About Phil

Ambassadorhips

Dad’s Read

Phil is an ambassador for the Dad’s Read campaign for the Libraries of South Australia. For more information click here.

“Be their reading legend. Reading just
10 minutes each day makes a difference”

Research confirms reading to children just 10 minutes each day strengthens literacy, models positive behaviour, and builds children’s self esteem about reading (especially for boys). Dads Read encourages fathers to invest in their child’s future by choosing to read to them each day.

Watch Phil Cummings read Boom Bah here. This is a great example how to share great stories with your children and shows that it can be more than just reading a book!

Raising Literacy Australia

Phil is also an ambassador for Raising Literacy Australia formerly know as the Little Big Book Club. Their vision is to enrich Australian lives and build communities through literacy with a mission to build sustainable, high quality and accessible programs which educate and encourage individuals, families and the broader community. The outcome is to support effective change in practices enabling Australians to achieve lifelong learning, improved life chances and the ability to participate in society.

Follow these links to find out more:

http://www.thelittlebigbookclub.com.au/our-ambassadors

http://www.thelittlebigbookclub.com.au/titles/be-brave-pink-piglet

http://www.thelittlebigbookclub.com.au/

Premier’s Reading Challenge

Phil has been an ambassador for the Premier’s Reading Challenge in South Australia since its inception. Click here to find out more.

Bio

Phil Cummings was born in the small seaside town of Port Broughton in South Australia. He is the youngest of eight children with four brothers and three sisters. Life as a kid for Phil was a fabulous adventure. He was on a farm for the first seven years of his life. When his family left the farm they moved to the mid north of South Australia to a railway town called Peterborough. His older brothers worked on the steam trains. The windows in his house would rattle constantly as the trains rumbled through the rail yards. When Phil left school he worked in a local garage, in the abattoirs and played sport constantly until he left to attend teachers’ college.

Phil’s interest in writing began with poetry and writing songs. With the beginning of teacher training, Phil was exposed to a great deal of children’s literature, particularly picture books. Phil decided to sit down and write one! He mistakenly believed it would not be difficult at all! His work was rejected time and time again but, having the writing bug, he kept going. He soon learnt that writing for children was a lot harder than he ever imagined. Seven years after his first attempts, Phil had a book published.
Goodness Gracious!– illustrated by Craig Smith – was published by Omnibus Books in 1989. and in the U.S. in 1990. 

Here are some questions and answers from Phil himself!

What are your nicknames?

At school my nickname was Cummo and am still called that by my friends from my hometown. But my more commonly used nickname is Seagull. This name has survived from the days when I played cricket and would swoop on the food scraps at the tea break because I would often not have a proper lunch before leaving home and would be starving by mid afternoon. I remember coming into bowl once and whole team suddenly started flapping their arms furiously before erupting into a chorus of squawking. It took me quite a while to pull myself together so that I could keep playing. The umpire and batsmen were not impressed!

What song always gets you dancing?

If you ever saw me dance you would hope that they didn’t play any song that made get up and embarrass myself. I love music and listening to it is one of my favourite pastimes. I love the music from the late sixties and seventies. It’s hard for me to pick a favourite artist. I love so many different kinds of music. But just to give you an idea of my musical taste. I love Van Morrison, Ry Cooder, Eric Clapton, Joe Cocker, J.J Cale, Sting, Dire Straits, Pink Floyd, B.B. King, Jackson Browne, Neil Young, The Rolling Stones and so on.

Do you have any pets?

We had a blonde border collie called Misty and when she died at the age of fifteen we got another dog; a Jack Russell cross called Daisy. Misty was  the one pet in our house that played a big part in my life. A beautiful and unusual sandy coloured dog with a white chest, she had , like most family pets, many endearing qualities. She slept beneath my desk when I wrote; great company for me, particularly in the early hours of the morning when the rest of the family was fast asleep. She loved to chase a ball. Daisy is more  bossy than Misty.  She loves riding in the car with the only problem being she demands, and usually gets to sit in the front seat!

Daisy reading one if my books, Winter’s Blanket, with me.

What were your favourite subjects at school?

My favourite subject was history!

How did you spend your summer holidays as a kid?

We lived in a very small town and had a farm until I was about eight or nine years old. I have a few treasured memories of those days – Hunting for tadpoles in the dam, riding the tractor with my dad, being left in a tall field of wheat by my older brothers, being in an army with the Kelly boys from across the road, playing in the sandhills near the farm, climbing what seemed like a mountain ( a hill a short walk from our home) and looking out over the countryside, finding snake skins and sheep skulls and hiding them in a hollow tree, building cubby houses with rope bridges in two enormous pepper trees in our back paddock. A great life!
My novel Danny Allen was here is based on those memories.

What are some of your favourite books?

The Bridge to Terabithia I have read this one many times. The James Herriot books. I love animals and the characters in these stories were wonderful. The Hobbit and To Kill a Mockingbird both left a lasting impression on me.

What are some of your favourite meals?

Steak, pasta, fresh salad, home made bread and for dessert – chocolate cake and ice cream.

If you could travel to any place in the world where would you go?

Africa.

What words would you use to describe yourself?

I would hope that people would find me easy-going, down to earth with a sense of humour.

What is your favourite room in the house and why?

My study, because I am surrounded by a comfortable mess of papers, books, photos, old records, guitars and loads of memorabilia!

What skill do you wish you had?

I’d love to be able to play guitar like Eric Clapton.

Who or what inspires you?

A Determination to succeed and self belief on any level. The story of Nelson Mandella inspires me. 

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