Categories
Other

The winners are…

The winners of Linda Strachan’s book are….

Julie Booth
Ruth Worthington

Congratulations!

I’ll be emailing the winners later today and posting a copy of Writing for Children to them as soon as the snow melts enough for me to get to the post office!

Categories
Other

December 2009 Summary and Plans for January 2010

I read 14 books in December giving a total of 144 for the year. I’m quite impressed with that and hope I can read a similar number in 2010.

I was lucky to read two outstanding books in December – Flowers for Algernon and Generation A both managed to gain my highest rating and I hope that you decide to read them, as I’m sure you’ll love them!

Overall the quality of the books I read in December was very high. I’m wondering if I’m noticing a gradual improvement due to book blogger recommendations?


 

Generation A – Douglas Coupland  stars51

Flowers for Algernon – Daniel Keyes  stars51

Fall on Your Knees – Ann-Marie MacDonald stars4h

Nineteen Eighty-Four (1984) – George Orwell  stars41

The Mosquito Coast – Paul Theroux  stars41

Right to Die – Hazel McHaffie  stars41

Snow – Orhan Pamuk  stars41

Tender Morsels – Margo Lanagan  stars41

The Inner Circle – T.C. Boyle  stars41

A Redbird Christmas – Fannie Flagg  stars41

The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo – Steig Larsson   stars3h

Something’s Wrong – Sam Smith  stars3h

Grotesque – Natsuo Kirino  stars3

An Equal Stillness – Francesca Kay stars2

Plans for January

It is Orange January!

I plan to read a few Orange books this month:

Small Island – Andrea Levy 

The Little Friend – Donna Tartt

Buddha Da – Anne Donovan

I’m also taking part in Woolf in Winter:  

 To the Lighthouse – Virginia Woolf (29th January)

I hope to read a few of these other books too:

The Astonishing Life of Octavian Nothing, Traitor to the Nation: v. 1 – M.T. Anderson

Uglies – Scott Westerfield

The Harlot’s Progress: Pt. 1: Yorkshire Molly – Peter Mottley

The Boat to Redemption – Su Tong

Rupture – Simon Lelic

The Woman in the Dunes – Kobo Abe

The Elegance of the Hedgehog – Muriel Barbery

Have you read any of the books that I plan to read in January?

Which one do think I’ll enjoy the most?

Categories
Other

My Favourite Reads: 2009

Thanks to recommendations from book bloggers I have read a higher quality of books than ever before. I’ve already posted my list of favourite books published in 2009, but here are the ones I enjoyed reading most, whenever thay happened to be published.

 

Blindness – José Saramago

Out – Natsuo Kirino

Flowers for Algernon – Daniel Keyes

 

 

 

 

 

Stone’s Fall – Iain Pears 

The Hunger Games – Suzanne Collins

Generation A – Douglas Coupland

.

The Wilderness – Samantha Harvey

Child 44 – Tom Rob Smith (Audio Book)

The Other Hand – Chris Cleave

2666 – Roberto Bolaño

If you are interested in seeing how I rated other books I’ve read, then please look at my new reviews by rating page. 

I have also created a page which shows all my reviews by title, or author surname. You can also find these pages by clicking on the Books Reviewed tab in the top right-hand corner of my blog.

Do you like my new pages?

Have you read any of my favourite books?

Have a fantastic New Year!

I look forward to sharing many more book recommendations with you in 2010!

Categories
Other

I’m back (almost!) and my Secret Santa

I hope that you have had a wonderful Christmas. I have had a lovely few days and plan to take things easy for the next week as my husband is having some more time off work. I hope to start posting again soon but I have some things planned for the next week, so my blogging might be slightly erratic. I’m very behind on my blog reading, so apologise for my lack of comments recently. Hopefully everything will get back to normal after the New Year celebrations.

Book Blogger Holiday SwapI’d like to thank Jennifer from Mrs Q :Book Addict for a wonderful Secret Santa present. It arrived on Christmas Eve, in the cutest envelope I have ever seen. Aren’t those penguins gorgeous?!

.

.

She sent The Last Queen by C.W. Gortner, which I’ve had on my wish list for a while – I’m really looking forward to finding out more about the Spanish Royal family. She also sent two great bookmarks and a stretchy book cover. What else could a book lover want?! Thank you so much Jennifer!

santa2

I’ll be back with a review or two soon, and a list of my favourite reads from the past year.

I hope that you are all enjoying the last few days of 2009!

Categories
Other

Happy Christmas!

I’m taking a short blogging break, to enjoy some time with my family.

I hope that you all have a wonderful Christmas!

Categories
Books for Children Other

Writing for Children – child’s play – or is it?



Guest post written by Linda Strachan, the author of over 50 books for children.

Car crime, racism, stabbings, pregnancy; delicately seasoned with flying horses, puppies, a cuddly haggis and a dollop of love –  Enter the diverse world of this children’s writer.

It is a curious thing – you would never ask a paediatrician if they are going to become a proper doctor i.e. a doctor for adults, but most children’s writers have been asked when they will write a ‘proper book’ (for adults!).  I think the real question to ask a children’s writer is – ‘What kind of children’s books do you write?’

The answer might be – novels, non fiction, educational or picture books.  Some write one kind of book while others will write across the ages and genres.  I write novels for young adults, picture books for young children and pretty much everything in between.

One of the glorious things about writing for children (unlike writing for adults) is that you are less likely to be restricted to one age group, or even a single genre. But if you write for adults, publishers and readers alike will have expectations; do they know you as a writer of crime or romance, thrillers or literary fiction?

Writing is a lot about imagination but I never imagined I would be a writer. In fact it is amazing that it happened at all because when I was about eight years old a teacher once said ‘ (she)….lacks imagination.’  So for many years being a writer never really entered my head.  

When I started I had my fair share of rejection slips (in fact I have a fat file full of them) and it was a steep learning curve, but in 1996 I got my first publishing contract.  My latest book, a teenage novel (Dead Boy Talking – pub Strident – April 2010) will be my 56th book.  Granted some of them are very short!

I love my work, the angst and delight of writing; losing myself in the story and living with my characters.  It is the challenge of getting inside the head of a teenager or trying to find exactly the right words that will be reassuring and still have the awww! factor, for a bedtime story picture book.

Writing ‘short’ for a picture book means that every single word counts. You are continually working up the text, reading it out loud, cutting and moulding it, until the rhythm is strong enough to grab even the most casual reader. The story may seem deceptively simple but it must feel complete and satisfying for both the child, and the adult reader who reads it to them –again and again!

Writing ‘long’ for a novel it is important to get the feel of the characters and their situation so that the reader is taken along for the ride and not bumped out of the story because it seems unrealistic, or because the readers cannot recognise themselves in the characters.

Young people are very critical readers, they will not put up with anything that does not grab them and carry them through the story; they won’t put up with padding or self indulgent twaddle. There is no place to hide.  As a children’s writer you also have to be prepared for very direct criticism. Most young people will be brutally honest about your book, even if it is negative, they will tell you with complete disregard for your feelings.

Writing is only a part of my job. The research is often fascinating. It has taken me out on a Saturday nightshift with an ambulance crew; extracting people from crashed cars on a training day with the local Fire Service training college; on tours of haunted castles and Royal palaces; speaking to experts about where pterodactyls nest or the culinary delights of Jamaica.   So from pterodactyls and ghostly castles to crime and mayhem, being a children’s writer may be exhausting at times, but it is never boring.

I spend a lot of time travelling all over the UK, and beyond. I visit schools and libraries talking to children and I also speak to adults who want to start writing, at festivals, conferences and writing retreats.  So I decided to write a book for people who were as excited as I was by the idea of writing for children.  But it is not just for new and aspiring writers.   I was keen to give a realistic view of what happens when you are first published; what to expect and how to gather support systems, and everything from school visits to handling finances. Many people have a very strange idea of what life is like for a writer.  This probably comes from the media hype that surrounds any big book deal or mega-successful author; think JK Rowling’s Harry Potter or Philip Pullman’s Northern Lights.  The reality is actually less Hollywood and more Eastenders!

Linda Strachan is the author of over 50 books for children and her book Writing for Children is full of information for aspiring and newly published writers.

If you’d like the chance to win one of two copies of Writing for Children, then just leave a comment below, before midnight GMT on 5th January 2010.

Winners will be selected at random and notified by email.

The giveaway is open internationally.

Good luck!