It's my constant companion at the moment, a great way to get the writing juices flowing. I read a little bit, then write a little bit. Then read a little bit. Then write a little bit more.
It's fantastic. How Siobhan Dowd could write.
And though I am so enjoying it, I can't help but feel sad.
Because Siobhan Dowd died in the summer of 2007 and this is it, the last one. Bog Child
And tomorrow morning, the last ever issue of the DFC will plop through my letter box. Oh woe.
And I just got a sad email from Lookybook, the 'Try Before You Buy' picture book website, that it had decided to close. It had been named one of the 50 Best Websites of 2008 by Time.
Sad. That's me.
And then I meet up with friends Sue Eves, whose book The Quiet Woman and the Noisy Dog
is selling very well indeed, and Steve Hartley who you won't have heard of but soon will (Steve has signed a contract with Macmillan for not one, not two, not three but EIGHT books featuring his hero Danny Baker Record Breaker). Correction: it was FOUR books (two stories each)!
Steve and Sue
... and I remember that there is reason to hope and that the point of the whole exercise of trying to get published is that we are in the business for the sheer love it.
And to cheer myself up I watch the trailer for Where the Wild Things are
which was released today.
