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Where do you get your ideas from?
This is the question that every author gets from any audience they
talk to, whether children or adults! Authors get ideas: that must
be the secret, and some writers do talk publicly about getting
ideas from their own and other peoples experiences, news
stories, gossip, things that happen.
But I agree with the American writer Ursula Le Guin who has written
that ideas are not really where stories come from. For
her, and for me, stories develop from unusual characters put in unusual
situations, with problems and mysteries to solve.
I always say I invent the characters and they get the ideas.
Its for this reason that I spend a lot of time thinking about
my characters, making many pages of notes, getting to describe, know
and understand them, so that I know how they are going to react when
things go wrong. Film script-writers teach that films are all about
problem-solving, about sharing a journey with characters under extreme
pressure, so that the choices they make reveal their real character,
not necessarily the one they present to the world. Im terrifically
interested in peoples motivations, why they do the things
and make the choices that they do.
So Night Race to Kawau began
with a girl promoted to being co-skipper of a yacht in a storm at
night after her father/skipper knocks himself out. Though I had no
idea how to go about writing a novel, I had to sit down and write
the story to find out what happened to Sam and her family!
Alex started as a girl who is gifted, and has a supportive family,
but has to realise that big achievement means big sacrifices. She
wants to go to the Olympic Games so does Maggie. When she
finally gets herself sorted out, something terrible happens over
which she has no control. The last book Songs
for Alex ends with Alex now coming to terms with her grief,
knowing who she can trust, and confidently leaving her school and
swimming years behind.
The Tiggie books are about a fat girl, at odds with the medias
images of young women, discovering that she does have a talent, one
that will provide her with an incentive and reason to trim down,
learn to enjoy her talent and gain confidence.
My short story Freddie Bone,
probably my best, began with a publishers challenge to write
a swimming story. Well then, the opposite of Alex! So hes a
fat boy into long-distance swimming, where plump people have an advantage;
in a local swim-athon he becomes a local hero. Again, its about
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How many books have you written?
Well, heres the line-up since my very first in 1982: 11 novels,
8 books of non-fiction, one full-length play and 8 anthologies.
But if you include the books Ive done as the editor, with
my name on the cover, thats another 7 which, with
various others, come to around 35.
Ive also had 13 short stories published in various collections
and one one-act-play written with a fellow writer.
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What is your favourite book?
If you mean of all the books Ive ever read, impossible to name,
because there are just too many.
But of my own books, thats not so easy a question to answer
either!
Night Race to Kawau will always be a little special, because
it was the book I wrote before I knew I could be a writer; Alex is
special because it remains my most successful book. (Im working
on changing that one day!)
Im especially proud of A Book
of Pacific Lullabies because it was my idea, and gave me
some wonderful lullabies to sing with my grand-daughter Sedef, as
well as winning the big Russell Clark Award for its wonderful illustrator
Anton Petrov. Hes a young Russian immigrant living and working
in Auckland and who I believe has a big future internationally.
But the real favourite is always the one thats in my
head at the moment, the one Im working on - making choices
for the characters, inventing new ones and surprising myself as I
write with twists to the storyline that I didnt foresee in
my initial planning.
When a book is published, anything between 6 to 12 months have gone
by since I delivered the manuscript. By the time it gets edited,
the covers approved, the text proofread several times by several
people including me, and it finally comes out, Im already working
on a new book. Ive said goodbye to it, because it no longer
belongs to me, but to you, the reader. Thats why, I suppose,
we talk of launching a book, so that like a ship, it
sails off into the unknown, out of sight but still having its own
adventures, making connections with and influencing other people.
In the case of series, though, like the Alex and Tiggie series,
its only a temporary goodbye between books. Sooner or later,
I have to come back and pay another visit to their world and their
story.
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When you wrote Alex, did you know it
was going to be a quartet?
Not at all. I finished the first book in December 1986 and went off
on holiday with my children, on the long-planned trip around the
South Island. And Alex started talking to me. I know that sounds
a little weird, but she really did, asking questions like Did
I go to the Olympics, Mrs Duder? If so, how did I get on? What happened
when I came back? So by the time I got back to Auckland I knew
there was more of Alexs story to be told.
I then spent several months working out a structure for a trilogy.
I decided I had to give her 1960 Rome Olympic experience a whole
book to itself. And because I felt that the period of her preparation,
between February and departure for Rome in August couldnt just
be dealt with in a few chapters, I was then committed to the second
book Alex in Winter. Some
critics have found this book very bleak and unresolved; but others
have thought it a brave and very successful book.
I originally planned the Rome story and its aftermath to be one big
grand book, but my publishers preferred to treat this as two books,
so I ended up with Alessandra :
Alex in Rome and Songs
for Alex and a quartet.
My goodbye to Alex was the little epilogue the two entries
as I imagined they would appear in a New Zealand Whos Who of
Alex Archer and her husband, Tomas Alexander, a famous opera singer.
I enjoyed writing those, creating their adults lives together as
a couple, and separately in their careers.
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Do you have any pets?
Not now, because much as I would like to have a cat, I travel quite
a bit. (One day I will stay at home and get one.) But I grew up with
an adorable springer spaniel called Sandy, and then my own family
had all sorts a cat called Liquorice who lived to 16 years
and is buried underneath the punga trees in my fathers garden;
hens called Port and Starboard; for shorter periods, mice, ducklings,
pet lambs, a seagull (only for 2 weeks while his broken wing mended).
Especially there was Pipi, a Labrador cross who in her youth was
the worlds greatest jumper for sticks and lived to 14. Old
and quite sick, she nobly went walk-about on Kawau Island, where
she spent her first weeks with the family as a tiny floppy-pawed
puppy, and was never seen again.
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Have your children always read your books before
they were published?
Yes, mostly, and to them I will always be grateful for their comments
and suggestions. It was my oldest daughter Lisa, then about 19, who
told me that to kill off Keith in the first Alex book was too much
and lessened the impact of Andys death, and she was absolutely
right.
But Ive always found it difficult to hand over a manuscript
and wait for the judgement. Whether its to my daughters, husband,
agent or publisher, you feel very exposed and anxious for their opinion.
And no matter how many books youve published, each one is always
taken on its own merits, so you cant assume that any manuscript
is always going to be accepted. You need quite strong nerves if you
want to be a writer! Or any creative person who needs the feedback,
and hopefully the enthusiasm and approval, of an audience.
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Who is your favourite author?
Too many to name, really but I have to say there are some
writers whose books I read with especial pleasure and admiration:
Margaret Mahy, William Taylor, Maurice Gee and Kevin Ireland in New
Zealand; the Australian writers Sonya Hartnett and Gillian Rubinstein;
the English writers Philip Pullman, Geraldine McGaughrean, Jan Mark,
A.A. Milne; the Americans Louis Sacher, Katherine Paterson and Ursula
Le Guin.
Generally speaking, I go for adventure and family stories, history
and fantasy, but am not so keen on sci-fi or thrillers. I love big
biographies and autobiographies, and dipping into dictionaries and
encyclopaedias. I read a lot of magazines too, to try and keep up
with whats happening in the world.
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How much money do you make?
You might be surprised to learn, not heaps! Very few writers in New
Zealand make heaps. Of course, the famous writers who are published
in many languages all round the globe can get really wealthy, none
more so than J.K. Rowling, of course, but those are only a relatively
small number of the worlds authors.
In New Zealand we have the particular problem of having a very small
market, so we have to try and publish lots of books and sell them
overseas. Its not easy, because Australia, England, America
etc all have their own wonderful writers.
But yes, its possible to make a reasonable living in New Zealand lets
say about on the same level as teachers - if you work hard, write
different sorts of books, visit schools and talk to adult groups.
You may be lucky enough to get a writing grant for an approved project
from Creative New Zealand, and to be asked to appear at literary
festivals and your books to be published in Australia, England and
possibly some languages other than English. If youre really lucky
you might have a film or television producer take an option on your
book, though very few optioned books ever actually make it to the
screen.
And one good thing about being a writer you need never retire!
Although you might have heard of young writers who have dazzling
success with their first book, that is still very unusual.
Many writers begin quite late say in their thirties, after
they have done all sorts of interesting things and
build up their careers quite slowly. You can go on writing as long
as you like provided you still have something to say and a
publisher who wants to publish you.
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