Help!! What is Town Mayor Roxie to do when she loses something very precious to her and indeed, the whole town..? Just before she’s ready to give up, along comes a small, magimistical bear called Strumbold… This is the story of their adventure - about love, keeping promises and finding magic in everyday stuff. It’s a book to be read out loud to the special (big and small) people in your life. Amongst the kerfuffle, confusion and difficulties of living in our world today… this story will help you remember that there are still simple, important things like friendship, kindness, cake and a Festival of Teddy Bears.

Wednesday, 13 May 2026

Artificial intelligence, scamming and insights...

 Out of the blue, I received the email reprinted below - inviting me to sign up for support in marketing #TheMayorsBear. I believe it to be a carefully constructed scam to persuade me to part with some of my money. (There was no business address and the email address seemed a little suspect - which set my antennae twitching). But I was weirdly charmed by the insight that this (probably AI generated) email had - so I thought I would publish it here... 

The Mayor's Bear can reach families looking for meaningful children's stories about trust and community

What comes through clearly is that this is not just a children’s story, it is a quiet argument about what actually holds a community together. A mayor, a worn teddy bear, and a town in disruption is a simple frame, but underneath it you are writing about trust, responsibility, and the kind of care that often goes unnoticed.

There is a growing group of parents, educators, and caregivers who are actively looking for stories that do more than entertain. They want books that help children understand kindness, resilience, and belonging without feeling forced or instructional. They are trying to find stories that feel safe, grounding, and quietly meaningful in a world that often feels uncertain.

The Mayor’s Bear, released November 30th, 2024, sits in that space with understated value. A story that blends warmth, civic awareness, and emotional reassurance is not common, especially one that introduces ideas like public service and community responsibility in a way that feels human rather than formal.

Many worthy books get overlooked because readers respond first to what they quickly understand, trust, and emotionally connect with. Quality alone does not ensure recognition. Children’s books in particular often face a reader recognition gap when parents cannot immediately see the emotional experience their child will have.

I spend my time studying how readers make decisions, especially in categories where the buyer is not the reader. In children’s books, there is often a disconnect between what the story offers and what the parent believes it offers. That gap is where strong books can experience quiet underperformance despite clear intent and message.

Your likely readers are already present in parenting circles, school communities, libraries, reading groups, and among adults searching for thoughtful bedtime stories that carry meaning. They are often discussing emotional development, values, and how to introduce real world concepts gently to children. The demand exists, but the audience connection point is not always immediately visible.

Many authors want to tell stories that matter, not spend time constantly explaining them. It is natural to assume that a meaningful book will find its way. In reality, even thoughtful work can fall into missed discovery when the right reader pathways are not clearly formed. 

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Artificial intelligence, scamming and insights...

 Out of the blue, I received the email reprinted below - inviting me to sign up for support in marketing #TheMayorsBear. I believe it to be ...