Tag Archives: Stories

6 December: Alexia Casale

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Joining us today is the lovely Alexia Casale!

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Photo: Art by LAW

A British-American citizen of Italian heritage, Alexia is an author, writing consultant and editor. She also teaches English Literature and Writing.  After an MA in Social & Political Sciences (Psychology major) then MPhil in Educational Psychology & Technology, both at Cambridge University, she took a break from academia and moved to New York. There she worked on a Tony-award-winning Broadway show before returning to England to complete a PhD and teaching qualification to become a Fellow of the Higher Education Academy. In between, she worked as a West End script-critic, box-office manager for a music festival and executive editor of a human rights journal.  Her debut novel, The Bone Dragon, was shortlisted for the Waterstones Children’s Book Prize and the Jugendliteraturpreis, and long-listed for the Branford Boase Award. It was also a Book of the Year for the Financial Times and Independent. Her second book, House of Windows is a ‘Reading Well for Young People: Shelf-help‘ title.

Name three things on your Christmas list this year!  Bubble bath. Books. Piping nozzles.

Christmas is a time of family traditions – what are your best (or worst!) family traditions? 21st December, Winter Solstice, is an important family day for us, centred around decorating our Christmas Tree with ornaments from around the world. Most of the rest of our traditions centre around food – well, we are an Italian/Jewishwhitechristmas household.

What is your favourite story to read at Christmas? It’s probably more about Christmas movies for me – all the old musicals I grew up watching with my grandparents and
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(I LOVE the old musicals – can’t have Christmas without them!)

If you could have Christmas dinner with anyone (alive today or person from history) who would it be ? There is no way I can pick… I’d love to have a meal’s worth of time to talk to Margaret Attwood or Barbara Kingsolver. People from history… Shakespeare would be an interesting companion for a meal, surely! Diana Wynne Jones is a more recent writer I would love to have fangirled over – before I hopefully calmed down and asked some semi-intelligent questions about craft. Ditto Josephine Tey. But ask me tomorrow and it’ll be someone else. Probably still a writer, though. Or people from history I’m considering writing about – oh, the opportunity to get the inside scoop!

Wonderful fantastical figures and magical creatures are synonymous with Christmas and come to life at this time of year. In The Bone Dragon, why did you choosdownloade a dragon as Evie’s magical companion? The Bone Dragon is very much about the line between truth and fiction… and there’s such a rich history of Dragons in fiction, it gave me a lot to play with: referencing other books and stories helped me keep the reader guessing about what sort of dragon Evie’s Dragon is… I purposefully wanted to keep the ground shifting, one minute making it seem like the Dragon falls under the mentor archetype, then ‘revealing’ it as more ‘shadow-like, then confusing everything so the only conclusion seems that the Dragon plays a ‘shapeshifter’ role. But I can’t lie – if I could have a magical companion, it would probably be a Dragon. The ‘able to breath fire’ thing is a major selling point.

You’ve spoken in the past about the importance of daydreams in generating wonderful ideas for writing. What would your ideal Christmas daydream be? A transporter pad so I could go anywhere in the world without having to do too much journeying (I’m a bit of a ‘It IS the destination, not the journey’ sort of girl when we’re talking literal travel) and this would mean I could see all my favourite people, all the time – even just popping into writer friends’ places for a 5 minute cuppa to solve a plot problem. Also I would get a disintegrator weapon – no body, no murder. Nuff said with politics the way they are. See why I like Dragons?

winter-1027822_1920Reader’s question from students at Warden Park Secondary Academy: what do you do if you get stuck when you’re writing? First, I try to figure out why I’m stuck. Sometimes it’s because I need a break… but usually it’s because I don’t know what happens next: maybe I know what follows plot-wise but somehow I don’t know what little steps and pieces of dialogue take the story from where it is to the ‘next big step forwards’. The answer almost always lies with the characters: maybe I’ve made someone act out of character so it all feels wrong… or maybe I’ve got an idea that just won’t work because the character would never do the thing I want him/her to do next. The solution is to go back to who the characters are and what motivates them… and then figure out how to change the context and situation so that it is not just believable but inevitable for them to carry out the plot I’ve got in mind. So when I’m struck I try to recognise that it’s my way of telling myself I need to think a bit more carefully, plan a little more, and respect who my characters are as if they were real people.

(Really great advice – thank you.)

Turkey or goose? Goose? YUCK! Turkey all the way.

Real or fake tree? Real. Watered carefully for 3-4 weeks. Bliss and beauty.

Mince pies or Christmas pudding? Mince pies.

Stockings – end of the bed or over the fireplace? Under the tree! It’s all about the tree in our house.

Christmas Eve or New Year’s Eve? Depends who I’m seeing when. Also when we eat the trifle.

Thank you so much for participating! Have a very Happy Christmas.

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Find out more about Alexia on Twitter at @AlexiaCasale or via her websites: www.alexiacasale.co.uk and www.thebonedragon.com.

 

 

5 December: Joshua Seigal

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Introducing Joshua Seigal, children’s poet!

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Joshua Seigal is an award-winning poet, performer and educator. He has worked in hundreds of schools, nurseries, libraries, theatres and festivals around the country, and his poems have been published in numerous anthologies.  Joshua writes for adults as well as children, regularly standing up at comedy, spoken word and variety nights. Michael Rosen described Joshua’s poems in I Don’t Like Poetry  as magic!

Name three things on your Christmas list this year! Hmm, interesting. I don’t really have Christmas lists. I was brought up Jewish so we didn’t really do Christmas. Nowadays I decide what to get people on the spur of the moment. Usually it’s edible (or drinkable).

Christmas is a time of family traditions – what are your best (or worst!) family traditions? The annual family argument is quite traditional, isn’t it? Another good one involves dressing my dog up as Santa. He is a Lhasa Apso and is very fluffy, so he has a beard just like Santa.

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What is your favourite story to read at Christmas? Talking Turkeys by Benjamin Zephaniah.

If you could have Christmas dinner with anyone (alive today or person from history) who would it be? Donald Trump. Just joking! It would have to be my family. But not Uncle Nigel. Uncle Nigel is not invited.

(Poor Uncle Nigel!!)

You write amazing poetry for children! If you were to write a festive Christmas poem for children what would it be about? Thank you very much! I wrote one recently about a kid who falls in love with the fairy on top of the Christmas tree. It might also be fun to write one about the ten worst things to find in a Christmas stocking.

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I Don’t Like Poetry is described as helping even the most reluctant poem reader enjoy it more. Did you enjoy poetry as a child and how did you get into writing poems? I liked it a bit, I would say. I enjoyed writing rhyming poems as a child, and as a teenager I wrote some awful, self-indulgent, pseudo-intellectual stuff. But I was never very into reading poetry. I started to read more poems in order to become a better writer. I also found writing poetry, and engaging in intricate word play, was a good way of keeping the black dog of depression at bay.

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Reader’s question from Adam aged 10, Great Walstead School: you write lots of funny and silly poems. Where do you get your ideas from and do you laugh while you’re writing them? Great question. I get ideas from lots of places, but the most important ingredients are within me: my five senses, and my imagination. I do sometimes laugh when I write them; when that happens I know it is going to be a good poem!

 

Turkey or goose? Neither. A nut roast for me.

Real or fake tree? Real.

Mince pies or Christmas pudding? I hate both! Bah, humbug!

Stockings –  end of the bed or over the fireplace? On my legs.

Christmas Eve or New Year’s Eve? Christmas Eve.

Thank you for taking the time to participate! Have a very Happy Christmas!

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For more information about Joshua Seigal, visit www.joshuaseigal.co.uk and follow him on Twitter @joshuaseigal

 

 

4 December: Sara Grant

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On Day 4, Sara Grant participates in our festive Q & A.sara-grant

Sara Grant writes fantastic stories for children and young adults. Her Magic Trix series is aimed at younger readers, with Chasing Danger being her latest novel for teens. Sara has worked as an editor, is a lecturer at Goldsmiths, has co-created projects to help writers get published and regularly blogs about books. She was born and raised in Washington, Indiana, graduating from Indiana University with degrees in journalism and psychology. Sara later earned a master’s degree in creative and life writing at Goldsmiths. She lives in London and writes full-time.

Name three things on your Christmas list this year! Lots of books, of course! Tickets to see Hamilton the musical. And spending time with my mother, who will travel from the US to spend Christmas with me in London.

Christmas is a time of family traditions – what are your best (or worst!) family traditions? We’ve got a bit of a wacky New Year’s tradition. On New Year’s Eve, if you are in any way, shape, or form related to someone with the last name Murray (my maiden name)…you calculate…you strategize…and you endeavour to be the first to ask ‘the riddle’ – a riddle that has been handed down through the generations and that can only be delivered on the last day of the year. It may seem strange, but it has become a beloved family ritual. I can guarantee I will speak to every member of my family on the last day of the year. The question leads to conversation. I’m not sure if it’s what my grandma intended. Or maybe it was her grandfather who started the tradition. No one knows for sure how it all began. But it keeps a scattered and growing family connected on one day each year. So what’s the riddle: Have you seen the man walking around with as many noses as there are days left in the year?

(What an amazing tradition…I don’t think I can possibly work out the answer!)

What is your favourite story to read at Christmas? There’s not one bo26258306ok I gravitate to again and again. Instead I like to pick a new holiday-themed book to read at Christmas. I met Rachel Cohn and David Levithan at this year’s Cheltenham Literary Festival so I have my signed copy of The Twelve Days of Dash & Lily all ready to read at the holidays!

If you could have Christmas dinner with anyone (alive today or person from history) who would it be? My dad. He passed away in 2014. He was a great man. He served in WWII. He had a song for everything. He was the most positive person I’ve ever met. Even when diagnosed with cancer, he told me it was ‘only a little bit of cancer’ so I wouldn’t worry. He always made the holidays special. I would love to share Christmas dinner with him again.
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You have said that you like to use your fantastic Magic Trix series to encourage children to think of others and, like Trix, act as a fairy godmother by performing random acts of kindness. What random acts random acts of kindness would Trix do at Christmas time? I imagine she’d hand-make her very own holiday cards, using lots of glue and glitter –she’d probably ending up with more glitter on her than on the card. She’d personally deliver her special holiday cards and visit with people who might be sad at Christmas time.1454444664

Your novel Chasing Danger has been described as an explosive action adventure! At Christmas what do you find is the best way to take a break from the action and relax?! Thankfully my life is not as full of peril as my main character Chase’s life. No pirates, or vicious eels, shark attacks or dead bodies in blocks of ice. I like to relax with a bubble bath and a good book!

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Reader’s question from Jamie, Age 11, Great Walstead School: why did you decide to have a female heroine in Chasing DangerThanks for your question, Jamie. When I was a young girl, there weren’t many action stories where girls were the heroes. It’s important to me to give girls great role models – smart, feisty and athletic girls who can catch the baddies. There are too many books, movies, TV shows and video games that portray girls as damsels in distress. I’ve never been that kind of girl – and I know a lot of girls and women like me.

(Chasing Danger reminds me a little of Nancy Drew, but with more edge! I loved the fact that the heroine was a girl!)

Turkey or goose?  Turkey! I love it on Christmas day, but I love the turkey sandwich later that night or the next day even more!

Real or fake tree?  Fake. No pine needles or mess.

Mince pies or Christmas pudding? No contest – mince pies!

Stockings –  end of the bed or over the fireplace? Over the fireplace, if I had one, which I never have. So we’ve always lined up stockings on the couch.

Christmas Eve or New Year’s Eve?  Christmas Eve. It’s my tradition to go to a show in the West End on Christmas Eve. I love the theatre so the tickets are one of my Christmas presents. I’ve never seen a pantomime so I’m taking my mom to a pantomime this year. Oh, no you’re not! Oh, yes, I am!

(I couldn’t agree more about turkey sandwiches!!)

Thank you for participating and have a Happy Christmas!

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Find out more about Sara Grant at www.sara-grant.com and follow her on Twitter @AuthorSaraGrant

3 December: Patricia Forde

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Day 3 of our author calendar.

img_7368-soft-copy-copy-730x410Today we’re featuring the wonderful Patricia Forde, who lives in Galway, in the west of Ireland. She has published three Picture Books, lots of Easy Readers, and in May 2015 she published her first novel The Wordsmith with Little Island. Patricia has written plays and television dramas for children and teenagers as well as writing on both English and Irish language soap operas. She was a primary school teacher and the artistic director of Galway Arts Festival. She lives with her husband, two teenagers,and a dog called Ben. In her spare time, she collects vintage children’s books and reads them late at night.

Name three things on your Christmas list this year! Snow. Tasteful Ornaments for the Tree. (See 2) Dystopian weather. (See 4)

Christmas is a time of family traditions – what are your best (or worst!) family traditions? Worst family tradition: Every year we dress the tree together as a fa16934523_1300x1733mily. I always imagine that we will be like a scene from the Waltons – all peace and harmony. It always ends in civil war.  Usually, because I am the only one who wants classy ornaments…and a little more dignity.  Everyone else wants tinsel.

(Ah ha. The old lets-throw-everything-on-the-tree vs. keeping it simple and sophisticated argument! I’m sure this is echoed up and down the country!!)

7468548d1640257e44b26fc5df79b2f4What is your favourite story to read at Christmas? ‘Twas The Night Before Christmas (which may or may not have been written by Clement Clarke Moore) is a tradition in our house. It calms people down after the Christmas Tree row. (See 3). The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe by C.S Lewis – because of the snow. I intend to add Katherine Rundell’s Wolfwilder this year because of the wolves and well… the snow.

(Twas the Night Before Christmas is my absolute favourite!)

If you could have Christmas dinner with anyone (alive today or person from history) who would it be? I would love to have dinner with J. R.R Tolkien. I adore The Hobbit. I could get him to read a bit aloud as we dress the tree. (See 2) Then we could talk about Galway. He used to come here to the university where he was an external examiner. He loved the west of Ireland. Obviously a man of good taste.

the-wordsmith-coverYour novel The Wordsmith is set in a dystopian world. What would a dystopian Christmas look like to you? It would look very frugal. There would be beetroot, of course and apples. Also carrots.  I’m thinking beetroot crumble with an apple and carrot salsa. Dystopian worlds suffer a lot from bad weather, so there would be snow, which might brighten the thing.

You collect vintage books, if you could have a copy of any vintage book in the world for Christmas which would it be? I would love a first edition of William Blake’s Songs of Innocence and Experience. I love his poetry and the illustrations, and when I’d finished admiring it, it could become my pension.  What’s not to like?

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Reader’s question from children at the Inkpots Writers’ Hut: do you type your work or write by hand? I do both but for volume I type. I write notes by hand and draw little diagrams and the odd map. When it comes to the serious writing – I type, badly, with two fingers.

 

Turkey or goose? Turkey.

Real or fake tree? Real!

Mince pies or Christmas pudding? Both though not together.

Stockings – end of the bed or over the fireplace? Over fireplace.

Christmas Eve or New Year’s Eve? OMG! No contest! Christmas Eve.

 

Thank you for taking part and have a very Happy Christmas! 

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Find out more about Patricia Forde at www.patriciaforde.com and follow her on Twitter @PatriciaForde1

2 December: Gwyneth Rees

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Day 2 of our author Christmas calendar!

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Gwyneth Rees is half Welsh and half English and grew up in Scotland. She studied medicine and qualified as a doctor, working as a child and adolescent psychiatrist before she became a full-time writer. Her bestselling books include the Fairy Dust series, Cosmo and the Magic Sneeze – always huge favourites in the library! Gwyneth’s book The Mum Hunt won the Red House Children’s Book Award. She lives near London with her husband, two young daughters and one noisy cat.

Name three things on your Christmas list this year! A new sofa (might be a bit heavy for Santa to carry but still!), a Terry’s chocolate orange (I always got one of these in my stocking when I was a kid) and a new diary for 2017.

(I always remember the Terry’c Chocolate Orange ad with the Indiana Jones type adventure!!)

Christmas is a time of family traditions – what are your best (or worst!) family traditions? We usually give out family Christmas cards on Christmas Eve and put them up in a specially reserved spot. We buy stuff that never gets eaten – bread sauce, those orange and lemon segment jelly sweets in a round container (they taste disgusting but we always had them at Christmas when I was a kid). We have to have After Eight mints after dinner. We get out all the old decorations my children made from toddler group onwards and look at them all and choose some to go up.

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What is your favourite story to read at Christmas? The Grinch – it’s really funny but also has an important message.

If you could have Christmas dinner with anyone (alive today or person from history) who would it be? I would love to sit down to Christmas dinner with my grandparents as they were when I was a child. I still miss them and think about them loads.

 

(That’s really lovely. It’s amazing how Christmas can bring back so many memories of childhood and the people we share Christmas with.)

You’ve created some wonderful magical characters in your books. If you were to write a Christmas story about one of them, who it would be? I’d write about Cosmo the witch cat having a Christmas adventure with all his friends (and enemies). It would just be a lot of fun to write!

Christmas is a time when family comes together. The Honeymoon Sisters features a family who foster children in the short term. What do you imagine Poppy and Sadie’s Christmas to be like? I imagine their first Christmas together might be a bit different to what either of them have had before. Sadie would bring her own expectations and traditions from her previous family and Poppy will be used to sharing Christmas only with her mum. So they will both have some adjusting to do. But I think they will each be pleasantly surprised by some of each other’s Christmas ideas too.winter-1027822_1920

Reader’s question from students in Year 10 at Warden Park Academy: you write stories featuring lots of fantasy characters; where do you get your inspiration from? A lot of my inspiration comes from real life – mine and other people’s. With fantasy stories I tend to blend real life with imaginary ideas which is great because it lets real people do amazing things that wouldn’t be possible in real life!

 

Turkey or goose?  Turkey

Real or fake tree? Real

Mince pies or Christmas pudding? Both!

Stockings – end of the bed or over the fireplace? Fireplace

Christmas Eve or New Year’s Eve? Christmas Eve is my favourite!

 

Thank you so much for participating and have a very Happy Christmas! 

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Find out more about Gwyneth Rees at www.bloomsbury.com. You can read reviews of Gwyneth’s books at lovereading4kids.co.uk. Follow Gwyneth on Twitter @gwyneth_rees