Firefly Hires Leonie Lock as Assistant Editor

Firefly Hires Leonie Lock as Assistant Editor

With thanks to Books Council Wales’ funding, Firefly have created a new, part-time Assistant Editor role to expand the existing team. We’re delighted to announce that we’ve appointed Leonie Lock, who has been a bookseller specialising in children’s books for the last eight years, and has a passion for Children’s and Young Adults fiction. Alongside working for Firefly, she is finishing her degree in English and Drama at Cardiff Metropolitan University.

“I’m super excited and honoured to join the Firefly team, and I cannot wait to get stuck in and help publish more brilliant books!” Leonie commented on securing the post. “I’ve always been dedicated to promoting reading, and although disguised as a grown up, still love children’s books!”

Get Creative with Firefly’s Eggtastic Competition

Get Creative with Firefly’s Eggtastic Competition

You could win a Firefly book of your choice with our eggtastic Easter competition! Just let your imagination fly and create an egg to scramble our minds, boil our brains (in a good way!) and generally crack open a smile.

How to enter: Tweet a picture or video of your eggstravagent creation to @FireflyPress by 5pm on Friday 17 April to be in with a chance to win. You can download and print this handy egg template if you want to design a 2D egg, but you can also paint or decorate a 3D egg in any way you choose.

If you don’t have a Twitter account, you can email your pictures or videos to hello@fireflypress.co.uk using the subject heading Easter Competition. We will then tweet your picture for you. UK entries only please.

We can’t wait to see your crackin’ ideas! To get you inspired, here’s some eggstraordinary eggs created by Monster Max and the Bobble Hat of Forgetting author, Robin Bennett, and his family…

Rebel Without a Cupcake Resources

Rebel Without a Cupcake Resources


Recipe from Rebel with a Cupcake author Anna Mainwaring

My first novel, Rebel with a Cupcake, was reissued by Firefly Press in 2020 with a beautiful new cover by Niki Pilkington. It’s about a confident teenage girl, Jess (short for Jesobel), who loves to cook for her friends and dysfunctional family. But one fateful Own Clothes Day, a wardrobe malfunction sets off a chain of events which leads Jess to re-consider everything she has held dear. Jess has to learn to make her own way through a family, school and society that seem to think she’s just a bit too much

I’m not a great baker but I do love to try. Whereas Jess can make a gingerbread version of her school in one afternoon, if my cakes were to appear on The Great British Bake Off they would definitely be described as ‘rustic’ if the judges were being kind and ‘a total mess’ if they were being honest. But what Jess and I do share is a belief that food is a great pleasure and a brilliant way of bringing people together. Food and life should be full of flavour! All the best celebrations, whether personal, cultural or religious, all seem to centre on the sharing of tasty dishes and treats. So Jess bakes cupcakes for her friends, throws an impromptu party for her grandmother who rarely leaves the attic, and helps mend her sister’s broken heart. 

If you have time, inclination and most importantly in these strange times, the ingredients, perhaps you might like to bake a cupcake or two to share with those you love. Here’s a basic cupcake recipe that has never let me down. Jess would probably make elderflower and rosehip cakes, for me lemon and poppyseed are my favourite. What would be your perfect cupcake flavours?

Ingredients for the cupcakes:

110g softened butter or margarine

110g golden caster sugar

2 large eggs 

½ tsp vanilla extract

110g self-raising flour

Optional food colouring of your choice … go subtle or go bold!

Ingredients for the buttercream:

150g softened butter

300g icing sugar

1 tsp vanilla extract

3 tbsp milk

Optional food colouring … possibly match the beautiful colour of Rebel with a Cupcake’s spine!]

To decorate:

Sprinkles or any edible decoration you prefer

Optional pin badge (just don’t eat!)

Method:

Heat oven to 180C/160C fan/gas 4 and fill a 12 cupcake tray with cases. White ones are fine but coloured ones are best.

Beat 110g softened butter and 110g golden caster sugar together until pale and fluffy then whisk in 2 large eggs, one at a time. An electric whisk saves time but using a spoon is a great work-out!

Add ½ tsp vanilla extract (or alternative flavour), 110g self-raising flour and any colouring, whisk until just combined then spoon the mixture into the cupcake cases. Aim to fill each case half way or just over. If you fill to the top, then the mixture with expand in the oven.

Bake for 15 mins until golden in colour and a skewer inserted into the middle of each cake comes out clean. Leave to cool completely on a wire rack. (I don’t have a wire rack – I just improvise)

To make the buttercream, whisk 150g softened butter until super soft then add 300g icing sugar, 1 tsp vanilla extract (other flavours can be substituted). Whisk together until smooth. You might want to do this really slowly to start off with as the icing sugar has a tendency to create a cloud. Now would also be the time to add the colour if you want. Of course, you can always use ready-made buttercream to save time and washing-up if desired.

When ready, either spoon on or if you’re up to the challenge, use a piping bag for a more professional look. You can add sprinkles and/or other decorations. Then present to those you love and see how much they enjoy them! 

Rebel with a Cupcake: Design a cupcake colouring sheet


Click on the cupcake below to download the colouring sheet and design your own cupcake!

Rebel Without a Cupcake Resources

The Importance of Baking Cupcakes by Anna Mainwaring

On 2 April my first novel, Rebel with a Cupcake, is being reissued by Firefly Press with a beautiful new cover by Niki Pilkington. It’s about a confident teenage girl, Jess (short for Jesobel), who loves to cook for her friends and dysfunctional family. But one fateful Own Clothes Day, a wardrobe malfunction sets off a chain of events which leads Jess to re-consider everything she has held dear. Jess has to learn to make her own way through a family, school and society that seem to think she’s just a bit too much

I’m not a great baker but I do love to try. Whereas Jess can make a gingerbread version of her school in one afternoon, if my cakes were to appear on The Great British Bake Off they would definitely be described as ‘rustic’ if the judges were being kind and ‘a total mess’ if they were being honest. But what Jess and I do share is a belief that food is a great pleasure and a brilliant way of bringing people together. Food and life should be full of flavour! All the best celebrations, whether personal, cultural or religious, all seem to centre on the sharing of tasty dishes and treats. So Jess bakes cupcakes for her friends, throws an impromptu party for her grandmother who rarely leaves the attic, and helps mend her sister’s broken heart. 

To celebrate the publication of Rebel with a Cupcake, if you have time, inclination and most importantly in these strange times, the ingredients, perhaps you might like to bake a cupcake or two to share with those you love. Here’s a basic cupcake recipe that has never let me down. Jess would probably make elderflower and rosehip cakes, for me lemon and poppyseed are my favourite. What would be your perfect cupcake flavours?

Ingredients for the cupcakes:

110g softened butter or margarine

110g golden caster sugar

2 large eggs 

½ tsp vanilla extract

110g self-raising flour

Optional food colouring of your choice … go subtle or go bold!

Ingredients for the buttercream:

150g softened butter

300g icing sugar

1 tsp vanilla extract

3 tbsp milk

Optional food colouring … possibly match the beautiful colour of Rebel with a Cupcake’s spine!]

To decorate:

Sprinkles or any edible decoration you prefer

Optional pin badge (just don’t eat!)

Method:

Heat oven to 180C/160C fan/gas 4 and fill a 12 cupcake tray with cases. White ones are fine but coloured ones are best.

Beat 110g softened butter and 110g golden caster sugar together until pale and fluffy then whisk in 2 large eggs, one at a time. An electric whisk saves time but using a spoon is a great work-out!

Add ½ tsp vanilla extract (or alternative flavour), 110g self-raising flour and any colouring, whisk until just combined then spoon the mixture into the cupcake cases. Aim to fill each case half way or just over. If you fill to the top, then the mixture with expand in the oven.

Bake for 15 mins until golden in colour and a skewer inserted into the middle of each cake comes out clean. Leave to cool completely on a wire rack. (I don’t have a wire rack – I just improvise)

To make the buttercream, whisk 150g softened butter until super soft then add 300g icing sugar, 1 tsp vanilla extract (other flavours can be substituted). Whisk together until smooth. You might want to do this really slowly to start off with as the icing sugar has a tendency to create a cloud. Now would also be the time to add the colour if you want. Of course, you can always use ready-made buttercream to save time and washing-up if desired.

When ready, either spoon on or if you’re up to the challenge, use a piping bag for a more professional look. You can add sprinkles and/or other decorations. Then present to those you love and see how much they enjoy them! 

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