So happy to see my book amongst this FAB selection!
So happy to see my book amongst this FAB selection!
So excited to learn that A Climate in Chaos has been shortlisted for the @ALCS_UK Educational Writers’ Award nestling amongst a fantastic selection… đ
I couldn’t have made this book without help from Dr James G Dyke, Dr Huw Lewis Jones,  Liza Miller, Sophie Stericker, Namishka Doshi, Alison Eldred, Arena Illustration and of course my publisher Wren and Rook.
Thank you all.
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Now online â an occasional place to purchase Neal’s artworks and other sundry â Neal’s Store!
Hugely grateful to the Association for Science Education for shortlisting ‘A Climate in Chaos’ for their Book of the Year awards!
My letter from lockdown written for the Childrens Bookshow.






‘A Climate in Chaos’ is published this week. Here’s a short film explaining a bit about the book…
A Climate in Chaos is published by  Wren and Rook
Home schoolers! On Wednesday Iâm going to read my book âA Planet Full of Plasticâ on YouTube. The film will go up 11am GMT and remain for 24 hours to let folk around the world watch it.
link to my YouTube here
See you soon, thanks Neal
I’m very proud to have my work on show at Seven Stories in Newcastle at the moment, as part of Drawing Words, a travelling exhibition showcasing work from 10 various illustrators from the U.K.

Preparatory artworks from Stanley’s Stick. Photo by Courtney Huck
Journalist student Courtney Huck wrote a short piece about the exhibition below…
Drawing Words, an exhibition currently being featured by Seven Stories, differs from past exhibits shown by the Childrenâs Book Museum by encouraging children to locate their inner illustrator.
The exhibition features multiple activity spaces resembling a pop-up book. Children can easily move or crawl between different âworlds.â In each space, children are encouraged to create a drawing relating to that specific story.Â
Curated by the Childrenâs Laurate, Lauren Child, the traveling exhibition showcases work from 10 various illustrators from the U.K., including Neal Layton, who received his BA in Graphic Design in Newcastle.Â
The traveling section of the exhibit focuses on the illustratorsâ published works and includes a short quote from each artist about where they find their inspiration. Exclusively for the exhibition at Seven Stories, the museum collaborated with Cumbria-based artist Hannah Fox to incorporate the playscape activity centers along with original drawings from the illustrators.Â
Layton selected illustrations from âStanleyâs Stick,â and decided with Seven Stories to show âworking drawings from that book, alongside finished illustrations, so children might better understand the process of making a book.âÂ
He commented that, âit almost feels like Iâm giving something back after all these years.âÂ
While Drawing Words has seen visitorâs enjoyment of the space, operations manager Jayne Nicholson admits she had to take some time to wrap her head around the more âorganic natureâ of the exhibit. Nicholson said the display is all about exploring and children discovering what they can do at different stations, even if that means coloring on the walls.Â
âAt first we were alarmed because itâs an exhibition,â Nicholson said. âBut thatâs where more of the âorganic feelâ comes in. We wouldnât expect that upstairs in Elmer because itâs very precious artwork, so itâs a different vibe going on.âÂ
Nicholson said story catchers are imperative in facilitating the interpretations that comes across for each collection.Â
Charlotte Brumby, a nine-year story catcher, said Drawing Words has been different than other showcases sheâs worked with because of its focus on children drawing, whereas most other exhibits at Seven Stories encourage parents to read books to their children. Brumby said âwhen Iâve taken school groups through, there have been several that really loved the drawing aspect and they got really into it. Theyâve clearly been inspired by the works and the words around them.âÂ