Reading, writing and... Mars?

Hi everyone.

Welcome back to my Monday mini-blog - which had a half term break and has returned as a mid-week mini-blog instead. I’ve been putting together a weekly writing challenge (bar last week) to provide a little creative distraction to children who’re at home - and anyone else who’d like to have a go. Previous challenges are here. And, for a change, I’ve recorded today’s as a video! Let me know what you think!

What I’m writing:

I always love it when authors put out a bonus short story or comic set in the same world as their books just for fun. It feels like such a treat. How about you - do you enjoy that too? Well, if the answer is yes (which I hope it is) then watch this space. Because I may have something up my sleeve, coming soon…

Reading and to-be-reads:

I’ve just finished Malamander by Thomas Taylor and let me tell you, it’s witty, thrilling (and, of course, supremely eerie) in all the right places: a truly rare and masterful creature. I’ve now started on Joseph Elliott’s second book in the Shadow Skye trilogy, The Broken Raven. I’m thrilled to be spending time with characters Agatha and Jaime again, as well as newcomer Sigrid, and the tension’s already rising!

Writing challenge:

Check out my video below for a prompt that I hope helps you spark some other-worldly story ideas!

Check out a video I made via Loom

Video transcript:

My writing challenge for you this week is all based around the Mars Rover that landed the other week and all the cool pictures it's been sending back. I just thought it was really awesome that it's on a whole new planet and is up there exploring things we've never seen before. So here's the writing challenge. Imagine that this Rover has moved on a little way over Mars, and it's taken some pictures and sent them back to earth. And the scientists are opening up these pictures right now. What do they see? There's something truly shocking in one of the pictures! That thing is completely up to you to decide: is it bones of some kind or even a live alien creature - or something completely different? Maybe it could be something completely random, like a teapot. It's also up to you to figure out why it's there…

New pages, new reads, a new writing challenge

It’s Monday, which means another mini-blog! I hope you enjoy this week’s writing challenge, as well as the latest updates from me:

Writing challenges get their own page:

I’ve created a page for my weekly writing challenges - so you can now browse them all in one place to find one that captures your imagination. I’ll be keeping it up to date every week when I add a new one - but keep an eye on this blog to be first to catch the latest.

When Life Gives You Mangoes.JPG

What I’ve read, what I’m reading:

Last week I finished the most incredible book: When Life Gives You Mangoes by Kereen Getten. The story follows Clara who’s been having a difficult time with her best friend, and who can’t remember things about last summer. All she knows is, she used to love to surf, but now she’s afraid of the sea... The adult audiobook I’ve just started is The Martian by Andy Weir, which I’m loving listening to as an audiobook. I’m finding a few parallels between lockdown and Mark Watney’s experience of being alone on Mars!

Writing challenge #4:

We watched Spirited Away this weekend (man I love that film!) and the idea of there being a spirit in/for everything - based I think on the Shinto religion - gave me an idea for the next challenge. So here it is. In Spirited Away there are river spirits, stink spirits - even a radish spirit! Take any object you can see or imagine (a tree, an armchair, your favourite mug) or something you can’t (like a smell you love) and imagine it as a character. What would they look like? What sort of personality do they have? How do they behave/talk/move? Write all about them! And please share: I’d love to hear all about your character.

Stay safe and well everybody, and have a brilliant week.

Writing challenge #3 - exploring emotions

I really like thinking about how characters feel when I write, and what the things that provoke a big reaction say about them. (In Glassheart there’s an imp called Castor whose scales change colour depending on how he feels, and that was really fun to write.) So I’d like to try a super fun challenge this week:

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