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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Kerry Millard, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 3 of 3
1. Setting Your Characters Free - From Book to Film and back again


Bindi Irwin as Nim, from Return to Nim's Island movie poster
I know that tying in a film to a book sequel sounds like the writer’s equivalent of a first world problem, but in fact we always need to be aware of how much we are, or want to be, swayed by other people’s comments and interpretations, from editors to illustrators, cover artists and even readers. I didn’t actually plan Nim as an eco-warrior, but the way that she and Jack live means that she’s interpreted as one. It seems so logical to me now that I have to remind myself it simply evolved naturally, as it probably would have if she were real.














My only physical description of Nim in any of the books is ‘her hair is wild and her eyes are bright.’ But of course I have my own vision of her:  a wiry, dark haired, almost elfin girl, and I kept that through the first two books, even though I enjoyed imagining how Kerry Millard might illustrate something.


Kerry Millard's interpretation of Nim






Wendy Orr, Abigail Breslin, Kerry Millard
Then the films came, and there were real people, in flesh and blood, both the people I met off camera, and the way they were portrayed on screen and covers. By the time I started Rescue on Nim’s Island, I’d had 5 years of seeing Abigail Breslin being so completely Nim that it was difficult to return to my own vision.  
Abigail Breslin as Nim



It was only when I’d seen Bindi Irwin on location, portraying Nim differently but equally convincingly, that I could free myself up and remember my mantra that characters are however you interpret them: if they could both be Nim, my own vision could be too.


Bindi Irwin, Wendy Orr

It took me a while to find my way with Rescue on Nim’s Island  and that’s what I think is relevant to all of us. I had to really go back to basics instead of planning plots that I thought were terribly filmic, to which the film producer kept saying, ‘But that doesn’t really sound like you, or Nim.’ 
Geoff's Kelly interpretation of Nim


I had to slow down, dream around it, and gradually discover the story in the usual organic way that I work. I reread the first books and got into the rhythm. Nim is a year older in each book, and I felt that she was growing naturally. She’s still herself. She’s more quick-tempered than either Abbie or Bindi are in real life, though slightly less pugnacious than the Nim of the second film. She’s the girl that was obviously born of some part of me, when I started writing her in 1998. Or maybe further back, when I wrote the prototype when I was 9. So if there’s a moral, I think it’s simply, let your characters grow and develop, but always be true to who they are at core.

*This is an edited excerpt of a talk I gave at the SCBWI meeting at Flinders on 6 September, 2014.

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2. Next Big Thing Blog Tour


I’ve been tagged for the Next Big Thing, a new blog tour where an author writes about their current work or next book. I was tagged by two lovely authors, Corinne Fenton, whose upcoming LIttle Dog and the Christmas Wish sounds just as delightful as her new book Hey Baby and Robyn Opie Parnell, who learned how to become a medium to write Maya and the Daring Heist!  Fascinating stuff! 

What is the working title of your next book?
DISCOVERED! A Beagle Called Bella. It’s the 6th book in the Rainbow Street Animal Shelter series and is illustrated by the talented Patricia Castelao. 

2) Where did the idea come from for the book?
When my parents were first married, they fell in love with a beautiful beagle puppy. She was extraordinarily destructive, an escape artist, and completely unsuitable for a young couple out at work all day. They eventually had to rehome her with a kennel of hunting beagles, where she was very happy. However the story haunted our whole dog-loving family, and when I heard a call from the Customs service for uncontrollable beagles, my story seed was planted.


3) What genre does your book fall under?

Realistic children’s fiction for readers of 7 and up; illustrated chapter book.

4) What actors would you choose to play the part of your characters in a movie rendition?

Toby Wallace at twelve for Timothy. The beagle would need to be very well trained to act very naughty.

5) What is the one-sentence synopsis of your book?

Bella the beagle puppy has so much energy she doesn’t just need a home – she needs a job!
6) Will your book be self-published or represented by an agency?

It will be published by Henry Holt, USA, who also hold international and film rights. It has also been published in Rainbow Street Pets, a collection of all the Rainbow Street stories published in one volume in Australia by Allen & Unwin.

7) How long did it take you to write the first draft of the manuscript?

A rough first draft: about six weeks. I have no idea how many drafts followed during the year or so after that. 

8) Who or what inspired you to write this book?

Apart from my parents’ story for this individual book, the series was sparked by my publisher at Henry Holt, who knew that I loved writing about animals, and suggested a series set in an animal shelter. I felt that it was important to include a story that dealt with a dog who needed to be rehomed because it and its first owners simply weren't right for each other – it's heart breaking for the owners who decide to surrender the dog, but can have a happy ending. 

10) What else about the book might pique the reader's interest?
(Aren’t dogs enough to pique anyone’s interest?) I think kids will find it intriguing to think of the sniffer dogs as detectives – I was quite fascinated by the research.  It’s amazing what these dogs can find!

I've now tagged the talented Kerry Millard to see what her next big thing is. Check it out on Jan 23!  I've invited a few other people as well, but I have to confess I left it a bit late, so they may have already been tagged. I'll quickly add them in when I hear...

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3. Halloween Story: The Ghost of Jack Henry

My Halloween gift to you:  an excerpt, which can be read as a complete short story, from Spook's Shack, illustrated by Kerry Millard, published by Allen & Unwin, 2003




Deep in the bush, down by the creek where the trees grew thick and the vines twined tall, Finn saw a chimney. If there was a chimney there must be a roof and if there was a roof there must be a house.
But there was no road and no driveway, and all this great wild bushland belonged to Aunt Agatha.
‘No one else has lived here for a hundred years,’ she’d said. ‘Stay off the farms and away from Boris Banks’ mansion - but while you’re in the bush you’ll bother no one and no one will bother you.’
So Finn pushed his way through thorny bushes and wire-sharp grass until he could see the corner of a wall. He ducked through tangling vines and scratching branches, and then he saw the shack.
It was so old it looked like part of the bush. The walls were charred black from fire and the door was locked with a big wooden bolt.
A prickle of fear ran up Finn’s neck.
‘It’s just a shack,’ he told himself. ‘An old deserted shack. You can’t be afraid of it.’
The prickle of fear ran faster and colder.
‘There might be something interesting,’ he decided. ‘There might be gold.’
He slid back the bolt, pushed open the door and stepped inside.
The air smelled of wet dogs and stale bread, and it was cold - shivery, clammy cold. The window was dark with dirt and covered by leaves, so that not even the hottest sun could reach inside. Across the walls, lumpy green fungus glowed in the dark.
Then a dog growled, a chair creaked, and a cross, whispery voice snarled, ‘Gazumping galahs! Who’s that, clumping into my shack?’
Finn jumped - and hit the door. It shut tight behind him.
An old man was sitting in a rocking chair with a border collie dog at his knees. The hair on Finn’s head and arms stood up as straight as bristles in a brush, because the old man - a scrawny, skinny old man - had skin that glowed green from the toadstools behind him and a body that was see-through as shimmering glass.
Finn’s knees started rattling. ‘Oh!’ he said, in a squeak that made the dog shake his ears and whine.
The black parts of the dog’s coat were nearly invisible but his white ruff and paws shone as green as his master’s face.
Finn’s teeth started chattering
‘You woke us up!’ growled the old man, and the dog growled too.
‘I didn’t think anyone lived here,’ said Finn, and now he was clattering from his clenched-tight toes to his quivering hair.
The old man laughed, like gravel in a gold-shaking pan. ‘You look like you’ve seen a ghost!’
Finn slid sideways to open the door, but his knees were wobbling and his feet were as heavy as if he were walking in glue. The black-and-green dog sneaked towards him and bit his ankle with a sharp cold pinch.
‘Ow!’ Finn shouted. His foot jerked back; his wobbly knees folded - and he slid to the ground.
Cold hands whispered over his face.
Finn couldn’t breathe in and he couldn’t breathe out. He wondered if he was going to die right now.
           ‘You’ll have a lump like an emu’s egg tomorrow,’ cackled the old man, and held out his hand.
Finn sat up. His head went through the old man’s arm.
            ‘Waddling wombats!’ hissed the old man. ‘Try that again!’
            The old man waved his arm from side to side, right through Finn’s head. Finn saw a blur of green and felt a shiver of cold between his ears.
 ‘Gazumping galahs,’ breathed the old man, with a sigh like wind blowing through leaves. ‘Looks like you did see a ghost!’

Copyright: Wendy Orr

Spook's Shack is available as an ebook or direct from the author for $15.00 plus postage. 

Happy Halloween! 


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