Interview with Fiona Wood, author of Six Impossible Things

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Fiona Wood is the author of the terrific, hilarious Six Impossible Things. Read my (fabulous, numbered) review right here (and you ought to read the book, too! You really should). I'll wait a sec while you go read it, if you haven't already...

Okay, I'm waiting.
Waiting.
Getting a cup of tea.
Waiting.
Okay, if you're not back already you're just going to have to miss out on the interview.

Fiona herself is very lovely, and this is her website. Six Impossible Things is her debut novel, but she's written for TV for the past ten years. Here, I ask her about writing SIT, writing for TV vs. novels, her characters, time travel, what we should expect from her next (awesome things! Is that a spoiler?) and I think that's about it.

Steph: Dan is a fabulous and hilarious character, and I loved the Cinderella theme to the novel. Can you tell me a bit about the process of writing this book?

Fiona: It started with Dan. I wasn't really thinking of writing a book - I was working on a feature film script - when this fourteen year old boy character, who had nothing to do with the film, kept suggesting himself. By which I mean that ideas for his character kept interrupting the thing I was supposed to be writing. So I gave in, and wrote him a story. Because he was a bit shy and a bit lonely I really liked the idea of him getting to go to the ball - or year nine social in his case. I gave him a name that is an anagram of Cinderella, and incorporated a few other elements from the Cinderella story. I wrote the first draft over about nine months. And I wrote four more drafts over a couple more years - a couple were biggish rewrites, and a couple were lighter edits. I don't show very many people work-in-progress, but the few readers I had were really helpful.

Steph: You've also written a lot for TV - what are the major differences between script-writing and novel-writing? Do you prefer one over the other?

Fiona: I like both a lot. But I enjoyed writing the novel more for three reasons: first, it was a form I hadn't written before, so because it was new and a bit scary that made it exciting, the second reason is that it is entirely my own work, whereas in TV writing you are usually responding to someone else's brief, and the third reason I preferred it is that it was a more absorbing, more difficult and longer-term piece of writing. One of the things I prefer about TV is the tight deadlines, to which I respond well. When I'm setting my own deadlines, the pace is harder to keep up.


Steph: Of all the characters in the book, who do you feel you're most alike? Or does every character have a bit in common with you? Or are they totally separate entities?

Fiona: They are all totally separate entities, but they inevitably all have a bit of me in them as well. So, to be specific, I have for example some of Dan's tendency to over-think things, some of his mother Julie's affection for the 'serious talk', some of Estelle's inability to get on with her mother, some of Ali's impatience, some of Lou's preference for direct communication, and so on.

Steph: What part of the writing and publishing process do you enjoy most? Writing the first draft, editing, holding the finished book in your hands?

Fiona: The first draft is fun, like freewheeling down a hill - exhilarating. Editing is more like pedaling uphill, hard work, good for you, satisfying when you get there. Book in hand is a great feeling, but very transitory, because that's the point at which you hand the book over to readers and it starts its own life.

Steph: Imagining you could travel back in time and meet yourself without tearing the fabric of the universe apart, what advice would you give your 16-year-old self about life and/or writing?

Fiona: I would definitely be giving myself the 'serious talk'. I'd tell myself it is deeply uncool to smoke. I'd try to convince myself to exercise more sooner. I'd warn myself off a couple of relationships. I'd tell me to love my fair skin, stay out of the sun and never ever use fake tan! I would try to persuade myself to work harder at university. I'd suggest that I have my babies sooner, maybe starting at 25 rather than 30. And I'd certainly encourage myself to start writing sooner than I did.

Steph: I would absolutely love to know what you're working on at the moment... but if it's super top secret I understand if you can't tell me. What can we expect from you next?

Fiona: I'm writing another YA novel, called Pulchritude - what an ugly word for beauty. It's a story about friendship and betrayal. And I've just decided to restructure it. I don't seem to be any more 'efficient' writing this than I was writing Six Impossible Things - by which I mean I still have to write into a certain direction for a while to find out if it's the right one for this story. For some reason I can't seem to makes those decisions theoretically - I have to try it out and look at it. Pulchritude's main character is called Sibylla Quince, and Lou from 'Six Impossible Things' is in there, too. And I've started very early work on a middle-grade novel.

Visual Inspiration, Week Four

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Images I've found this week that I've used visual inspiration for my current work in progress. All images sourced from Tumblr and We Heart It, none are mine. If you know any original sources let me know and I'll update the post with them. If you've done a visual inspiration post, comment with the link - I'd love to see it (it'd be awesome if you say you're participating in my meme and link back here but you don't have to do that).

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Everybody freak out! There's a crisis going on!

Thursday, September 23, 2010

So this is the thing about the internet, newspapers, any kind of media really:
Everybody wants to be popular. Everybody wants to get the most page views, sell the most newspapers, have the most people tune into their TV station. This is mainly to make money. And for their egos.

And, secondly, everybody likes to worry. I think it may be a natural human thing that we inevitably do. As you can tell, I am a highly scientific person. Not. You don't realise consciously that you like to worry, and maybe it isn't so much that it's an enjoyable thing to do, because speaking as someone who has worried pretty much constantly since the summer of 1999, it sure isn't, but it's something that people tend to linger on. It's like a comfort zone.

So, based on the combination of people wanting to be popular + people liking to worry, we end up with a lot of sensationalist articles. I'm thinking specifically blog posts on the internet about YA writing here.

Like 'The book is dying!' And 'There's a CRISIS going on! There are no good books for boys! Oh, what will those poor boys do?' And 'YA is totally messed up!' And 'It's impossible to get published in this financial climate!'

Now it's okay to worry about some things. Like how many people will be sleeping out in the cold tonight (not because they upset their missus, more like because they're homeless). Like the number of kids who'll never make it to five years old in developing countries because they don't have access to basic vaccines. Like everybody starving and oppression of women in certain countries and racism and homophobia and things like that. But there's not much point in worrying about things like that -- what you really should be doing is taking action and doing something about the things that need to be improved in the world.

As for the 'OH MY GOD CRISIS OF BOOKS!', if you think that there's a crisis of whatever going on, stop sitting around and angsting about it and solve the problem for yourself. But please, gosh, don't make up crises just to get a few hundred page views. If you read something on a blog or wherever, even if it's by an author (who therefore must be speaking the honest truth!), don't immediately freak out. Just because that's their reality doesn't mean there is really a massive problem going on. Write what you write and read what you read and encourage everybody to read great books, too, not based on their gender or anything. Stop worrying, and keep living your life and writing and submitting to publishers. The world is not about to end. Even if it is, there's no point freaking out about it. I guarantee you will not die and then think, 'hey, maybe I should have worried more about that crisis.' (Unless that crisis is global warming or something, in which case you ought to stop worrying and do something about it before it's the end of you.)

And let's briefly touch on the whole boys books drama - the fact that you perceive that boys don't read because there are no good books for them isn't because authors aren't writing the right books. It's because society dictates boys can't read girls books. And you know what? I know just as many boys as girls that read books. More and more, I think boys as well as girls are rebelling against how societal pressures dictate they conform and are just being individuals - not all boys will like one book/genres, same as not all girls will like another book/genre. People, teenagers included, are individuals.

Visual Inspiration, Week Three

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Images I've found this week that I've used visual inspiration for my current work in progress. All images sourced from Tumblr and We Heart It, none are mine. If you know any original sources let me know and I'll update the post with them. If you've done a visual inspiration post, comment with the link - I'd love to see it (it'd be awesome if you say you're participating in my meme and link back here but you don't have to do that).

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Words That Don’t Exist in the English Language

Monday, September 20, 2010

L’esprit de escalier: (French) The feeling you get after leaving a conversation, when you think of all the things you should have said. Translated it means “the spirit of the staircase.”

Waldeinsamkeit: (German) The feeling of being alone in the woods.

Meraki: (Greek) Doing something with soul, creativity, or love.

Forelsket: (Norwegian) The euphoria you experience when you are first falling in love.

Gheegle: (Filipino) The urge to pinch or squeeze something that is unbearably cute.

Pochemuchka: (Russian) A person who asks a lot of questions.

Pena ajena: (Mexican Spanish) The embarrassment you feel watching someone else’s humiliation.

Cualacino: (Italian) The mark left on a table by a cold glass.

Ilunga: (Tshiluba, Congo) A person who is ready to forgive any abuse for the first time, to tolerate it a second time, but never a third time.

Winner of Girl Saves Boy contest!

Friday, September 17, 2010

I want to thank everyone for their lovely-amazing entries (lots of lovely book covers and trailers and written responses), and apologise for the massive delay in announcing the winner. Things have been a tad busy lately and I only remembered that I forgot about the contest last night. After consulting with my nan (hi nan!) and much deliberation, the winner chosen is: Catt! For her wonderful trailer.

Read the first chapter of Girl Saves Boy!

Thursday, September 16, 2010

I just found out that Readings have a chapter of Girl Saves Boy available for download on their website. Check it out here. I don't know about you, but I kind of absolutely love sample chapters. Not mine specifically. Just sample chapters in general.

I'm going to return to my schoolwork-and-writing cave now, aka the bedroom. And I will be back with blog posts soon!

Let me know what you think of the chapter, if you read it!

Visual Inspiration, Week Two

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Images I've found this week that I've used visual inspiration for my current work in progress. All images sourced from Tumblr and We Heart It, none are mine. If you know any original sources let me know and I'll update the post with them. If you've done a visual inspiration post, comment with the link - I'd love to see it (it'd be awesome if you say you're participating in my meme and link back here but you don't have to do that).



















Visual Inspiration, Week One

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

I'm going to start posting images on a weekly basis that I've used as visual inspiration for my current work in progress, or just generally interesting pics. Hopefully there'll a) inspire you, b) inspire you to make a visual inspiration post of your own, or c) just be interesting to look at. I'm not going to talk much more about what I'm working on at the moment because I'll jinx myself and I don't want that to happen.

All images sourced from Tumblr and We Heart It, none are mine. If you know any original sources let me know and I'll update the post with them. If you've done a visual inspiration post, comment with the link - I'd love to see it (it'd be awesome if you say you're participating in my meme and link back here but you don't have to do that).
















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