann Preston-Gannon and Tiger, Tiger, Burning Bright! illustrated by Britta Teckentrup, as well as Margaret Atwood\\u2019s first novel The Edible Woman and Stephen King\\u2019s The Dead Zone\\u2026 She mentions Keats and Coleridge and the poems \'Journey of the Magi\' by T.S. Eliot and \'Romance\' by Robert Louis Stevenson, and last but not least the backroom collection of Spare Rib magazines!

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Get the books from Bookshop.org (and help to support independent bookshops) here.

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