Wednesday, 30 December 2015
Happy end of 2015
I think it's as important to celebrate the year that's just past (or if it hasn't been happy, to at least acknowledge it), as it is to look forward to the new one.
2015 has been fun (and hard work) for me, launching a fledgling publishing company - Flat Bed Press - and a new children's novel - The Bold Ship Phenomenal.
I also always enjoy the turn of the year, as a chance to look forward with anticipation to the next one and to plan. I love to consider and get excited about the writing projects I have scheduled.
2016 for me will be another novel in the junior fiction series I am working on at the moment. It will also, hopefully, be a polished draft of the novel for adults I have been working on seemingly for ever. There's also a picture book in the publishing pipeline.
To celebrate both end and beginning, I'm running a book giveaway on Goodreads for the first two weeks of the year. All you have to do to enter is click the button (on the Goodreads site). Then wait and see...a bit like waiting to see what the New Year will actually bring.
I hope yours has its fair share of adventure and joy!
Tuesday, 8 December 2015
Bold Ship Phenomenal listed as best Christmas buy
I'm chuffed that my book, The Bold Ship Phenomenal, was listed by The New Zealand Herald's Canvas magazine as one of the best books to buy for young readers this Christmas.
I'm doubly chuffed to be sandwiched between JK Rowling and the Thunderbirds. Hopefully some of their success will rub off. Bold Ships are go...
I'm doubly chuffed to be sandwiched between JK Rowling and the Thunderbirds. Hopefully some of their success will rub off. Bold Ships are go...
Enjoy a good scare? Author Sue Copsey tells us about her latest spooky story for kids...
I have just finished reading Sue Copsey's fabulous ghost story for kids - The Ghosts of Tarawera (Treehouse Books, 2015).
The Ghosts of Tarawera is book two in a planned series of New Zealand-based ghost stories for junior fiction and young adult readers (the first was The Ghost of Young Nick's Head (Pear Jam books, 2011)).
It's a wonderful, wonderful story, and a gripping read, which builds on and adds to the well-known ghostly appearances that preceded the Mount Tarawera eruption of 1886.
I've written a review of the book, which you can read on Goodreads (along with numerous four and five star reviews by other appreciative readers).
Sue kindly agreed to answer some questions about how she came to write the book, and what she has planned next - here's what she said. For more information, check out her website: www.suecopsey.com
The Ghosts of Tarawera is book two in a planned series of New Zealand-based ghost stories for junior fiction and young adult readers (the first was The Ghost of Young Nick's Head (Pear Jam books, 2011)).
It's a wonderful, wonderful story, and a gripping read, which builds on and adds to the well-known ghostly appearances that preceded the Mount Tarawera eruption of 1886.
I've written a review of the book, which you can read on Goodreads (along with numerous four and five star reviews by other appreciative readers).
Sue kindly agreed to answer some questions about how she came to write the book, and what she has planned next - here's what she said. For more information, check out her website: www.suecopsey.com
Interview with Sue
The Ghosts of Tarawera draws on the famous New Zealand
legend about the ghostly waka that appeared before the Mount Tarawera eruption.
What was it that drew you to this story?
I well remember the first time I
read about this legend. I was editing a school textbook about the Taupo
Volcanic Zone, and in amongst all this serious science there it was, as
reported at the time (1886) by many tourists as well as local Maori. I was
drawn to the story because there were so many witnesses: two groups of Europeans in sightseeing boats,
as well as villagers on the lake shore. The sightseers reported seeing an
impressive war canoe – nothing spooky about it – but the Maori realised it was
supernatural as there hadn’t been a waka of that type in the area in living
memory. Local Maori also recognised it as an omen of disaster, and 11 days
later were proved right when Mt Tarawera erupted. I reckon Lake Tarawera’s
phantom waka, which legend says will reappear if the mountain reawakens, is far
more credible than the Loch Ness monster, and look which is more famous. That’s
just wrong!
Your story is very evocative of the landscapes around Lake
Rotomahana and Rotorua. Did you spend much time there while you were writing
the book?
I’ve been to this part of the North
Island many times, so I had a good feel for it. I love the mix of forest,
lakes, hills, Maori culture and weird and wonderful volcanic features. You can
feel you’ve slipped back in time, to when dinosaurs roamed the Earth.
But also, Google Earth was my
friend. While I was writing the book I had it almost permanently open as I
zoomed in and out of satellite images looking for how the children would get
across and around Lake Rotomahana before and during the eruption. When I’d
finished, I hauled the family down to a bach near Mt Tarawera, and revisited
the Buried Village, went on a boat trip on Lake Rotomahana, and kayaked on Lake
Tarawera, making sure it all felt right, especially the atmosphere – I wanted
the reader to feel they were really there, and recognise it if they visited.
What was the hardest part of the story to write, and why?
Writing the story was easy, it more
or less wrote itself! But I was worried about getting the science right. I love
popular science but wasn’t very good at it at school. Show me a physics
equation and I feel a bit faint. I wanted to include lots of interesting facts
about volcanoes and Mt Tarawera (I call it ‘education by stealth’), and to be absolutely
sure I got it right, I asked GNS Science, who monitor NZ’s volcanoes and
earthquakes, to check the manuscript for me. And so began the best correspondence
I’ve ever had with an expert. Cornel de Ronde, who led the team that explored
the lake floor at Rotomahana, contacted me, saying he loved how I was weaving
all this geology into my adventure story, as he’s passionate about science
education in schools. He was quite accepting of a few, ahem, liberties I took
with the geology of the area in order to keep Joe, Eddie, Anastasia and Beckie
alive. ‘They’d certainly die in an eruption such as you describe,’ he said.
‘But this is a moot point – it is a story, after all.’
What spooky tales did you enjoy as a child?
I liked the ‘true’ ones. Every
village in Britain, where I grew up, had its spooks, and I had a book that
listed just about every haunted house in the country. Thinking back, I must
have been a weird child to have on holiday. Wherever we travelled in England,
my twin loves of Enid Blyton’s Famous Five, and local folklore meant that I was
always searching for secret passages and ghosts.
Have you ever seen a ghost?
Honestly, I don’t know – but something
odd happened that makes me strongly suspect I have. It was my wedding night
(seriously – no chortling please) and Michael and I were staying in a turret
room in a Victorian hotel near my home town of Rugby. I was in bed and Michael
was in the bathroom. In one wall was a small door which, without warning, flew
open. A figure was silhouetted in the doorway, bright light behind. Then it
slammed shut again. A bit like those sightseers with the phantom waka, I didn’t
think this was anything supernatural, I just assumed someone had got lost in
the hotel’s maze of corridors and ended up at our room by mistake. When Michael
reappeared, I told him what had happened and asked him to move a table in front
of the door. He did so, looking at me oddly – he thought I’d probably been half
asleep (and yes, a few glasses of champagne had been imbibed).
Next morning we opened this little
door to see a fire escape leading out onto the turret roof. So how could anyone
have been out there, and why had there been a bright light behind them? Could
this have been something spooky?
Feeling a bit silly, I asked the
receptionist if the hotel had any ghostly residents, only to learn that there
were several (most usually a coach and horses, a headless man, and a hand), and
that people were constantly reporting strange occurences. Seems the hotel was,
and still is, notorious for its ghosts – and we had no idea before that night.
This is your second novel about New Zealand ghosts. Is there
another one on the horizon? And if so, can you give us a hint about the ghosts
involved?
Yes indeed! Peeping over the
horizon is The Ghosts of Moonlight Creek.
I wanted to set my next ghost story in one of New Zealand’s old goldmining
settlements, and discovered the wonderfully named Moonlight, near Queenstown.
Anastasia’s movie director father is filming a fantasy movie down there and
invites Joe, Eddie, Beckie and Anastasia to the movie set as a treat after
their scare at Mt Tarawera. However, they soon discover filming is being held
up by unexplained incidents, and the crew are beginning to call it a cursed
film. I’m about a quarter of the way through and can’t wait to find out what
happens!
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