Charlotte Mason-Curl built a community of 26,000 parents around one lightbulb moment: that gifting doesn’t have to mean landfill. Now she’s written a children’s book to prove it, printed on paper with a story of its own.
Living just a few miles from Burneside Mill, Charlotte can cycle to the printer that produces her books. The proximity, physical, philosophical, and deeply local, turns out to be the whole point.
Her debut picture book, Elf Chloe’s Surprise, was published in June 2026. It is a rhyming read-aloud for children aged two to five, following an elf who discovers something troubling about the toys her workshop keeps making, and decides to do something about it. The story tackles toy waste, pre-loved gifts, and the idea that even the smallest voice can change things. It is also, in a very specific sense, a product of its landscape.
The special edition is printed on Vanguard, a paper made from recycled fibre supplied by James Cropper. It was printed by Titus Wilson, just down the road. In fact, Charlotte picked up the first copies herself.
“It feels really nice doing something with your local community,” she says. “Burneside is only a few miles from where I live. That matters to me.”