

Among her many awards are the Smarties Prize, the Guardian Children's Fiction Award and Blue Peter's People's Choice Award. Jacqueline Wilson has sold over 20 million books in the UK and has been awarded an OBE for services to literacy in schools.

Tessa Peake-Jones reads Dustbin Baby, a compelling listen for older children about one girl's search for her real family. She even wonders if it might be possible to find her.Perhaps if April can achieve her ambition, she will feel strong enough to shake off the nicknames - and the memories of some awful times in her past - for ever. There have been lots of people she's called Mum, and now she lives with Marion, but April wishes she could remember her birth mother. When she turns 14, April decides that she must find out who she really is - where she came from and, most importantly, who her real mother is. That reminds her of how she started out in life: abandoned in a rubbish bin. Her worst nickname of all, though, is Dustbin Baby. The book was adapted into a television film in 2008 by the BBC. After a blazing row with her foster mother, she goes in search of her past. It focuses on April, a fourteen-year-old girl who was abandoned by her mother in a dustbin when she was only a few minutes old. April has lots of nicknames: there's April Showers, because she's always crying, and April Fool, because of when her birthday falls. Dustbin Baby is a children's novel by Jacqueline Wilson.
