If you are a regular reader
of my blog, you will know that I only post silly sketches about my family and
our pets. However, today I am going to use it for shameless self-promotion as I
was tagged to be part of an internet meme called THE NEXT BIG THING.
(Click on the red words to go to relevant links.)
The writer who tagged me is the lovely Karen
Saunders, a fellow children’s writer whom I met at the Bath Children’s
Literature Festival. Her own version of the meme appears here. The idea is
that every Wednesday some children’s authors will post some Q & As about
their books and then tag a new author to do the same the following week. It’s
like a very excellent chain letter – one you actually WANT to be part of!
What is the
title of your next book?
The next book to be
published is called The Smug Pug. Macmillan
Children’s Books are publishing it in February 2013. It’s the third and
final book in my Pooch Parlour
series which includes The Poodle Problem
and The Dotty Dalmatian.
What is a one-sentence synopsis of your book?
Dash the dachshund is
suspicious when a clever and very smug pug arrives in Crumbly-under-Edge,
bringing with him a mysterious machine to help out in the pooch-pampering
salon.
Where did the
idea for the book come from?
The idea for the whole
series came to me whilst chatting in the hairdressers. I was moaning (as I
frequently do) about writer’s block.
“I can’t come up with any
more stories!” I wailed.
“Why don’t you write about
us?” suggested my hairdresser. “There’s always funny things going on in this
place.”
“But my publishers want me
to write about dogs,” I cried, “not hairdressers!”
Now, the funny thing about
inspiration is that it can come from the most unlikely places or conversations.
And so it was that in the car on the way home, I could not stop thinking about
hairdressers and dogs (as you do). By the time I had got back to my desk, the
idea for a pooch-pampering parlour had started to take root.
“What if I had a dog who
could talk and who helped out in the parlour?” I thought. “And what if he was a
bit of a Sherlock Holmes and liked solving mysteries . . .”
What if . . . ? What if . .
. ? The cogs had started whirring and the idea for Mrs Fudge’s Pooch-Pampering
Parlour was born!
What genre does
your book fall under?
Young fiction for 7-10s. The Smug Pug will appeal to boys as well
as girls as there’s loads of gadgets and slap-stick comedy in it. And the cover
is yellow. (NOT pink, for a change . . .)
What actors
would you choose to play the part of your characters in a movie rendition?
The minute I saw the
illustration that Kate Daubney did for the cover, I could not get the image of Ronnie Corbett out of my head. Not sure he would accept the part of a pug, though,
however much he was paid!
Julie
Walters would make a lovely Mrs
Fudge (the owner of the pooch parlour). Although the image of her on this link is perhaps a bit too glam! Think Mrs Weasley in Harry Potter, but with white hair . . .
Will your book
be self-published or represented by an agency?
It’s being published by Macmillan Children’s Books. Macmillan
have published all my young fiction titles. My agent is Hilary Delamere at The
Agency.
How long did it
take you to write the first draft of the manuscript?
The first complete draft of
a new series takes between six months and a year. I scribble loads of notes to
start with, churn it over in my mind obsessively and write at least five drafts
before I show it to my editor, then she suggests improvements and I write
another draft! By the time it is published, it has gone through many changes.
And it is always better for having been thoroughly edited.
What other
books would you compare this story to within your genre?
I was a bit stumped when it
came to thinking what other books I would compare my series to, so I asked my
editor how she would answer this question. She said, “Your books are like
Andy Stanton’s Mr Gum books in terms
of writing style, and the content is like The
Great Hamster Massacre or the Cat
Conspiracy books by Katie Davies.”
I was pretty pleased with those comparisons! I hope readers
will agree . . . Basically, the books are
comedies with a mystery-solving twist, and are aimed at animal lovers.
Who or what
inspired you to write this book?
The idea for the whole
series came from the hairdressers, as I have explained, and is a sort of The No. 1 Ladies’ Detective Agency in a
pooch parlour! But the individual characters came from all over the place. Mrs
Fudge is a little bit like an English version of Mma Ramotswe from The No. 1 Ladies’ Detective Agency and
she is a lot like my wonderful
Grandma who passed away a couple of years ago. She was a great cake-baker and
tea-drinker and a very kind and patient grandmother. She also had snow-white
hair and was round and cuddly!
Pippa Peppercorn is a
little bit like me when I was 10 and a little bit like Pippi Longstocking and a
little bit like my daughter when she was 10.
Smug the pug is inspired by a very old book called The Incredible Adventures of Professor Branestawm, which I loved to read when I was young.
What else about
your book might pique the reader’s interest?
I hope the characters will
make you laugh out loud! And I know that anyone who sees Clare Elsom’s beautiful inside
illustrations will be tickled by them.
Next up, I’m tagging the
fantastic writers Michelle Robinson, who blogs here, has a website here and tweets @MicheRobinson and the marvellous Chris D’Lacey of The Fire Within fame. He has a website here and blogs here and tweets @chrisdlacey.
Have fun hopping from blog to blog to check out all the
authors involved in The Next Big Thing. Once you start, you can't stop!
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