World Book Day: Wollaston horse detective is best in class
- Published
Children at a primary school had an unusual visitor to their World Book Day assembly - a horse.
Cody joined a sheepdog called Tess and Natasha Fountain, an author, to meet the youngsters at Wollaston Primary in Northamptonshire.
Cody and Tess investigate a crime together in Ms Fountain's book.
World Book Day has been going in the UK since 1997 and aims to encourage young people to develop a lifelong love of reading.
Natasha Fountain, who owns Cody, was pretty sure he would cope well with visiting a school, but he got a chance to practise his entrance.
She said: "We brought him on Monday - I was expecting to go through a door from the outside to the inside [of the assembly hall], but I had to walk him down a corridor. As I thought he would be, he was amazing."
The idea for the book came from Ms Fountain's experience as a PCSO [Police Community Support Officer], when she was allowed to patrol on Cody.
"So, for three years, we patrolled, and that gave me an idea of a horse investigating crime," she said.
World Book Day has become famous, or possibly infamous, for requiring children to dress up in the costumes of their favourite fictional characters, but Wollaston Primary took a different direction this year.
Kate Bryan, the teacher in charge of reading at the school, said: "We just felt this year, with the cost of living, rather than put pressure on families to dress up, we would just come in our pyjamas."
Among those donning the nightwear were the head boy and girl, Darwin and Willow.
Willow said: "I just love the topic of reading. You can go into different worlds in your head and you can zone out from everything that's going on."
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