Gwen Grant was born in 1940 in Worksop, Nottinghamshire, and lives there still. When she was twelve years old, she was Highly Commended in a national competition for her essay on the Cocoa Bean - she has written ever since. Her many books for children include Private - Keep Out, its sequels Knock and Wait and One Way Only; The Lily Pickle Band Book and The Revolutionary's Daughter. She is also a published poet.
In Lucy Mangan's childhood reading memoir Bookworm, she describes the significance of discovering Gwen Grant's book Private - Keep Out! and reading about a family dynamic that she recognised from her own life, but hadn't found in any other stories. At last, she explains, I could see my family from the outside in ... we were still in some fundamental ways outsiders. I think about Private - Keep Out! whenever arguments about diversity and representation in books break out. * Independent * Private-Keep Out! should rank alongside Just William as an indispensable part of the children's canon. Alas, and for no better reason that I can discern than the vagaries of chance and/or the misalignment of planets on publication, it has so far failed to find its rightful place. So let me state for the record: the public has been deprived of one of the funniest children's books ever written -- Lucy Mangan * Bookworm *