Manawatu Standard

Grandpa’s Slippers trod winning path

- Grandpa’s Slippers

Great stories come from humble beginnings. In children’s author Joy Watson’s case, it was a pair of tatty old slippers. Who’d have thought the sight of her husband’s slippers with ‘‘holes in their soles’’, propped up on the hearth, would inspire a yarn that would sell hundreds of thousands of books all over the world.

Not bad when you consider a first print run for a New Zealand picture book these days is probably about 2500.

The simple but cleverly told tale of Grandpa and his slippers ‘‘ratty and tatty, a little bit mouldy and a little bit smelly’’ was so successful it spawned four more books, about Grandpa’s cardigan, shed, shorts and cat.

The books, all illustrate­d by Wendy Hodder and published by Scholastic, have been translated into te reo Ma¯ ori, French and Spanish, and are still in print 30 years after their first publicatio­n.

That’s a lot of mileage out of a pair of old slippers.

But Watson had mastered the art of being able to see the funny side of something quite ordinary and spin a tale out of it. That was her superpower.

Born Valerie Joy Evans in Gisborne in 1938, she was always known as Joy. Her father was a farm manager who travelled around for work. She and her three brothers lived in many parts of the country before settling in central Hawke’s Bay.

Her mother, who also worked on the farm while raising the children, was one of the Golden Queens – a women’s collective who used to bottle fruit for young mothers in need. A work ethic was instilled into Joy at a young age.

The whole family were writers – of diaries and letters – young Joy in particular. She was sent to St Mary’s College in Wellington for her secondary school years and later went on to become a dental nurse, working in and around the Dannevirke area.

It was at a New Year’s Eve dance in Ma¯ hia that she met her husband, Kevin Hayes Watson, a young pharmacy student who would later become her muse.

They married and moved to Hastings, where they bought a pharmacy and proceeded to build a family of nine children.

Family life was an organised affair. Watson ran a tight ship. The children were up before 6am completing their chores, doing their music practice.

She was an avid reader. Her children remember her reluctantl­y closing her book when they got home from school.

Reading was a family pastime. As the children washed and dried the mountain of dishes that such a large family of 11 naturally generated every night, one would be assigned reading-aloud duty.

At first they didn’t want to listen, but the story would work its magic and the gaggle of children would hang around the kitchen long after the dishes were washed

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child more than 40 per cent of nights. This fell to 28 per cent, or two nights a week.

Penalties for late payments were reduced, and the government given more powers to write these off with the aim of reducing Crown debt and incentivis­ing people to pay. (Penalties are around 75 per cent of all child support debt.)

‘‘I think the general perception had been that it was men ripping off the system, but it was actually much more evenly spread. If you were in a situation where you had the money, whether you were male or female, you had the power,’’ Dunne says.

‘‘There was a fear at the outset that taking both partners’ incomes into account might be disadvanta­geous to custodial parents, or women. But the impact didn’t seem to be as bad.’’

In fact, we can only guess. The only IRD research conducted and provided under the Official Informatio­n Act examined parents’ perception­s of the changes, not financial repercussi­ons. It found the scheme was viewed as negatively as before.

Bchildren’s author b February 21, 1938 d October 4, 2021

ut, in his analysis of the reforms, economist Michael Fletcher found the changes favoured men as paying parents. One in three men gained by the changes, compared with fewer than one in five women.

And they hurt low-income women the most; more than half of those who lost money were living on under $20,000 a year. Some of those women had child support cut by more than $40 a week.

The new formula, borrowed from Australia, did not take into account the costs of daycare, after-school care, unpaid caring work, and the opportunit­y costs for women of raising children.

‘‘ ‘Fairer’ in this case has layers of gender politics,’’ Fletcher says. ‘‘To the extent that the changes in the new-ish act were designed to help paying parents, it was the receiving parents who tended to lose out, and they were 4-1 women.

‘‘There’s major inconsiste­ncies – if both parents are working and you have a formula that takes both parents’ incomes into account, why would you not include the costs of childcare? The objectives of the act, its relationsh­ip with other aspects of family law and the welfare system were not addressed. This means many women will be effectivel­y stuck on the sole parent benefit until the kid is older.’’ and dried to hear more, daughter Maryanne Scott recalls.

all the classics. No-one wanted to be on dishes. Reading was the better job.

The house was full of books, but Watson was a great library user too. She would take the children to the Hastings Public Library every Saturday, returning cartons and cartons of books and leaving with another haul.

While her profession­al writing career began later on, she was always writing. Her children were her audience.

During school holidays Watson, usually with a babe in arms, would write the children a rhyming play which they would learn off by heart, make sets and costumes for and perform before school started again.

She wrote cryptic clues for treasure hunts held at each birthday, which was pretty much a monthly gig for the large family. She wrote rhyming poems for each of their parties. Nonsense poems inspired by the world around her. There were twists on the carpool; finger food took a sinister turn.

When one day her husband put his feet up on the hearth, Watson said: ‘‘Kevin! You need new slippers.’’

And right there the series was hatched. which won the Gaelyn Gordon Award for a Much-Loved Book in 2000, was followed by

(winner of the 2002 Children’s Choice Award), and finally

The original story was by far the most popular, and has more than 220,000 copies in print. It has been sold in hardback, paperback, as an enlarged edition for classroom use, and in foreign language editions.

The paperback edition has been reprinted 29 times since its publicatio­n in 1989. The four other titles between them make up a further 220,000 books.

The series has certainly shown longevity – not many New Zealand children’s books remain in print for 30 years, according to Scholastic, which has a bumper hardback treasury of all five titles scheduled for publicatio­n in 2022.

Scholastic, her longtime publisher, said the secret to her success was that she’d tapped into something that was very real. It was a quiet look into someone else’s life. People could recognise themselves in the story.

Publisher Lynette Evans said the company had been ‘‘very touched by the outpouring of love from Joy’s many fans to our Facebook post, which reached over 250,000 people. The hundreds of comments left by readers reinforce how beloved her books are’’.

Watson was most chuffed with her Children’s Choice Award. If children voted for it, then that was all right by her. It was always about the children, eldest daughter Liz O’Connor says. ‘‘She was able to enter the mind of a child. She really understood them.’’

Having Grandpa as the main protagonis­t was a way to include her

Can it be fixed?

This year, as part of the IRD’s business transforma­tion, more amendments to the Child Support Act were led by Revenue Minister David Parker. This included a further relaxing of penalties, a time limit on backdated child support, and earlier deductions of payments from employers.

In 2019, Inland Revenue interviewe­d 21 paying and seven receiving parents about husband, who was often away at work, says O’Connor. Watson wanted him to share in her success in a very visible way.

Occasional­ly, he would come up with ideas for Grandpa’s next adventure, once suggesting there was potential for a story about him searching for some old shorts.

By the time the Grandpa books came out, her own children were mostly grown up. She took great pleasure in being invited to read in schools, sometimes accompanie­d by Kevin wearing those tatty slippers for maximum effect. the effects of decreasing penalties. Fletcher and Henaghan both describe the changes as tweaks. ‘‘There’s not a lot in there,’’ says Henaghan. ‘‘It’s still all about the Government getting their money back, and doesn’t say anything about helping the children.’’

In a statement, Parker said the amendments were to support IRD’s business transforma­tion and simplify

She would often get a list of the children’s names before the class visit so she could write a rhyme using each child’s name.

Watson wrote 15 books in total. She and Kevin wrote a musical together, which was performed in local schools.

Her nine children, 28 grandchild­ren and 10 great-grandchild­ren have boxes of unpublishe­d short stories and journals she wrote over the years. A treasure trove of joy.

The Alzheimer’s that began a decade processes. Fundamenta­l changes had not been considered.

In an interview, Social Developmen­t Minister Carmel Sepuloni says she understand­s how difficult life can be for single parents. She agrees the child support pass-on policy is discrimina­tory and says she’s working to have it changed. It’s complex, she says, because it crosses two department­s – IRD and Work back started to rob Watson of her beloved words a year ago.

O’Connor would often recite rhymes to her mother, telling her afterwards, ‘‘You wrote that, Mum,’’ to which Watson would say ‘‘Did I? They’re really good!’’

As her Alzheimer’s took a tighter grip, she was unable to read her stories in the classroom as she’d loved to do over the years.

She did go along to her greatgrand­son’s class, though, and listened as the teacher read and Income – with competing IT systems and policies. She’s unwilling to put a time frame on the legislativ­e change required to end the policy.

‘‘I can say hand on heart that this is something I’m committed to doing,’’ she says. ‘‘It is because it’s so complicate­d, but that doesn’t mean we’ve been stagnant on effecting change for sole parents.’’

A Working for Families review is

Those familiar words, those ‘‘old slippers, with the stitching undone’’. When the teacher had finished reading, Watson remarked: ‘‘Do you know, that’s the best book I’ve ever heard.’’ – under way, and Sepuloni says she will raise the issue of unpaid child support being automatica­lly counted as income.

Other Government initiative­s to help single parents and children include reinstatin­g the training incentive allowance and repealing benefit sanctions like the subsequent-child policy and the Section 70a sanction for solo mums who do not name a child’s father.

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 ?? Book covers: SCHOLASTIC NZ ?? Joy Watson with two of her great-grandsons and, right, as a young dental nurse. Her copies, and the books are still in print 30 years after their first publicatio­n. series has sold hundreds of thousands of
Book covers: SCHOLASTIC NZ Joy Watson with two of her great-grandsons and, right, as a young dental nurse. Her copies, and the books are still in print 30 years after their first publicatio­n. series has sold hundreds of thousands of
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