Victor Watson is an English author who has written on the nature and history of children's literature and on how children learn to read. He later turned to writing novels for children.
Watson's main academic publications are After Alice – Exploring Children's Literature, The Prose and the Passion: Children and their Reading, and Voices: Texts, Contexts and Readers all of which Watson co-edited with Eve Bearne and Morag Styles. Later came Talking Pictures: Pictorial texts and young readers with Morag Styles; Opening the Nursery Door, with Morag Styles and Mary Hilton, and Where Texts and Children Meet, with Eve Bearne. He edited The Cambridge Guide to Children's Books in English, and co-wrote Coming of Age in Children's Literature with Professor Margaret Meek. One of his later academic works, Reading Series Fiction: from Arthur Ransome to Gene Kemp, allowed him to focus on the genre of children's books he is most interested in. Subsequently, he wrote a series of war stories for eight to thirteen-year-old children, beginning with Paradise Barn, which was shortlisted for the Branford-Boase Award. Watson followed this with three sequels. The last of these, Everyone a Stranger, won the 2014 East Anglian Children's Book Award. This quartet was followed by a thriller which was also a war novel, Operation Blackout; although this was last to be published it comes chronologically after Paradise Barn. All five remain in print in the UK. Watson has been influenced as a writer by the work of Philippa Pearce, Jan Mark and William Mayne. He wrote an afterword for a 2014 reissue of Pearce's Tom's Midnight Garden. At an Oxford Children's Book Group meeting in 2013 he spoke of his belief that series fiction is "a powerful way of fostering a love of independent reading", quoting a small boy as telling him that reading a new book was like entering a room full of strangers, but that series fiction was like "a room full of friends". In June 2020 Watson published his first novel for adults "The Cuckoo Season" which is set in East Anglia and London in 1952.
Novels for Children published so far
Paradise Barn
Operation Blackout
The Deeping Secrets
Hidden Lies
Everyone a Stranger
National Centre for Children's Books
Almost from its inception, Watson has been a trustee of an organization committed to establishing in the UK a national archive of manuscripts, artwork and books relating to children's literature. He chaired this organization during the main fundraising and building period, which led in 2005 to the opening of Seven Stories, the National Centre for Children's Books. His own collection of children's popular literature, mainly story papers and annuals, was transferred there in April 2016.
Walden Writers
Watson is a member of the Walden Writers co-operative, set up in Saffron Walden by authors Amy Corzine and Martyn Everett in 2008 to promote the work of its members and organise literary events. Other members include children's authors Rosemary Hayes and Penny Speller, travel-writer and novelist Jane Wilson-Howarth, biographer Clare Mulley, novelist Carol Frazer, and historian Lizzie Sanders.
Personal life
Watson is married to Judy, also a teacher; they have three children, Sally, Lucy and Tim, and four granddaughters.