
The following interview appeared in the Fall 2001 Preview Magazine
Do you have any rituals?
I can write anywhere if I have to because I still use a pen and paper -,
but when I am at home I go to the old carved desk I inherited from my
mother
who was a writer too, and told some fantastic stories. The morning is
best for
ideas, and I have to be wearing warm clothes because when I am thinking
hard I get
cold. And I have to have a waste paper basket handy for all the pages
that
have gone wrong.
Whom do your share your writing with first?
I don't really share my work until it is published, I feel too
uncomfortable about
unfinished work.
When did you know you wanted to be a writer?
I don't think I ever knew, it just happened. One day I wrote 'author' in
my passport and that was that..
What were you doing when you found out that your first book was going to be published?
Cooking supper for my husband and children. My agent phoned and I
shouted and we all danced about, except my husband who saw to it that
the sauce
did not burn.
What did you treat yourself to when you found out that your first book was accepted for publication?
My first money as a writer came from a short story in a magazine. It was
a very small sum, and I bought Mars Bars for everybody in the family.
What was the first book you remember reading as a child? Did you have a favorite book as a child?
I don't remember the name of my first book, but I know it had a picture of very
bright berries, green and red in a forest- and people lived inside the
berries...
Perhaps that's where my passion for forests comes from!
Do you read reviews of your own work?
Yes, when I am sent them, but I don't go out and look.
What's the best question a teen has asked about your writing?
I don't know what the best question is, but by far the most common is
'Where do you get your ideas from?' - and the answer to that is very
difficult
(and therefore interesting).
What are you reading right now?
The Wizard of Earthsea, by Ursula Le Guin.
Susan, your editor, tells me Journey to the River Sea is a book you've wanted to write for years. How did the idea first come to you?
Journey to the River Sea was written quite quickly but it spent years
and years inside my head. It started with my hearing about this
fabled opera
house a thousand miles from the mouth of the Amazon and I thought it
was one of the strangest things I had ever heard - I meant to go
there and
see for myself but then I realised it would mean going back into the
past because
everything is quite different there now. So I went on reading and
dreaming and
researching and then one day, I picked up my pen to start a new book
about
witches and ghosts and found I had started to write an adventure story
set in the
jungle.
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