WHEN I WAS JOE by Keren David

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

When Ty witnesses a stabbing, his own life is in danger from the criminals he's named, and he and his mum have to go into police protection. Ty has a new name, a new look and a cool new image -- life as Joe is good, especially when he gets talent spotted as a potential athletics star, special training from an attractive local celebrity and a lot of female attention. But his mum can't cope with her new life, and the gangsters will stop at nothing to flush them from hiding. Joe's cracking under extreme pressure, and then he meets a girl with dark secrets of her own. This wonderfully gripping and intelligent novel depicts Ty/Joe's confused sense of identity in a moving and funny story that teenage boys and girls will identify with - a remarkable debut from a great new writing talent.

I got this book in the mail two days ago (from the lovely Walker Books!) and I was delighted - I've been reading Keren's blog for a few months now, and reading rave reviews of When I Was Joe on UK blogs around the interwebs.

As always when I start reading a book I've heard great things about, I worried it woouldn't live up to expectation - no one ever wants to read amazing reviews of a book and then pick it up and be disappointed. But I wasn't! When I Was Joe totally lived up to the praise.

This novel was fantastic - unique voice that grips you from the first page, and a highly original concept. I think it'll appeal equally to both boys and girls, from thirteen up (there are themes of violence, self-harm and mild sexual references, but the characters are all around thirteen and fourteen and everything is dealt with tactfully). It's edgy and dark without being too confronting, I think, because of the amount of humour in it.

I think at times the British setting seemed really foreign (they use words like 'chav' and 'slapper' and other things I haven't heard of) and since my only real exposure to British culture was Shaun of the Dead, I sometimes had trouble following (the names of shops I'm not familiar with pulled me out of the story for a second). Ty/Joe is a great narrator, but the entire time you're reading you're wondering - is he good or bad? And what really happened? I think I was slightly frustrated by that.

Once I started reading, I didn't stop (okay, I did. But I had to do my Accounting schoolwork. Then I went back to reading). Before I began reading, it seemed pretty long for a YA that isn't fantasy or paranormal, but I barely noticed how long it was while I was reading. Hopefully reluctant readers won't be turned off by how thick the book is, because it's immensely readable and very exciting.

The start of what's sure to be a brilliant series, and I can't wait for the next book.

You can find the author's blog here: http://wheniwasjoe.blogspot.com/

THE PUZZLE RING by Kate Forsyth - Review & Author Interview

Sunday, February 21, 2010

Book Review: THE PUZZLE RING

Hannah Rose Brown was not quite thirteen years old when she discovered her family was cursed...
It seemed a day like any other day. Yet for twelve year old Hannah Rose Brown, it is the day when her ordinary life is changed forever, a day when she discovers a past full of secrets and a future full of magic.


Hannah lives with her mother, Roz. Her father Robert disappeared soon after she was born, and she and her mother are all alone in the world. Or so Hannah has always believed. Yet one day a letter arrives, addressed to the Viscountess of Fairknowe. Hannah thinks it's a hilarious mistake but the letter upsets her mother who confesses that Hannah’s father was the Viscount of Fairknowe, and the heir to Wintersloe Castle in Scotland.

The letter is from Hannah’s great-grandmother – someone she never knew existed – begging Hannah and her mother to come to Scotland. At first Roz refuses – she had sworn never to return to Wintersloe Castle. But Hannah is determined to go, her curiosity aroused by the letter’s reference to a curse.

Wintersloe Castle is an old house, built near the ruins of a castle and overlooking the waters of Loch Lomond. On the northern wall is a strange gate, built through the hollow trunk of an ancient yew tree. Through the gate, Hannah can see the round hill that rises behind the house, crowned with a blackthorn tree. This is called Fairknowe on the maps, but the locals call it the fairy hill.

Strange things begin to happen. A toad coughs up a round stone with a hole worn through the middle. When Hannah looks through it, the world seems different. She hears a dog howling at night – yet there is no dog at Wintersloe Castle. Shadows seem to stalk her. One stormy day, the toad shows her the way to her father’s old tower room – and Hannah discovers the history of the curse of Wintersloe Castle, which has blighted the family and the house for centuries.

Hannah is determined to break the curse, but to do so she must go back in time to the last tumultuous days of the reign of Mary, Queen of Scots. She must face all sorts of dangers, including being hunted by the evil queen of the Otherworld and being accused of being a witch...


The Puzzle Ring is a fantastically imaginative fantasy novel that I'd recommend to readers between nine and twelve, as well as older readers who don't mind reading books with younger protagonists. I think if I were five or six years younger, this is the kind of book I'd've read over and over again - I'm giving it to my little sister to read, and I'm sure she'll love it.

It's fantastically gripping, and has elements of action and historical fiction. There was a lot going on in The Puzzle Ring - time travel, a curse, magic - but everything was tied together beautifully. At times Hannah was somewhat annoying, but she also had a great attitude and was easy to relate to (and pretty much all the young girls I know have a fantasy of living in their own castle. And grown-ups as well).
I highly recommend The Puzzle Ring for the 9-to-12 crowd, and all lovers of middle grade fantasy, historical fiction and folklore. A truly wonderful read.

Buy The Puzzle Ring on Amazon or The Book Depository.


Author Interview: Kate Forsyth

Steph: Can you tell me a bit about writing THE PUZZLE RING? Was there a specific inspiration behind it?
Kate: When I first read about puzzle rings and their fascinating history I thought at once what a wonderful idea it would make for a quest story. Basically a puzzle ring is a clever invention first made many hundreds of years ago by an Arabian king who was jealous of his young and beautiful wife. On the finger, the ring looks like a band of twisted gold but once you drawn the ring off the finger it falls apart into a number of separate loops, and it is impossible to put back on again unless you know the secret code to the puzzle. As soon as I read the story I thought ‘ah-ha! A search for a broken puzzle ring. What a great idea.’ I’ve always loved puzzles and secret codes and hidden treasures, and so I knew it was the type of story I’d love to write. For a long time it sat in my ideas book, and occasionally I’d ponder WHO would want to find it, and WHY, and WHERE and WHEN I’d set my story ... but I was busy with other books and didn’t try & answer those questions. Until one day, in a cobwebby second-hand book shop, I found an old book entitled ‘The Book of Curses’ which opened, mysteriously, on the story of an ancient Scottish curse that was actually cast against my own family, the Mackenzies, and my mind began to race. ‘Of course! A girl whose family was cursed ....’ After that the book really wrote itself.

Steph: How do you research your novels? Do you do all the research beforehand, or as you write?

Kate: I do an enormous amount of research for all my books, but luckily I love researching. I get very obsessed with everything to do with the book I’m writing, and its no hardship at all to read many enormous thick heavy books with names like ‘Fire Burn: Tales of Witchery’, ‘Mary Stuart’s Scotland’, ‘Folk Tales and Fairy Lore in Gaelic and English’, ‘The Tudor Housewife’, and ‘The New Time Travellers: A Journey to the Frontiers of Physics’ – these are just some of the books I read while writing ‘The Puzzle Ring’. I read and research a great deal before I even start the novel, and then I continue to research the whole time I’m writing. Some books I will read many times over. I usually begin with a very wide focus; for example, I’ll read a lot about the history of Scotland, and then, when I’ve decided that the action set in the past will take place during the time of Mary, Queen of Scots, I’ll read everything I can find about her in particular; and then, when I have narrowed my action down to six months of her life, I’ll read books that deal only with that particular period, for example, ‘Mary, Queen of Scots, and the Murder of Lord Darnley.’ I do a lot of research on the internet, and I order a great many books on my subject, some of them enormously old and valuable. I read up on Scottish cooking and then start cooking the recipes. I read that Queen Mary loved cinnamon, which was prohibitively expensive in her day, and I start making hot cinnamon rolls for my children’s afternoon tea. Sometimes I even begin dressing like my characters (in this case, green velvet skirts and berets) and listening to the music they like (my heroine Hannah loves soul music, and so that was all I listened to for almost 18 months!)

Steph: Is there much of you in Hannah, or your other characters?

Kate: I always get asked this question, and I always think, ‘No, they’re their own people’ – but if I was to really think about it, ‘yes, there must be some of me in there.’ Hannah is strong-willed, determined and loves all things magical – that’s very like me. However, she’s red-haired, left-handed and can sing, which is nothing like me! It’s the same with all my characters – we share some characteristics, and others not at all.

Steph: Is anything in your novels inspired by real life experience?

Kate: A writer takes everything they’ve ever read or seen or thought or experienced, and they turn it, by some mysterious alchemical process, into something completely different. For example, I once cursed a girl ...

Steph: You write for both adults and children - is the writing process very different? Is it more difficult to write one more than the other?

Kate: I don’t think one is harder than the other, though sometimes a book for adults is a little longer ... I always know who my story is being written for, and so that determines the shape and structure of the story. It’s an intuitive process as much as anything else. With ‘The Puzzle Ring’ I was writing the sort of story I would’ve loved to have read when I was 11 or 12, so I wanted it to be full of suspense, but I didn’t want anything too shocking or nasty. While writing a novel that I’d enjoy as an adult means you can have longer chapters, with more sophisticated language and structures, and the story can be a little darker, or sexier, or more surprising.

Steph: What advice would you give aspiring authors of children's and YA fiction?

Kate: It’s the same advice I’d give any writer. Take joy in the writing, bring everything you can to the writing process, be patient, take the time to let the story flower properly, rewrite, rewrite, rewrite.

Steph: What are you working on at the moment? Can you tell me a little bit about it?

Kate: I’m in the final stages of a YA fantasy novel which will be published in May this year. Called ‘The Wildkin’s Curse, its a tale of true love and high adventure, and is the long-awaited sequel to ‘The Starthorn Tree’.

--

http://www.kateforsyth.com.au/

This post is part of THE PUZZLE RING blog tour! Check out more posts at...

Yesterday's blog tour stop: ChickLit
http://chicklitreviews.com/

Tomorrow's blog tour shop: Me & My Big Mouth
http://meandmybigmouth.typepad.com/scottpack/

GUARDIAN OF THE DEAD by Karen Healey - Review & Author interview

Friday, February 19, 2010

Book review: Guardian of the Dead

'In less than a day I had been harassed, enchanted, shouted at, cried on, and clawed. I’d been cold, scared, dirty, exhausted, hungry, and miserable. And up until now, I’d been mildly impressed with my ability to cope.'

At her boarding school in New Zealand, Ellie Spencer is like any ordinary teen: she hangs out with her best friend, Kevin; obsesses over her crush on a mysterious boy; and her biggest worry is her paper deadline. Then everything changes: In the foggy woods near the school, something ancient and deadly is waiting.

Debut author Karen Healey introduces a savvy and spirited heroine with a strong, fresh voice. Full of deliciously creepy details, this unique, incredible adventure is a deftly crafted story of Māori mythology, romance, betrayal, and war.


Whoa, I loved this book. I know I use this phrase a lot, but it really was such a refreshingly different novel - you rarely read YA novels set in New Zealand, and even rarer still, read YA novels based on incredibly fascinating Māori mythology with a funny, obnoxious, original and all-around kick-arse awesome heroine.

The New Zealand setting was a strong element of the novel, which I really loved. Though it got to a slow start, once the action started and things began to be explained, Guardian of the Dead was fantastic. The baddies were freak-me-out scary, and once I was halfway into the novel I couldn't stop.

I think to a degree I found that I wanted more depth to the characters - the plot was sensational, but I felt maybe the character development was a little underdone. I wanted to know more about Ellie and her life before coming to the boarding school, more about Kevin, Iris, everyone. Not just how they were part of the mythological goings-on, but who they really were.

This isn't a book that'll appeal to everyone's tastes - while there is a romance element, it isn't huge, and if you like your YA heroines passive and inoffensive then you sure won't like Ellie. But if you're looking for something that's just a bit different, filled with totally unique mythology (and by 'unique' I don't mean 'sparkly') and that is - in parts - downright creepy, you'd be very wise to pick up Guardian Of The Dead when it's released this April.

Author Interview: Karen Healey


Steph: Can you tell me a bit about the process of writing GUARDIAN OF THE DEAD? Did you start with the storyline, or with the mythology?

Karen: Oh, the mythology came first. I'm not sure how it would even work the other way around – plan a plot and then look for a handy mythology to plug into it? That sounds a bit suss.

So, yes, I was living in Japan, and really homesick, and I started thinking about Māori mythology, the first stories of my homeland, New Zealand. I thought about the way the legends write the land, and the way the stories we know metaphorically write our individual versions of reality, and I wondered what would happen if someone vaguely familiar with the stories, but essentially ignorant, discovered they literally acted upon reality. How would she cope? What if all stories could be true? How would that work in a young land of immigrants, where many stories exist, but some are considered more important than others?

In lots of ways, it's a book that's sort of wrestling with the imagined realities of post-colonial New Zealand. Which is academese for, "The myths came first".


Steph: Are there any characters that are really similar to yourself, or events in the novel that are based on your real life experience? Or was all of the inspiration for the novel drawn from Maori legend?

Karen: Mostly I did what we lying liars writers do and made stuff up. Ellie has some of my traits, but she's definitely not me, and neither is anyone else in the novel. However, while the Māori mythology is the strongest influence on my making stuff up, I drew inspiration from lots of places; Shakespeare, Greek mythology, New Zealand history. A lot of the drama production scenes were inspired by my real life experience in the happy chaos of high school and university drama - but none of the characters are people I know, either!

The part furthest from my experience were the fight scenes, since I can barely throw a punch. Naturally, I decided the narrator would have a black belt in Tae Kwon Do. Good going, me! Fortunately, my best friend runs a martial arts school and she painstakingly explained how to break a wrist grip and perform a perfect side kick.

Steph: Can you tell me a bit about your journey to publication? Looking for an agent, going out on submission to editors, getting a book deal, editing, etc?

Karen: In 2007, I attended feminist sci-fi and fantasy convention WisCon in the USA, and took part in a writing workshop run by Holly Black. She liked the first three chapters we looked at, and advised me to submit to her agent when I finished the manuscript. Barry Goldblatt was at the top of my agent list. After a lot of really first class panic, I did submit, and he called me. About halfway through the conversation I realised he was actually going to represent me, and I don't remember a thing after that.

Editor submission was nervewracking, and I got my fair share of rejections, but I think I could not have landed better editors. I'm really happy with Little, Brown and Allen and Unwin.

The actual editing part was great. To me, the blank page is the enemy, and dragging words out to fill it is the hardest part of writing. Once I have something to work with, be it never so crappy, I have a great time picking out themes and rearranging scenes and putting all the pieces back together. I had wonderful guidance from my first readers to the proofreaders, and it really made the book so much better.

Steph: Why and when did you start writing? Is GUARDIAN OF THE DEAD the first novel you've written?

Karen: I've been lying lies telling fiction since I could talk, and writing it down since I could write. I wasn't dedicated the way a lot of writers seem to have been as kids – I wrote short stories, but I don't have a trunk filled with notebook novels or anything. But GUARDIAN is not my first-written novel – I wrote a couple of solo and very bad novels, and then co-wrote another couple of much better ones with my best friend, Robyn. I learned a lot about plot and structure and character establishment from that. I could not have written GUARDIAN without getting the crappy ones done, so I'm really rather fond of them, even though I never want to actually read them again.

Steph: Imaging you can travel back in time to meet yourself as a younger writer without tearing the universe apart, what advice would you give her about writing and life?

Karen: Dear self, don't worry about that stuff about keeping a notebook with you at all times and writing everything down in it! In the future you will never be anywhere without a book and a pen, and if you need to note anything, you can do so in the title pages. It will also make re-reading fun.

Also, read more. I know you read a lot, but read more.

And learn to cook earlier. I promise you'll like it.

Steph: What are you working on at the moment? Can you tell me a bit about it?

Karen: My next book to be published is currently titled SUMMERTON. It's set in a small, eerily perfect town on New Zealand's beautiful, isolated West Coast, where three teenagers are trying to find the real causes of their elder brothers' supposed suicides. It's a little bit psychological thriller, a little bit paranormal, a little bit romance, and a lot of mystery and action. I'm really excited about it!

What I'm currently working on is a secret. I'll just say that every time I sit down and write, I get really, really hungry.

--

I'm going to guess she's writing a cookbook for vampires. Anyway, while you're waiting for GUARDIAN OF THE DEAD to be released, you should check out Karen Healey's ridiculously funny/smart blog: http://karenhealey.livejournal.com/ and her website: http://karenhealey.com/.

SOLACE & GRIEF by Foz Meadows

Thursday, February 18, 2010


Solace Morgan was born a vampire. Raised in foster care, she has always tried to keep her abilities secret, until an eerie encounter with a faceless man prompts her to run away. Finding others with similar gifts, Solace soon becomes caught up in a strange, more vibrant world than she ever knew existed. But when the mysterious Professor Lukin takes an interest in her friends, she is forced to start asking questions of her own. What happened to her parents? Who is Sharpsoft? And since when has there been a medieval dungeon under Hyde Park?

Wow. Just, wow.

Solace & Grief got off to a slow start - the first third of the novel, while beautifully written, was somewhat stagnant. Solace runs away after a meeting with a faceless man, makes friends with a bunch of unemployed youths who live in a warehouse. She has some vaguely vampire-like traits - the sun tires her, she's strong, she can eat very few foods. It's all very mysterious, but not a whole lot seems to happen.

But then - we get to the second third of the novel and bam! there's suddenly tonnes of crazy stuff going on. Reality bending, alternate universes, people with special Tricks who are known as the Rare and someone out to kill them. Or capture them. Or something. There was a lot going on. I loved the ideas behind everything, this whole Rare species, the unique abilities everyone had. I think at times the dialogue was a bit unbelievable - young Australians in this day and age don't tend to talk so eloquently - but there were so many lines I absolutely loved and had to write down.

The final third of the book was amazing - while everything was not totally wrapped up, we did get some answers, and it was a very exciting ending. The kind you think about long after you've finished the book.

This is a vampire novel, and I think it'll appeal to paranormal romance fans, but also to people who don't like the whole vampire trend. It's just different enough to make it refreshing but also appeal to the people who already love books like these. I hope it gets picked up by an American publisher soon - I can see it having a lot of crossover appeal (it reminded me somewhat of Cassandra Clare's Mortal Instruments series, though I'm not entirely sure why).

The first book in what's sure to be a fantastic series, I highly recommend this novel to people who like urban fantasy and paranormal romance novels.

http://fozmeadows.wordpress.com/
http://www.fordstreetpublishing.com/

NO AND ME by Delphine De Vigan

Wednesday, February 17, 2010


At thirteen-years-old, with an unusually high IQ and a knack for observing things about other people, Lou Bertignac is not only the youngest in her class at school; she is also the most unusual. Painfully shy, she has few friends, save for Lucas, whose company helps her get through each day. At home, Lou's life is also difficult: Her mother hasn't left the house in years and her father spends his days crying in the bathroom. Lou's world is dark and sad... That is, until she meets No.

No is a teenage girl that Lou befriends for the purpose of her school project on homelessness. Despite the different worlds that these two girls come from, a friendship is soon forged between them. Unable to bear the thought of No not having a home or a family to keep her safe, Lou persuades her reluctant parents into letting her new friend stay with the Bertignac family. No's addition to the household forces Lou and her parents to face the sadness that has been enveloping them for so long — but not without some disruptions along the way.


I really loved this novel - Lou was a wonderful character, the writing was fantastic and while the story wasn't filled with huge dramatic events, this book was one I couldn't stop reading until I found out what happened to Lou and No. Everything seemed as if it could exist in the real world, and the French setting was brilliant.

I wished for No to be a stronger character. While I really loved Lou, I wasn't entirely sure why she wanted to help No so much - I felt if I were in Lou's place, I would have given up on her. It felt kind of hopeless, this constant saving of No, only for her to sabotage herself. The ending saddened me, but it was an ending which suited the novel.

This novel reminded me to a degree of Mark Haddon's Curious Incident of the Dog in The Night-Time, though the protagonist of that novel was far more different than Lou was - Lou is only extraordinarily smart and an outsider, but she still has an understanding of other people that the protagonist of Mark Haddon's novel did not. I think this novel will definitely have a lot of crossover appeal and will be enjoyed by people of all ages (I believe it's being released in separate editions for adults and YAs).

Beautifully written, touching and original, No and Me is a book that I strongly recommend you read.

F2M: THE BOY WITHIN by Hazel Edwards and Ryan Kennedy

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

What happens when who you are on the inside clashes with what you are on the outside?

All adolescents face the quest for identity, but gender change complicates ‘coming of age’.

School-leaver Skye plays guitar in her all-girl band, The Chronic Cramps. Making her name in the punk music scene is easier than FTM (female to male) transitioning: from Skye to Finn, from girl to man. At the school reunion, Finn faces victimisation, but challenges the bullies.

Uncovering genetic mysteries about family heritage tears the family apart. Gran’s loved sibling Al was also Alberta. Transgender identity is more than hormones and surgery, it’s about acceptance. Going public, Finn sings FTM lyrics on TV.

With a little help from bemused mates and parents who don’t want to lose a daughter, but who love their teenager, Finn is transitioning.


This is a fantastic, groundbreaking novel - I think the fact that one of the writers is trans himself adds to the authenticity of the novel and the issue of gender transitioning was dealt with honestly. Hopefully this is a novel that will both entertain and educate teenaged readers.

The elements of Skye/Finn's life in the novel outside of his gender transition - the punk music, zines, blogs - all added greatly to the novel. His situation in the novel - having finished school but not yet employed or studying further - is not one often seen in YA novels, but one that reflects the lives of a lot of older teenagers. It's an in-between life stage, which also reflects Skye/Finn's in-between gender issues.

I think teenagers will be able to relate to Skye/Finn in that everyone feels to some degree unhappy with their appearance and different on the inside to the way they appear physically. Skye/Finn's dilemma is just a bit more extreme than being unhappy with your weight or hair colour.

I felt that we didn't get a strong enough sense of the other characters in Skye/Finn's life. I think because we were so much in his head, we never really got to know the other characters enough. I would have liked to find out more about Skye/Finn's friends, as well as finding out more about the really big events in Skye/Finn's transition - it would have been great for those elements to be developed slightly further.

I strongly recommend this book to people who love GLBT fiction, and teenaged (and older) readers looking for an enlightening, funny, fast and original read.

http://www.hazeledwards.com/
http://ryanscottkennedy.com/
http://www.fordstreetpublishing.com/

Writing Toolkit

Sunday, February 7, 2010



Are there any things you like to have with you when you write?
  • Writing utensils? Computer, laptop, pen, pencil, paper, quill, typewriter, chalk?
  • Writing programs? Old-fashioned Word or another program (Scrivener, etc)?
  • Writing snacks? Sweets or savoury snacks? Anything to drink?
  • Writing plans? Your synopsis, chapter outlines, inspiring images, Post-It reminders?
  • Writing soundtrack? Do you write to music or not? Do you have a playlist for each novel?
  • Writing attire? Gloves, high heels, track pants, pyjamas?

AFTER JANUARY by Nick Earls - Review & Interview

Friday, February 5, 2010

Book Review: AFTER JANUARY

'It's as though the future is held here. Held at bay, held at more than arm's length. Held just beyond my reach all the long days of summer. And the waiting is everywhere...'
This January is different. School is over for Alex Delaney and he's waiting for his university offer - only seventeen days away. The waiting is killing him. He's not expecting much from January.

So he's not ready for the girl who cuts past him on a wave. Not at all prepared for her perfect balance, compelling green eyes and gold skin. January is about to change.

For the first time, this new edition combines Alex Delaney's two stories, After January and 'Juliet', by award-winning and popular author Nick Earls.

It's incredibly difficult to review a book you absolutely love and convey how brilliant it is in order to convince people to read it without resorting to means such as multiple exclamation marks and caps lock. I will try, guys. I really will.

What I love so much about this book - and, now I think about it, most of Nick Earls' other YA novels, like Monica Bloom and 48 Shades Of Brown, both of which I love, almost as much as I love this book - is that it doesn't resort to big dramatic events such as death to give it emotional substance, like a lot of YA novels do. It just acts as a snapshot into a few weeks in the life of a character one summer, while he's waiting to see if he gets into university. In the meantime, he meets a girl named Fortuna. It isn't a shocking or dramatic premise, or a particularly complicated plot. But what makes it a really brilliant novel are the fantastic characters, and the wonderful, nuanced writing. It's both realistic and hilarious, and every line of dialogue is perfect.

I especially loved the short story that acts as a prologue to After January, Juliet, as well as the other parts throughout the novel that use second person. The relationship between Alex and Fortuna is lovely and wonderfully written, and at no point resorts to cliche. Every character is well-rounded, believable and unique - Alex's mother, the holiday house neighbours... Fortuna's kooky family especially. Alex was a character I really related to - the novel is written from his perspective, and he's a very introspective character. There were certain parts of the novel (I'd include an excerpt here, but I'd end up typing up pages of it) where I thought, 'You're me! But fictional! And living in the 90s!' I don't think all readers will relate to Alex, but I definitely did (and I loved Fortuna, too).

All I can say is: I really recommend you read it. It's funny, awkward, insightful and beautifully written. Every single character is brilliant. It's all kinds of wonderful, and there's no reason you shouldn't pick it up.


Author Interview: Nick Earls

Steph: Can you tell me a bit about your writing process? Do you plot beforehand, or is it wholly organic? Between writing After January and now, has your writing process changed much?

Nick: I’m a plotter. A thinker, a note-maker, a mapper and a flow-charter. I’m up for using any device that will teach me more about the people I’m writing about and their story.

I write down small random ideas and file them away in case they might ever become something. Then a few start to cluster, and I start thinking ‘who is this about?’, ‘what’s going on?’. More ideas/notes come along and add to the pile. I think divergently and then convergently. First it’s about coming up with possibilities, then it’s about drawing the story out of the pile of possibilities and arranging it in some kind of shape. While I’m playing around structurally, I’m also trying to get into the head of my central character. Once I have my notes in order and the right voice in my head, I’m ready to go.

My outlines can be a quarter of the length of the novel. I don’t have to stick to them, but they’re a mighty big safety net for the days when it all feels less magical. A good, detailed outline means that, on the ugly days, I might be searching long and hard for the right words, but I’m not searching for ideas as well.

Obviously some people work very differently, and that works for them. What I do know is that, for me, the above approach seems to at least make writer’s block a lot less likely. It also gives me some means of navigating, and some fuel to take me there. A novel is big – too big to hold in a human head in one go. My head, anyway. I need a map.

After January was a big part in helping me to develop this approach. As you know, I had the ‘Juliet’ story, so I had my central character, Alex and a version of his voice. That’s a couple of massive building blocks already sorted. Then I set about asking questions, and discovered that in itself would be a useful part of my process. Some simple questions can help me a lot, like the following:

Question – Where is Alex, the main character when we pick up his story again?
Answer – Maybe it’s the holidays, since I don’t want to invent a school’s worth of people. So perhaps there’s an interesting story there ...

Follow-up Question – What’s Alex expecting? What can I give him that he’s not expecting? Is he ready for it when it comes?

And along comes some story that I didn’t have before.

Every novel is a new puzzle that I don’t know quite how to solve when I set out. As the novels go by, I get more tools in my toolkit, but I keep having to find still more, and I like that. I might have systematised some of the processes I was developing with After January, but I think I’ve done it in a way that feels creative.



Steph: You've written numerous novels for both teenagers and adults. When you start writing a novel, do you know whether it's going to be for teenagers or adults? Is it a different writing experience when writing for different audiences?

Nick: Some time early in the exploration of the idea, I get a sense of how old my character is. Some stories fit well with a teenage character, and that’s really the basis of the choice for me.

The difference for me is not at the creative level – it’s after all that. If I’ve written a novel with a teenage character, I know publishers are likely to see it as YA - and I’ll want it to connect with teenage readers too - but the writing experience is no different for me. If I wrote for children, I suspect it would be. I try to focus on getting my central character right, in the hope that if I do that some teenage people may find something to connect with.


Steph: Imagining you're able to travel back through time and meet yourself as a younger writer – without tearing the universe apart – what advice would you give him about writing and life?

Nick:
Writing: Try to be real, don’t try to be smart (real is smart enough in its own way). Less may just turn out to be more. Try to work out what ‘show, don’t tell’ actually means, and implement it. (I’m still trying to learn to be better at those things.) Step away from the sonnet. No one’s made a good living from sonnets since the 1620s, and you won’t be the exception. And don’t write poems to make girls like you, because it will not make them like you but it will give them something to quote back at you later in life. On the subject of which:

Life: Don’t be too concerned about the wingnut ears. Anxiety produces the wrong pheromones. Roll with the punches. Make time for life around your deep abiding need to write. Say Yes more, but not always. Say No enough that you have a life. Don’t even think about trying to get a tan. Sell all your shares in November 2007, then buy back in in mid-March 2009.


Steph: You started writing Juliet based off your own experience of a school play. Is much of your writing inspired by real life experience? Do you find many of your characters share your traits?

Nick: Apparently my main characters tend to have a lot in common with each other, and quite a bit in common with me. A psychologist who is also Myers-Briggs personality assessment trainer once wrote an article about my characters. I think he said they were all personality type INTP. He suggested that might be me too, and I think he’s right. Though I think I’m less I (introverted) than I used to be, and he said that’s probably the case. The public side of the job has, over years, changed that to an extent. I still like walking into the silence in my office after a tour though, and getting my head into something new.

Some of my writing has been triggered by real life but, in the end, it’s not supposed to document it. It’s supposed to feel real, but to have a life of its own. Frankly, I love making things up. I actually find it pretty tedious when magazines ask me to write articles based on my real life, because I’ve already lived it and there’s nothing new to discover. So, I’m unlikely to write a memoir. But I want my fiction to feel real most of the time, so it makes sense to pay attention to life and to how people work. And one of the things that makes characters real is details. Life offers a lot of details. You just have to choose and use them wisely. When you give them to fictional people and a fictional story, their purpose and their meaning changes, so it’s best to see the version in the book as fiction entirely, wherever it started out.


Steph: What has been your most rewarding experience as a writer?

Nick: The writing can be its own reward, as you discover more things that you can do. It counts a lot, though, when a story connects with a reader and they take the time to tell me about it. At another level, it feels like a big reward that I get to do this as a job. I honestly don’t think there’s a better one, not for me anyway.

Some of the big rewarding experiences have been less about me. I was part of the editorial and writing team that put together anthologies that raised $3million for War Child, and that money has done a lot of good. A few years ago, when I was chairing War Child Australia, I wondered if we could help restock the school libraries of the Solomon Islands with books and, with the help of Rotary and Australia’s children’s publishers, we made it happen. We sent more than 10,000 books to schools that had none. A year later, I heard how loved those books were. It’s hard to beat that reward.


Steph: What are you working on at the moment?

Nick: My main focus is getting myself more followers than you on Twitter. However many I get, you seem to be three ahead. I’m telling myself you’re following way more, and tweeting way more, but it’s no good. I still want to beat you.

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Thank you to Nick Earls & Kristy at UQP for making this interview and review possible! For more information about Nick Earls and his novels, visit his website, nickearls.com (you totally shouldn't follow him on Twitter, though. Follow me instead). More details about After January can be found there, and on UQP's website.

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