Last year, one of the shortlisted books
for Children’s Book of the Year was Six Impossible Things by TV writer and now
YA novelist Fiona Wood. It was funny and sad at the same time and contained
characters who were over-the-top but lovable. This book got a mention during a
YA panel I was on at Continuum a few weeks ago, from an American writer, so it
has already made it overseas as well as Australia. And given that the panel was on speculative fiction in YA and this book is very much set in our own world, it has DEFINITELY made it!
In this interview, Fiona talks about her work – hope you enjoy!
In this interview, Fiona talks about her work – hope you enjoy!
SB: What inspired this particular
story? Why, for example, have a boy as your main character when so much
mainstream YA these days is about and for girls?
FW: My point of departure was not: ‘What
gender should my protagonist be?’ but rather, ‘What story will I devise for
this character who keeps knocking on my door?’.
Because Dan was where it all started. He
was the first element of the novel to appear. I was working on something else
entirely – a film script – when ideas for a shy, angsty, nerdish
fourteen-year-old boy started suggesting themselves. I decided it would be fun
if this ‘boy least likely’ got to go to the ball, or, in his case, the year
nine social, and from that point I included some elements from the Cinderella
story. Boys and girls have both enjoyed the book.
SB: You’ve said your hero’s name,
Dan Cereill, is “Cinderella” jumbled up. What other elements of the Cinderella
story are in there? (He strikes me more as a much brighter Adrian Mole,
actually, with a Pandora who’s worth caring about. ;-D)
FW: Yes, naming him was the first Cinderella element. Dan could also
have been a Ned or Ed, but when I wrote down Cereill as a possible surname, I
could see there was fun to be had with mispronunciation – cereal/surreal – and
so Dan Cereill it was. Then because I wanted Dan’s
appearance to change through the course of the story as a concrete image of his
‘growing up’, it gave me an opportunity to have Oliver and Em play a fairy
godmother role. And Dan’s mother’s wedding cake business gave me a good clamp
to require him to be home by midnight. (I really like the character Adrian
Mole, but I think he and Dan are very different.)
SB: You’re a TV writer in your other
life - has this had an effect on the way you wrote the story?
FW: I’m sure TV writing influences the way
I tell a story. For example, I really enjoy a narrative that rolls along, and
I’m pretty hard-line during the editing process in cutting out any passages
that stall the flow of the story. TV writing has also given me the habit and
discipline of plotting and planning. I couldn’t start writing without having
developed the plot, and knowing the end points to which I am heading for each
character, and for the story overall. But that’s not to say it doesn’t change a
lot along the way.
SB: I really liked Estelle and her
friends and thought they deserved a book of their own - are you considering
giving them one?
FW : Thanks, Sue. Lots of readers have
asked about a sequel to Six Impossible Things, and though I haven’t written a direct sequel, my
new book Wildlife (out
next year with Pan Macmillan) does feature Lou from Six Impossible Things as one of the two point-of-view
characters. Wildlife
sees Lou starting at a new school, and going through a phase of readjustment
following a tragic event that happens between the two books. She is still in
touch with Dan and Estelle, and we hear what they are up to. The third book in
this very loosely linked trilogy will take up the story of two characters who
first appear in Wildlife
in minor roles.
And I’ve just written a short story with
Estelle in it. But it’s set in the future. She’s twenty-five, and breaking up
with her boyfriend in Prague. The characters certainly live on in my mind
beyond the narratives for which they have been created.
As a reader, I love coming across
characters who move between novels. Alison Lurie was the first writer I was
aware of who does this, and more recently I adore the way Melina Marchetta
takes up the story of some of her characters from ‘Saving Francesca’, five
years later, in her recent release, ‘The Piper’s Son’.
SB: Did you have any beta readers
for this? If so, what kind of people did you ask? Teens? Teachers? Girls? Boys?
FW: Yes, I tick all those categories of
beta readers for Six Impossible Things, and have asked the same readers, plus two
additional readers, to look at Wildlife in unedited manuscript form.
SB: Are any of the things that
happened in your novel based on real events?
FW: Nothing directly, but so many little
details of character and dialogue, music and humour, are based on my world.
SB; Finally, tell us about your new
book. What’s it about?
FW: Wildlife is a story about first love, friendship
and betrayal. It's set over one term during which year ten students board at
their school’s outdoor education campus. I’ve written a post at my blog on the
various working titles it has had, and why they didn’t make the cut. http://fionawood.com/2012/07/01/coming-up-with-a-title/
Thanks for giving your time to the
Great Raven, Fiona! I’m sure your fans will be delighted to know that some of
your characters from the first book will be appearing in your new one.
MORE ABOUT FIONA:
Fiona
Wood has been writing television for more than ten years on shows ranging from
’MDA’ and ‘The Secret Life of Us’ to ‘Neighbours’ and ‘Home and Away’.
Her
first novel Six Impossible Things was shortlisted for the 2011 CBCA
Book of the Year, Older Readers. Her second novel Wildlife is out next year.
Web
site: www.fionawood.com
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