Difference between revisions of "The Interview: Bookbag Talks To Hilary McKay"
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Bookbag really enjoyed Hilary McKay's [[Wishing For Tomorrow by Hilary McKay|Wishing For Tomorrow]] (the sequel to [[A Little Princess by Frances Hodgson Burnett]]) and couldn't resist the opportunity to ask her a few questions. | Bookbag really enjoyed Hilary McKay's [[Wishing For Tomorrow by Hilary McKay|Wishing For Tomorrow]] (the sequel to [[A Little Princess by Frances Hodgson Burnett]]) and couldn't resist the opportunity to ask her a few questions. | ||
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* '''BB: If you had to write a sequel to another classic, which would it be and why?''' | * '''BB: If you had to write a sequel to another classic, which would it be and why?''' | ||
− | HM: | + | HM: ''The Lord of the Rings''. And I would write it in order to sell the film rights. |
* '''BB: Do you miss the [[Forever Rose (Casson Family) by Hilary McKay|Casson family]] as much as we do?''' | * '''BB: Do you miss the [[Forever Rose (Casson Family) by Hilary McKay|Casson family]] as much as we do?''' |
Latest revision as of 16:16, 8 May 2018
Bookbag really enjoyed Hilary McKay's Wishing For Tomorrow (the sequel to A Little Princess by Frances Hodgson Burnett) and couldn't resist the opportunity to ask her a few questions.
- Bookbag: When you close your eyes and imagine your readers, who do you see?
The Interview: Bookbag Talks To Hilary McKay | |
| |
Summary: Bookbag really enjoyed Hilary McKay's Wishing For Tomorrow (the sequel to A Little Princess by Frances Hodgson Burnett) and couldn't resist the opportunity to ask her a few questions. | |
Date: 26 October 2009 | |
Interviewer: Keith Dudhnath | |
Hilary McKay: Oh, dear, I have never done that. But (anything to oblige) I tried it just now. And what did I see? Not readers anyway. A glimpse of landscape, a flicker of a character passing by, but no readers. A pity; they would have been an interesting sight.
In the further interests of research I asked a musician (not having a writer handy) what he saw when he closed his eyes and imagined his audience. I am loading up the dishwasher, he replied. Or is it a trick question?
So he was no help.
- BB: What was the motivation for writing a sequel to A Little Princess?
HM: I wrote Wishing For Tomorrow for several reasons. To answer the unanswered questions of what happened to the characters whose fates were left unresolved in A Little Princess. As a break from those blessed Cassons. Most of all, for fun. I loved writing it - I loved the minute, detailed world of Miss Minchin's Select Seminary and the people who lived in it.
- BB: Were you nervous about the response from the public, given how much of a favourite the original is to so many people?
HM: Not nervous. That is too shivery a word. Slightly trepidatious (my spellcheck tells me that is not a word but I think it is too useful not to be). I did wonder. But then I thought, Oh well, they need not read it if they don't want to. And I need not take their opinions too much to heart. After all (let's keep this in perspective) it is only a rather short, rather frivolous little story. In the end.
- BB: If you had to write a sequel to another classic, which would it be and why?
HM: The Lord of the Rings. And I would write it in order to sell the film rights.
- BB: Do you miss the Casson family as much as we do?
HM: No, I do not miss them at all, and the reason I do not miss them is that I am at present engaged in writing a sixth book about that scatty crowd: Caddy's World.
- BB: Is it hard for children's authors to get the same recognition as authors for adults?
HM: I suppose we do not get reviewed very much in comparison. But that is a great generalisation. J K Rowling and Philip Pullman don't do so badly. Perhaps we get the recognition we deserve.
- BB: Which three books should every child read?
HM: That depends of course, entirely on the child. The closest I can come to a reply is three books that I am very glad that I read as a child. TH White's The Once and Future King. Eleanor Farjeon's The Little Book Room. Jane Gardam’s The Hollow Land (except for the last chapter).
- BB: What are you reading at the moment?
HM: At the moment I am reading: Graham Swift's Waterland, Gilbert White's The Natural History of Selborne, Jilly Cooper's The Common Years.
- BB: Which book has most influenced you, and do you still have a copy?
HM: There is no book that I have read and loved that I do not own. So how lucky am I?!
- BB: What's next for Hilary McKay?
HM: A three book series for Scholastic about a little girl called Lulu, a friend of Charlie's. Caddy's World (see above). And of course, to fill in the odd moments, the Lord of the Rings sequel...
- BB: Haha! Excellent. We can't wait to read all of those. Thanks a lot!
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