From Lewis Carroll’s Wonderland to JRR Tolkien’s Middle-earth, CS Lewis’s Narnia and the parallel universes of Philip Pullman’s His Dark Materials, Oxford has played host to some of the UK’s most enduring literary creations. Now a £2.5m donation from an anonymous private benefactor means the first steps have been taken towards the creation of a museum dedicated to storytelling in the city.
Children will be able to listen to stories at the museum, to “walk through” them, to create stories of their own and to “open windows and go through doorways into other worlds”, according to the team behind the museum, described as a cathedral to the children’s story by trustee and children’s publisher David Fickling.
“Dreams do come true: we are absolutely delighted to have a real home at last,” said the museum’s director Kim Pickin. “Rochester House has its roots in the Victorian era, when Oxford began producing children’s stories that are known and loved across the world. Lewis Carroll himself would have known the building.” Spokesperson Cath Nightingale said the donor wished to remain anonymous.
The museum’s team is now planning a feasibility study to establish how to create the Story Museum, and is also putting together a “major public campaign” for 2010 to raise the £11m it needs if it is to open by 2014, in time for Oxford’s bid to become Unesco’s World Book Capital that year.