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HERE BE DRAGONS: Edith Cohn

11/9/2014

 
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The Kidlit Interview Series
Children's literature encompasses some of the most imaginative, entertaining, well-written fiction out there, so every Tuesday I shine a spotlight on it by interviewing a different middle-grade author. Come back regularly to find writers answering crucial questions like who they'd want riding alongside come the zombie apocalypse...
This week's dragon is Edith Cohn, who was born and raised in North Carolina where she grew up exploring the unique beaches of the Outer Banks. She currently lives in the coyote-filled hills of Los Angeles with her husband and her dog. All of these things provided inspiration for her debut middle grade novel, Spirit's Key, which is out this week!

Spirit's Key is a mystery about a twelve-year-old girl named Spirit who works with the ghost of her pet dog to solve a crime on a remote island filled with magic house keys, wild dogs and superstitious characters. 
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THE HERE BE DRAGONS 8 KILLER QUESTIONS
1. Uh oh, it’s the zombie apocalypse. Which author (living or dead) do you want riding shotgun? 

I'm going to say E.L. Konigsburg (author of From the Mixed Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler and The View from Saturday) because one of my favorite quotes from her books is: “There were times in school when a person had to do things fast, cheap, and without character.”  The zombie apocalypse seems like a time when those skills might come in handy.

2. Look, I got a time machine on eBay! Where do you want to go? (Said time machine may possibly malfunction and leave you there. Possibly. It was *very* cheap.)

I'm super happy in the present. So I wouldn't get inside that old, rusty time machine. I might miss something exciting happening right now!

3. What’s your favourite thing about writing for kids? 

I think it's going to be getting letters from kids. I don't know for sure though, because I haven't gotten any letters yet. SO if you know any kids...hint, hint.

4. A witch has cast a spell on you (sorry about that) and you’ve woken up as a character in a children’s book – what’s your special talent or power? 

Ooooh, it would definitely be the ability to see ghost dogs and read the future just like Spirit in my book SPIRIT'S KEY.

5. What’s the scariest or strangest thing you’ve ever done?

I did research for a new book I'm working on, and it required me to do the scariest and strangest thing I've ever done! But it's top secret. I can't tell you. I have a superstition about talking too much about the books I'm working on until they are completed. I know, I'm a terrible tease.

6. What’s something you wish you’d known about writing when you started out? What’s something you wish you’d known about publishing?

Well, thank god no one told me how long it would take! Though it would have been nice to know I was actually going to get there. But really, I've learned the joy of writing is in the process not the outcome, and I don't think I could have come to that conclusion without being in the dark. So my answer is, I don't wish I'd known anything before I knew it.

7. What would your daemon be?

A bald eagle because the eagle is my favorite animal in SPIRIT'S KEY. The eagle acts as a compass and brings messages from the Greats, Spirit's ancestors.

8. My books don’t have dragons, but they do have... ghost dogs! And magic house keys that can tell the future. ;)

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Oh what a stunning cover! *swoons* Find out more about Edith and her books on her website, Facebook page, Goodreads, and chat to her on Twitter.


Come back next Tuesday for the Here Be Dragons interview with Pip Jones, author of Squishy Mcfluff, The Invisible Cat!

HERE BE DRAGONS : Abi Elphinstone

3/9/2014

 
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The Kidlit Interview Series

Children's literature encompasses some of the most imaginative, entertaining, well-written fiction out there, so every Tuesday I shine a spotlight on it by interviewing a different middle-grade author. Come back regularly to find writers answering crucial questions like who they'd want riding alongside come the zombie apocalypse...
This week's honorary dragon is the very adventurous (one word: cliff-jumping O_O) Abi Elphinstone, who grew up in Scotland where she spent most of her childhood building dens, hiding in tree houses and running wild across highland glens. After being coaxed out of her tree house, she studied English at Bristol University then worked as a teacher in Tanzania, Berkshire and London. 

Oracle Bones is her debut novel for 9-12 years, out Spring 2015 from Simon and Schuster. "Think Romany gypsies, a wildcat called Gryff and an ancient Bone Murmur foretelling dark events…" The sequel, Soul Splinter, will follow in 2016. 

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THE HERE BE DRAGONS 8 KILLER QUESTIONS

1) Uh oh, it’s the zombie apocalypse. Which author (living or dead) do you want riding shotgun?

Definitely Eoin Colfer. He'd make the zombies laugh then we could all hang out and chat about leprechauns. Zombies are kind of vicious, too, and Eoin Colfer is about as kind as it gets. I met him once at the Cheltenham Literary Festival and asked him to read an early draft of Oracle Bones. He gave me a piece of invaluable advice and it transformed the book. So yeah, Eoin Colfer would be up there riding shotgun. Him or Philip Ardagh – he’s bigger than the BFG (with a frightening beard to boot) so I reckon I’d stand a good chance against the zombies with him by my side.

2) Look, I got a time machine on eBay! Where do you want to go? (Said time machine may possibly malfunction and leave you there. Possibly. It was *very* cheap.)

I’d like to go to Svalbard with Lyra Silvertongue. I’ve always wanted to see the Northern Lights and I’d love to ride Iorek Byrnison across the ice plains. Then I’d hitch a ride in Lee Scoresby’s hot air balloon, and if the time machine didn’t mind waiting I’d love to fly alongside Serafina Pekkala and her witches. Then, if the malfunctioning time machine wanted to swing by Narnia on the way home, I’d be cool with that, too. Always fancied a milkshake with Aslan in Cair Paravel.

3) What’s your favourite thing about writing for kids?

I love letting my imagination go. I had a string of ‘sensible’ jobs before I committed to writing, blogging, and teaching, and I had to button my imagination in tight. Now it runs wild. Even I find it hard to keep up. I also love the writing process – when I’m typing away and I’m completely oblivious to what’s going on around me. I’m right there with my characters – in another world, another place, another story. That’s cool.

4) A witch has cast a spell on you (sorry about that) and you’ve woken up as a character in a children’s book – what’s your special talent or power?

Flying. Always flying. I was hang-gliding over Rio De Janeiro the day my book deal was announced. It was the BEST. DAY. EVER. (See photo!) If I could fly right now, I’d soar over a snow-capped mountain then dip down to touch the sparkling sea.
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5) What’s the scariest or strangest thing you’ve ever done?

A few weeks ago, as book research for Soul Splinter, I abseiled 75m into a jungle cave in Brazil, snorkelled the 80m-deep lake inside the cave which was home to the world’s biggest stalagmites, then rappelled back up again. (See photo below!) That got the heart going a bit. And I love cliff jumping. Though the 30ft cliff jump I did last summer into a river in the Dordogne was pretty scary. That one wasn’t book research – that was me being egged on by my younger (braver) siblings. And the strangest thing I’ve done? Once I danced a Scottish jig in a gondola in Venice while my friend played the bagpipes. True story.

6) What’s something you wish you’d known about writing when you started out?

I wish someone had told me that it’s okay to take time to research and ‘create’ your story before writing. I used to think that I should dive into the writing then I’d see immediate results. But one of the most important things I’ve learnt is that the thinking time before writing (the researching, the planning, the mulling of ideas) is just as important as the writing. Sometimes I find that hard because I’m dyslexic and I struggle with organising my ideas into coherent patterns. My brain is usually all over the place at the start of a book and I get so exasperated with myself. But even the muddled thinking that you think is just going round in circles and meeting with dead ends – that counts. It all breathes life into the story.

7) What would your daemon be?

AMAZING QUESTION (since Pantalaimon is one of my favourite characters and a very good friend of mine is nicknamed after Pantalaimon). My daemon would be a snow leopard. They’re wise, patient and secretive; everything I’m not. So they’d help me out. In Oracle Bones my main character, Moll, has a wildcat called Gryff. He’s the closest thing she has to a daemon.

8) My books don’t have dragons, but they do have...  witchdoctors, tree ghouls, skinshifters, gothslitters – and a wildcat with attitude.
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Note to self: choose Abi as your zombie apocalypse partner-in-crime. When Abi's not writing, teaching and doing star jumps in random places, she runs a ‘mad about children’s books’ blog and also tweets.

Come back next Tuesday for the Here Be Dragons interview with 
Edith Cohn, author of Spirit's Key!
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    Tatum Flynn is the author of devilish MG fantasies The D'Evil Diaries and Hell's Belles (Orchard/ Hachette Kids), and several unfinished To Do lists.

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