« 1 ... 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 ... 87 »

Happy Book Day – James Gong: The Big Hit! By Paul Collins

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Paul Collins has written many books for younger readers. He is best known for his fantasy and science fiction titles: The Jelindel Chronicles and The Quentaris Chronicles ─ co-edited with Michael Pryor. His trade series The Earthborn was published in America by Tor. Paul has been short-listed for many awards and has won the Inaugural Peter McNamara, A Bertram Chandler, Aurealis and William Atheling awards.

ABOUT THE BOOK

James Gong is training for his black belt in taekwondo. One night a camera crew from Hollywood Productions turns up at training for an episode of My Life, only to see James at his most ornery aggressiveness. They love James’ jumping spinning sidekick, and decide to star him in a small budget flick. Trouble is, Hollywood Productions is a scam company that basically produces B grade ‘loser’ movies to offset huge tax bills.

Meanwhile, James, who likes his sister Caitlin’s best friend, Amber, thinks his sudden film career will curry favour. Not so. If anything, Amber shuns him more so. Hollywood Productions may want to lose money, but underestimates their star.

It’s early days, but so far a couple of reviewers have given it ‘Highly recommended’ reviews. Here’s one from a teacher-librarian in Qld: https://losangzopa.wordpress.com/2020/03/29/james-gong-the-big-hit-paul-collins/?fbclid=IwAR2v_PyoRzl0NNL1kzvm8vGormKsc8c4q9QLETDTo4oxuWsf6Qy2IEFKDWA

THE INSPIRATION BEHIND THIS STORY

Basically, I like plot and action-driven fiction. Think Eoin Colfer, Peter O’Donnell and Philip Reeve. James Gong: The Big Hit is basically extreme martial arts (he does many stunts on blades). I have a history in martial arts – I’ve also written eight books on various martial art disciplines. So personal experience went into this book.

WRITING TIPS

1/ People say you should write what you know about. That in itself is pretty limiting unless you have a huge knowledge base. But a vet, James Herriot, is known to have written (with his wife) a hugely successful series of books. And you’ll find many such authors successfully utilising their personal knowledge. Those who know a lot about dogs, could write articles on them, much as, say, a person who knows about chickens, etc. Seek out magazines that specialise on these subjects and write specifically for them. I did this with a computer magazine called PC User. They’d never published fiction till I sent them a science fiction story. I wrote a story about a dog and sent it to a magazine about dogs. I wrote a trucking story for a magazine called Truckin’ Life – they’d never thought about fiction till I sent them a story. I wound up selling a handful of stories to that magazine and its sister magazine The Interstater.

2/ Writing for kids I think it’s a must to keep them turning the page. Action is a good way of doing this (admittedly, action doesn’t suit every book!!!). I’m not going to put my foot in it and start naming names, but there’s a hugely popular Australian YA author who isn’t a good writer, but he writes page-turning books. Most authors envy his sales record (but not his writing ability).

3/ It’s all very well writing because you’re passionate about writing. But at the end of the day, do you want to get published? Seek out what publishers are publishing. You need to be quick, of course, because a fad this year mightn’t be a fad next year. Gothic stories were big for a while as was sick-lit. Horror had its day quite some time ago with RL Stine and others. But if you can work out a trend and get in on it early, you have a better chance of getting published if you have a finished manuscript when the wave is high.

4/ As a publisher, I receive around 700 manuscripts a year. Most are picture book submissions. I can’t tell you how many don’t know how format a picture book manuscript. Most text doesn’t fill a 32-page picture book template. Many start on page one, when in fact, they mostly start on page four (first three are imprint, half title and title pages – not always, but most often). A publisher sees a poorly executed manuscript and that’s immediately a minus point for you. For those who haven’t been published, I’d suggest joining a writing group. Most states have a writers’ centre. Ask them to help you find one. RMIT, Melbourne Uni, Victoria University, Deacon and others have writing courses. I don’t think they actually teach you how to write as such, but they do everything else.

5/ Read, read and read more. Especially the genre in which you’re writing. There’s not much point in writing science fiction if you haven’t read any. Similarly, writing picture books when clearly you don’t know the layout is a no-no. Most who write picture books seem to forget there’s an illustrator involved. Why describe what your character is wearing, for example, when the illustrator will show what they’re wearing. Describing an action like skipping is superfluous, because again, the illustrator will show this movement. So immerse yourself in these books before trying to write them.

WHERE TO FIND PAUL ONLINE

https://twitter.com/fordstreet

https://www.facebook.com/fordstreet

https://www.linkedin.com/in/paul-collins-0954293a/?originalSubdomain=au

VIEW THE BOOK TRAILER

 

WHERE TO BUY THE BOOK

Any good bookshop or the author’s website www.paulcollins.com.au

Congratulations Paul on your new book, James Gong: The Big Hit

Share This Post

Eddy Popcorn’s Guide to Parent Training – almost 10 years from idea to publication

This month, Eddy Popcorn’s Guide to Parent Training was published by Scholastic Australia, but believe it or not, I started writing it almost TEN years ago.

At first I wrote it as a self-help book for kids, a parent training guide.  It didn’t really have a story to go along with it. My son, who was the same age as Eddy at the time called it my ‘fake non-fiction’. But of course there’s no such thing. Nobody goes into a bookstore and says ‘I’d like to buy a fake non-fiction book’.

That was the problem. It wasn’t fiction but it wasn’t non-fiction either. I added Eddy’s personal (made up) story and fixed that problem.

To write this book I drew on my person experiences of having possibly the most embarrassing parents in the world.  At least it certainly seemed like it when I was eleven.

Why I wrote Eddy Popcorn’s Guide to Parent Training

I discovered that bookstores were full of self help books for parents like ‘Toddler Taming’ and ‘The Teenage Brain’, but there was nothing to help kids deal with problem parents. And seeing as my son was eleven, I thought it might come in handy for him.

So What’s Eddy Popcorn’s Guide to Parent Training About?

The school holidays have started and EDDY POPCORN is about to turn twelve. Then disaster strikes — Eddy is GROUNDED for not doing his homework. Parents suck!

Faced with not seeing the beach, or his mates, for the WHOLE holidays,

Eddy puts all of his FRUSTRATION into a helpful book for kids: EDDY POPCORN’S GUIDE TO PARENT TRAINING!

Chock FULL of laughs and mushrooms, this guide is sure to be a HIT! And hopefully, Eddy will get to have at least one surf before the school holidays end.

Book 1 in an hilarious new series – great for reluctant readers.

The amazing pics

These have been created by talented illustrator, Ben Johnston. He must have had problem parents too because he could tell from the text, exactly what Eddy’s life was like.

What’s next for Eddy?

Eddy and I are currently working on his second book, Eddy Popcorn’s Guide to Teacher Taming and it will be out next year.

We’re also staying busy in lockdown, making pop motion movies (stop motion using popcorn) Here’s our first one … Popcorn Racing.  The next one’s social distancing and it will be out soon. You can follow Eddy’s excellent escapades at my/our website https://www.deescribe.com.au/eddy-popcorn

 

How are you keeping busy during lockdown? If you’re doing something creative … perhaps writing or drawing … Eddy and I would love to hear about it.

Share This Post