Category Archives: #am writing (and all things writing related)

The Inventory: Iron Fist – Andy Briggs – Blog Tour

Iron Fist

Summary

Imagine you had access to countless items of technology which have been classified as potentially too dangerous for the world to have access to!

Dev’s Uncle is the caretaker of The Inventory, the World’s strongest vault.

However, on the day that Lot, a girl from school, and bully Mason happen to visit, thieves try to break in to steal Iron Fist, and the three kids find themselves in a deadly battle with the intruders, and The Inventory.

My thoughts

I really enjoyed this middle grade action adventure and particularly warmed to Dev. Isolated from making friends because he can never invite them home he doesn’t have the best relationship with his uncle so is pretty lonely with a somewhat sarcastic robot his only company. Dev is clearly intelligent and has paid attention to workings of The Inventory but can he beat the thieves? Well, that would be classed as a spoiler so I’m not going to tell you. What I can say is that readers will enjoy the array of technology, be thrilled by the chase and surprised by certain revelations. I’m certainly looking forward to reading future adventures.

Interview with Author Andy Briggs

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How much fun did you have making up whacky inventions and which do you wish were real?

Making things up for a living is, in a word, awesome. Making up wild inventions for The Inventory was, therefore terrific fun. However, I had one vague rule at the back of my mind: make them feel real, even if it means pushing the barriers of fringe science, they have to at least sound plausible. That’s what set Star Trek aside from plenty of other science fiction shows, it was more science than fiction.

Straight away I would waltz into the Inventory, strap on a pair of Hover-Boots and fly around at breakneck speeds. If the internal security was to prevent me from pilfering the boots, then I would try and sneak off with the Onmi-Board, which is a next generation skateboard that puts Segways and hover-boards to shame.

 

Who is your favourite inventor and why?

That is so easy: Nikola Tesla. The Croatian genius who invented so many things – such as radio control, the Tesla coil (which used to be a vital component of old TVs), and – radio. Of course I can hear many history teacher correcting me there, but they’re wrong. There was a bitter legal battle with Marconi… go and read about it. Fascinating stuff. Many of Tesla’s inventions are only just being explored today.

Despite his amazing inventions, Tesla died penniless, had a pigeon as his best friend and believed that aliens transmitted ideas straight to his brain…

 

Writing is inventing. What is your process: Inspired by a Eureka moment or a carefully planned trial? 

If you had asked me this for any other book then I would have answered that it’s all carefully planned. I structure the chapters and key plot points and have my Eureka moments away from the page, then carefully integrate them into the story. This comes from the screenwriter side of me, scripts have to be very carefully structured and timed.

However, this time I threw caution to the wind and ploughed into the story. It wasn’t a moment of madness, it was an experiment. The Inventory itself is supposed to be a place of unexpected twists and turns, so I wanted to be surprised just as much as the reader. I didn’t want to fall into the trap of those old James Bond movies in which 007 gets exactly the gadget he needs later in the story. I wanted my heroes to find seemingly useless items then be forced to make them work to escape a dastardly situation later. The result is that I, at least, was surprised by what lurks in the World Best Kept Secret…

 

Were you a science geek in school? If not what was your best/favourite subject?

Um. Yes. When it came to choosing GCSEs I took Technology Design, Chemistry and Physics. Then for A-levels I took Maths and Physics – and Media Studies too, of course. The problem was, I wanted to know about quantum physics, black holes and travelling at the speed of light and, sadly, that didn’t crop up in my lessons so I quickly became bored and went off to write stories instead. These days I’m always watching documentaries, reading New Scientist and Wired Magazines and pretend I know exactly what they’re all talking about…

 

What have sheep ever done to you? (Reference to making them invisible and blowing one’s head off) 

Before the RSPCA descend upon me, they are fake sheep! Sheep are menacing. They have weird horizontal pupils and quietly judge you when you walk past their field. Sure, they act dumb, but the moment you’re out of earshot they’re baa-ing away in their cryptic alien language. Them (and cows) are contributing to massive global warming as they fart in order to terraform our planet for their own nefarious purposes. You mark my words, the cute fluffy image is merely creative marketing…

 

Which of the characters in the book would you Repeat, Rewrite, Remove and why? And yes you have to answer ;0

Ooh, now I know I don’t like you! What a cruel question… I would repeat Lot, because, as the daughter of an Air Force test pilot, she is a gung-ho thrill seeker.

I would rewrite Dev because you can never have a perfect hero (and by perfect, I still include all the flaws that make them interesting) as you keep coming up with new and intriguing issues and problems to inflict upon them. That said, the joy of writing a series is that I can now put him under so much more pressure and really pull him apart…

Finally, I would remove Mason (if I had to) because bullies should be erased (or thrown into the prison colonies of our future masters, the sheep (see above).

 

Huge thanks to Andy for some brilliant responses. I hope you enjoy reading them as much as I did.

The Giveaway

Comment below with which everyday invention you’d confine to The Inventory and tell me why (is it dangerous or just plain annoying) and then head over to the Rafflecopter to register your chances to win. Closes Wednesday 11th at midnight. UK and IRL residents only.

The Rest of the Tour

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You can find the links to all the blogs on tour organiser Faye’s website here.

Coming Up – May – June 2016

A somewhat lengthy post (#sorrynotsorry) to let you know about some coming attractions!!!

I’ve joined the #bookstagram community and am having fun taking photographs of my collection – you can follow me here if you wish. The picture I’m happiest with so far is this one – thank you for that, Sunlight!

Blog Tours

Sat 7th May – Andy Briggs – The Inventory: Iron Fist (I’m so excited to share this interview with you). Check out this post by @daydreamin_star for handy links to the other stops on the tour.

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As part of the 2016 Debut Author’s Bash at yareads.com I will be interviewing the following two authors. Check out the sign-up post here to see the amount of amazing authors (and their books) that will be taking part.

Fri 3rd June Jennifer Mason-Black ‘Devil and the Bluebird’

Sat 11th June  Kiran Millwood- Hargrave ‘The Cartographer’s Daughter’

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Sun 26th June – Tommy vs Cancer – I will be reviewing two of Tommy Donbavand’s books – Ward 13 and Scream Street 1: Fang of the Vampire – Tommy has cancer and this blog tour is designed to help support him pay his bills – check out one of his blog posts here and please consider donating. Do read the rest of the blog too. Thanks to @Serendipity_Viv and @daydreamin_star for organising.

 

Reviews

I’ve done lots of reading and have some reviews to catch up on.

Just a note I’ve decided to leave star ratings off reviews though you can still see them on my Goodreads Profile if you are interested.

2016 Classics Challenge

Feb – The Art of Happiness/A Force for Good, Mar – 1984/Brave New World, Apr – Anne of Green Gables, May – The Handmaid’s Tale, June – The Catcher in the Rye

Our Shared Shelf

I’m a little behind on the Emma Waston feminist book club reads but have all the books I’ve not yet read on my May TBR pile

Jan – My Life on the Road, Feb – The Color Purple, Mar – all about love, Apr – How to be a Woman/Moranthology/Moranifesto, May – The Argonauts, June – TBC

2016 Most anticipated

So far I’ve read 9/16 books I was most looking forward to this year and will be reviewing:

Morning Star, How Hard Can Love Be?, The Sleeping Prince, 13 Minutes, Desolation, Geek Girl 5: Head Over Heels, Rebel of the Sands, Kindred Spirits and Mind Your Head.

YA Book Prize 2016 Shortlist

When the 10 books that made the shortlist were announced I was very happy to see that I’d already read 5 and owned an additional 3. Since then I’ve bought and listened to One! on audiobook so just have 1 to acquire and 4 left to read. This will be the first shortlist I WILL have finished reading before the prize is announced. I think as Melvin Burgess is getting a special prize I should really add Junk to my list too.

Book Boxes

I appear to be expecting 4 book boxes in May – oops – so I’ll share an unboxing and review of each one.

They are, in alphabetical order: Fairyloot, Illumicrate, My Bookish Crate and Owlcrate.

 

New Feature

Finally, in my interview with Andy Briggs I asked him a somewhat nasty question – which he very kindly answered and I’m thinking of making it a feature.

Repeat, Rewrite, Remove

The question is ‘Which of the Characters in your book would you Repeat, Rewrite, Remove and why?’

I’m looking for brave authors who’d like to explore this to get in contact – please use the form below.

← Back

Thank you for your response. ✨

Ummm – just realised it looks like I have a busy couple of months ahead. What have you got coming up?

 

 

Bella Broomstick by Lou Kuenzler – Blog Tour – Author Interview and Blog Tour

Welcome to my stop on the blog tour for the new Middle Grade series Bella Broomstick by Lou Kuenzler. When Faye asked if I was interested I thought back to reading The Worst Witch when I was younger and said yes.

Bella Broomstick

Summary

Bella Broomstick is a hopeless witch. So hopeless that nasty Aunt Hemlock is sending her to live in Person World – with the warning that she must never do magic again! But when Bella finds a kitten in trouble, a spell is the only way to rescue it. What is Bella to do? For where there is magic, trouble is never far away!

What I thought

Oddly enough I’d listened to The Worst Witch stories earlier in the year and it’s interesting re-reading stories you loved as a child when you are older. Reading Bella Broomstick as an adult matched up to my re-read so I’m pretty sure the younger me would have loved Bella and Rascal as much as she loved Mildred and Tabby.

In Bella Broomstick I really enjoyed the fact that the setting was the ‘Person World’ and I adored the theme of finding your place and finding your self confidence in your uniqueness. The younger me definitely needed that sort of message (and older me needs reminding every now and then).  The illustrations in the book really contribute to the story, especially as they are “drawn by Bella herself.”

I have to admit though that I did want a little more of Wane the chameleon – he’s the evil version of Pascal from Tangled and would have been a fun foil for Rascal. Maybe next time ;o)

 

Interview with the delightful author

  1. In a lot of books we see the human person heading to the magic world, what made you decide to switch things round?

I think it was exactly that – I love the Harry Potter stories, of course. That got me thinking, what if somebody from the Magic Realm came to our world. Perhaps they’d find it strange and “magical” too.

  1. What magical stories did you enjoy reading as a child?

For pure bonkers magic, I loved Enid Blyton’s Faraway Tree series – the idea that with just one wish you could leap into a new land. Genius. But there was also a book called Silver Snaffles by Primrose Cummings in which a little girl enters a magic world where horses can speak. I grew up on a farm and was lucky enough to have a pony of my own … The hours I spent sitting in her stable hoping the hayrack would open up and I too would find the secret world! Perhaps that’s why Bella Broomstick can talk to animals – a little bit of wish fulfilment on my part.

  1. There are a number of animals in the book, which was your favourite to write about and why?

I really enjoyed writing Rascal the kitten because, as his name suggests, he is very mischievous which kept me on my toes. He’s quite big headed too. But, most of all, I enjoyed writing Wane the mean, shape-shifting chameleon. Creating baddies is always the best fun.

  1. What would you hope children that might get called hopeless in real life take away from this book?

I hope they will come to realise that sometimes the things we (and other people – including grown-ups) think are important at certain stages of our lives are not necessarily the most enduring things. Celebrate what you are good at – Bella worries about finding magic tricky when perhaps, instead, she should celebrate the fact that she can speak fluent animal languages. I am dyslexic and found school really hard. One way or another, I often ended up feeling a bit hopeless … the only thing I was any good at was making up stories (even though I found it really difficult to get them down on paper). All these years later, it turns out that having a pretty wobbly grasp of my times tables isn’t the end of the world. But, as a children’s writer – with the help of a great spell checker on the computer and very patient editors – having a lively imagination hardwired to childhood has finally paid off!

  1. How important do you think the illustrations are in this book? (I really enjoyed them).

Aren’t they fantastic. We really wanted it to look as if Bella had drawn them herself. Kyan Cheng has created a really wonderful doodle style and I think the pictures add lots of humour to the stories. It is always great for newly-fluent readers to have pictures along the way. I particularly love the illustrations of the long lists Bella writes (such as Worst Spells Ever). And Chang’s superb, shadowy image of Wane the chameleon sends shivers down my spine.

  1. Can you name some other animal languages – we’ve got cat chat, what about elephants, dogs, etc.

Ah … there’s Toad Talk, of course. Hornet Hum. Grasshopper Gulp. Dog Dialogue – I don’t know if Bella has ever chatted to an elephant but she could try Trunk Talking, I suppose! She does love Cat Chat best of all though … and is promising to learn Flamingo (one of the trickiest types of Beak Speak) very soon.

 

Thanks so much for these fabulous questions. I had a lot of fun – and a bit of head scratching – coming up with the answers.

Lou

 

Do check out the earlier posts on the tour, and if you’ve got children who like fantasy please introduce them to Bella (especially if they are having a bit of a hard time at school).

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