Graham Oakley

Graham Oakley is an English author and illustrator. He was born on August 27, 1929 to Thomas and Flora (Madelay) Oakley in Shrewsbury, Shropshire, England. He currently lives in Lyme Regis, Dorset and was listed in the 2008 Modern Classics edition of The Church Mice as 'mostly retired'.

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Military service

Graham Oakley served 1947-49 in the British Army.

Art career

In 1950, he attended the Warrington Art School. He worked for London repertory companies as a scenic artist from 1950-55.

From 1955-57 he was a design assistant at the Royal Opera House in Covent Garden, worked at Crawford's Advertising Agency from 1960–62, and then as a set designer for films and series at BBC-TV from 1962-67 for How Green Was My Valley, Nicholas Nickleby, Treasure Island, and Softly, Softly.

Children's books

Graham Oakley is best known for the Church Mice series, published 1970 to 2000, and the Foxbury Force series (1994 to 1998). He also won a citation from the Boston Globe-Horn Book Award in 1980 for a picture book entitled Magical Changes. It features detailed scenes that are drawn in such a way that the pages, which are cut in half, allow you to combine the top and bottom into many (often surreal) situations from original drawings that are already strange. It was republished in 2001 in France under the name 512, the title representing how many different combinations can be made.

The Church Mice series includes:

External links