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Wednesday Writing Prompt With Sarah Armstrong

About Sarah

When Sarah Armstrong was a kid, her family didn’t have a television and she read a book a day. She went on to become an award-winning journalist at ABC Radio before moving to live in a rainforest valley in northern NSW.

She’s written three novels for grown-ups and Big Magic is her first novel for kids, and its sequel will be out in 2023. She lives with her partner and their twelve-year old daughter in the town of Mullumbimby, which features in all her novels (although sometimes slightly disguised!).

About Big Magic

Big Magic is about eleven-year old Tulsi who lives in a travelling circus. She comes from a long line of women magicians but her mother has always forbidden her to learn Big Magic. It’s dangerous, thrilling and powerful – and Tulsi wants it more than anything. But one hot summer’s night, a magic trick goes horribly wrong and her mother disappears. Only one person can bring her back, and that’s Tulsi.

The Hardest Thing About Writing Big Magic

The hardest thing was probably the rewriting process. Writing the first draft is sheer fun. But rewriting takes a lot of thought and energy and I rewrote this about eight times. Hopefully it flows and reads very easily now – but it took lots of work to get it that way!

The Most Fun Thing About Writing This Book

The most fun thing is letting my imagination loose in my first draft (and later when I am rewriting and adding bits). I love freewriting to see what characters and twists and are just waiting to emerge.  

A Writing Prompt Inspired by Big Magic

Think of a character who has a problem, then dream up a magic trick that will help them solve their problem. The only thing is they must keep their magic secret from others….

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Wednesday Writing & Illustrating Prompts With Pat Simmons and Katrin Drelling

Today we’re so lucky to have both the creators of a wonderful new picture book, Cicada Sing Song visiting Writing Classes for Kids and talking about their craft.

Author, Pat Simmons created the fabulous concept and text and Katrin Drelling is the talented illustrator who has brought Pat’s words to life in pictures.

Today they’re talking about their journeys with the book and they have two great creative prompts for you.

ABOUT PAT

Pat Simmons lives at Scarborough on the NSW south coast with her cats, dog and the occasional mini beast. Pat writes poetry, short stories, flash fiction and children’s picture books.

Pat loves encouraging children to explore the natural world.

www.patsimmonswriter.com.au

ABOUT KATRIN

Katrin creates quirky illustrations that feature a mix of different media, texture and techniques.

Her picture book “The World’s Worst Pirate” has been awarded “Notable Book 2018” by the CBCA Australia, short-listed for the 2018 Speech Pathology Australia Award and the Society of Women Writers NSW Biennial Awards 2018 and she also delivered illustrations for a highly successful video animation production.

Additionally, Katrin conducts illustration workshops for both children and adults.

https://www.katrindreiling.com/

ABOUT CICADA SING SONG

Free teacher notes written by Kellie Nissen can be downloaded from Pat’s website. They appear under, ‘Latest News.’

The cicadas are above ground at last. This is the loudest sing song ever. Who knew that cicadas could rap?

Come along to the Festival of Sound.

THE HARDEST THING ABOUT WRITING

The hardest thing about writing a book for me is getting started. I spend ages thinking about an idea. Will it work? Where to begin? I write lots of messy notes before a story starts to take shape.

THE HARDEST THING ABOUT ILLUSTRATING CICADA SING SONG

My characters never really look realistic but of course require a certain recognition value. With this book, the text aims to introduce different kind of cicada species to children in a fun yet educational way and so it was important that the main characters looked cute and appealing AND could be identified as cicadas. I went for very round shapes (and let’s not forget the Rapper clothing) and was happy with how the cicadas turned out in the end but I can also see that some kids will think they are ‘green potatoes’ maybe…? 😊 I do believe though that at some point the artist/illustrator has to let go and let the creation speak for itself and just see what happens.

THE MOST FUN THING ABOUT WRITING THE BOOK – PAT

The most fun thing is watching my ideas come to life. What if? What if cicadas actually plan a music festival? What if they’re rapping in their own little way?

The very best fun thing is seeing how the illustrator interprets my words. That is so special.

THE MOST FUN THING ABOUT ILLUSTRATING THE BOOK – KATRIN

Exactly what I have described above – figuring out how to create cicada characters in my style. I love that challenge. Also, I really enjoyed illustrating the end papers for this book. I used a combination of mixed media and digital, as usual, but in this case also tried an etching technique for the tunnel system. There is something immensely satisfying about scratching paint off paper while other parts of creating this book require more of a steady hand and detailed elements. Apart from the technique, I really love showing what is happening in “secret places” and make it visible to the audience.

THE WRITING PROMPT

  • ‘If you could be any insect in the world, which one would you choose and why?’
  • Compose a haiku or rap about this insect.

THE ILLUSTRATING PROMPT

  • Draw a parade of cicadas with different instruments together
  • Draw a tunnel system for your cicadas in the shape of a maze. How do the cicadas get out and up to the surface?
  • Illustrate a cicada habitat: collect leaves and use them for printing, create paper collages for leaves, mushrooms, branches, flowers and combine with your prints. Lastly, hide a little drawing of a cicada somewhere in your nature illustration

Cicada Sing Song is published by Little Steps

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