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Posted by Tilda Johnson
by Adele  
April 26, 2012 at 8:24 am 

Describe the place where you write/draw.

It’s the back bedroom of our  house in Cambridge. My study, which is lined with white bookshelves has pale mauve and pale pink walls but doesn’t look girly at all. I have a pale wooden desk with a three drawer chest under it to the left of my legs. The view from the window is over the garden with a lovely sycamore tree in it and I sit with my back to that and looking at my bookshelves which remind me that I used to be able to do this writing thing! On the  wall above the double bed are pictures of my covers etc. The double bed is there because this room doubles as a guest room.

What is your most treasured possession?

My photographs and a painting that hangs in my kitchen.

What times of the day do you work?

Usually 2-5 ish in the afternoon.

What distracts you?

Everything! Twitter, email, post arriving, making salad for lunch, reading papers on the computer. ANYTHING AT ALL.

What is your favourite smell?

Nice food cooking. Or for perfume, currently either Vivienne Westwood’s Boudoir  or Thierry Mugler’s Angel.

Cat or dog?

CAT! I love them.

What is your guiltiest pleasure?

Watching too much mediocre television.

What is the worst job you’ve done?

Being a tour guide in Dar-es-salaam. In French.

What was the last song you sang along to?

I don’t sing along, I just sing. Almost all the time I have a song going through my head. Last one I can remember was You’re the top by Cole Porter.

If you could go back in time, where would you go?

Just before the First World War. I like the clothes. Almost any historical period would be quite interesting as long as you didn’t have to stay in it. I would not like to live in a time before antibiotics.

What are you reading at the moment?

Have just finished lots of prize winning books so a thriller is called for. Michael Connelly’s THE FIFTH WITNESS.

If you weren’t an author, what would you be?

A Country and Western singer.  That’s the dream/ fantasy. Probably the truth would be: a retired teacher of French.

 


Adèle Geras has written more than 90 books for children of all ages and for adults. She lives in Cambridge and contributes to blogs such as THE HISTORY GIRLS and AN AWFULLY BIG BLOG ADVENTURE.  Do explore her website, www.adelegeras.com. Have you read Adele’s Magic Bean? It is a retelling of the fairytale classic, The Six Swan Brothers.


Posted by Tilda Johnson
by Adele  
December 9, 2011 at 9:25 am 

When I saw that the theme for this month was Things we’ve been through in the process of writing our books  my heart sank slightly, I have to admit. Because the honest truth is, I don’t do anything remotely exciting or adventurous in the pursuit of a good story.

I’d have loved to give you an account of a trip up the Amazon or a week in Asia minor or living with down and outs in a squat in Baltimore but alas, they’re all impossible for one reason or another. The Amazon, and indeed anywhere at all jungly, is out of the question. Merely READING about such places produces violent conniptions. Though, on the plus side of jungly, I did live for many years in the tropics and have even written about those days in OTHER ECHOES. It wasn’t anything like the Amazon but we did have to look in our shoes every morning before we put them on to check that scorpions hadn’t taken up residence in the sweaty footwear overnight. I shudder even remembering it now but when I was nine or so, it was just part of the daily routine. Growing up has made me more of a wimp than I was then, which is saying something.

The truth of the matter is: I like staying home. I love reading books. You can gather a great deal of information about various parts of the world simply through consulting books and looking on Google images. When I say I like staying home, I am always up for visiting  a beautiful part of the world and  staying in a posh hotel: don’t get me wrong. But I don’t fly these days (though I did as a child: see above and growing less brave as you get older) and so I’m a bit limited in my destinations. Thus, I can’t go and do first hand research on that squat in Baltimore or the deserts of Asia Minor. Not that I’d particularly fancy it. On the other hand,  if someone would like to commission a novel set in the Ritz, I’m your woman.

But, as the saying goes, if you’re given lemons you must make lemonade.  Read the rest of this entry »


Posted by Tilda Johnson
by Tilda  
November 29, 2011 at 11:27 am 

There were  lovely reviews of 3 very different DFB titles in the papers this weekend - with Magic Beans and This Dark Endeavour featured in The Times’ best children’s books of 2011!  See more here.

‘One of the best value books for 6 plus is Magic Beans an entrancing collection of classic fairytales retold by leading storytellers such as Philip Pullman, Adele Geras and Malorie Blackman. Elegant line drawings by Ian Beck, Debi Gliori, Peter Bailey and others add to the magic.’

‘It’s a beautifully balanced novel with the darkness of the central crime never forgotten or over-sweetened by the love story….. readers wanting to discover if the relationship overcomes all the odds are sure to find themselves provoked, moved and rewarded in equal measure.’  Click here to read the full Guardian review of You Against Me by Jenny Downham. 

‘Kenneth Oppel’s This Dark Endeavour a captivating Gothic novel for 13 plus about the future Dr Frankenstein and his competitive love for his twin brother. Books this good are for life, not just Christmas.’


Posted by Tilda Johnson
by Adele  
October 10, 2011 at 8:31 am 

A long, long time ago…(well, 1998) and in a very different Economic Landscape, a Story Finder called David decided that it would be a good idea if children everywhere could read and enjoy the old stories: the fairy tales and folk legends  that we all love. He asked some storytellers of his acquaintance to retell these and I was one of the chosen ones. I wrote The Six Swan Brothers and it was beautifully illustrated by Ian Beck.

That’s only one example of my retelling history. I’ve retold a great many things: ballet stories, opera stories, other fairy tales and every time I’ve done it,  I’ve loved the experience and I’ve been lucky enough to have marvellous illustrators to bring my efforts to life: Emma Chichester Clark, Christian Birmingham,  Louise Brierley, Jane Ray, and many others.

Now, gather round while I tell you my secret. I like retelling stories because in one significant way, it’s very much easier than writing a book or a story from scratch. Is this a shameful admission? I don’t think so. It’s no more guilt-inducing than saying you like making cakes.

A short digression by way of illustration.  I’m hooked at the moment on the television series called THE GREAT BRITISH BAKE-OFF in which contestants are making cakes, biscuits, pastries, pies, puddings etc. every Tuesday evening.  Each time, one of them gets eliminated and the last woman standing (the men have all  gone already) is the WINNER!  Every week, you see different examples of, let’s say (because it was the hardest task the bakers have been given) a chocolate roulade. There is great variation in what the bakers end up with from a mixture that is, at heart, just flour, fat and eggs. Their skills turn these raw materials into things of unimaginable temptation and deliciousness or complete flops but the flour, eggs, butter DO NOT HAVE TO BE REINVENTED  each time they bake a cake.

So: retelling a story is baking from known and familiar ingredients. Read the rest of this entry »

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