Describe your latest project.I have two. The first one, Runemarks, is a fantasy book for young adults (and the regular kind), set in the world of the Norse gods.
The second is called The Girl with No Shadow, and it's a rather darker, more complex sequel to my earlier novel Chocolat. Vianne Rocher and her two daughters, Anouk and Rosette, are now living above a chocolate shop in Montmartre. Four years have passed since Chocolat, and Vianne has made a number of personal sacrifices in her effort to become like everyone else. Anouk is starting school, and faces problems with bullying and integration; and Rosette, now four, has behavioural problems of her own. Into this little scenario arrives Zozie de l'Alba, free spirit, bohemian and sometime witch ? to shake up their world and to rearrange their lives. But it soon becomes clear that the newcomer is not quite what she seems. And as Zozie's agenda reveals itself, Vianne finds herself facing the greatest challenge of her life...
If someone were to write your biography, what would be the title and subtitle?
Hooked Into the Dream Machine: An Idiot Savant's Guide to Books.
What fictional character would you like to date, and why?
Benjamin Linus, from Lost. Mysterious, complicated, intelligent, ruthless, and fiendishly manipulative ? but I bet he'd know which wine to choose, and we could always discuss literature...
What's the strangest or most interesting job you've ever had?
This one, by far.
Introduce one other author you think people should read, and suggest a good book with which to start.
Everyone ought to read the Gormenghast trilogy by Mervyn Peake ? a truly unique gothic masterwork; paranoid as Kafka, colourful as Dickens; complex, multilayered, brooding and strange.
Writers are better liars than other people: true or false? Why, or not?
True: but then again, I could be lying...
Offer a favorite sentence or passage from another writer.
My mantra during my years of teaching: "Every skool is a bit of a shambles" from Down With Skool by Willans and Searle.
Oh, and my favourite toast, from Neil Gaiman's graphic novel Season of Mists (one of the Sandman series): "To absent friends, old gods, lost loves and the season of mists, and may each and every one of us always give the Devil his due..."
How do you relax?
Long baths, with candles, bath oils, music and a book.
How did the last good book you read end up in your hands and why did you read it?
I'm a judge this year for the Prince Maurice prize, so a lot of books have come to me by that route. Right now I'm reading Salley Vickers' The Other Side of You, a beautifully written psychological love story.
Have you ever made a literary pilgrimage?
I once went to the town of François Mauriac's birth ? and no one there seemed to have heard of him!
What makes your favorite pair of shoes better than the rest?
They are bright orange, and as comfortable as being barefoot. I got them from Chinatown in San Francisco, and I wear them all the time.
What is your astrological sign? If you don't like what you were born with, to what sign would you change and why?
Cancer ? but I prefer my Chinese dragon sign...
Describe the best breakfast of your life.
Burnt toast, cold tea and jam over the bedclothes, courtesy of my daughter, aged five, at 4:00 a.m. on Mother's Day in 1997.
What is your idea of absolute happiness?
A snowball fight on a sunny winter's day, then back home for hot chocolate.
What is your favorite indulgence, either wicked or benign?
Going to LaserQuest with my daughter. I drink Coke all night, eat sweets, talk about sci-fi, and shoot teenagers with a laser pistol. It's very therapeutic.
Why do you write?
Because I must.
Share an interesting experience you've had with one of your readers.
I get interesting, off-the-wall questions at a lot of my Young Adult reading events. But recently I did an event at a school for autistic and Asperger's Syndrome children. Their questions were hysterical ? all seemed to be related to trains and aeroplanes, somehow. I gave up the book talk and ended up giving a short lecture on the Sopwith Camel instead...
Fahrenheit, Celsius, or Kelvin?
Whichever goes the highest.
Name the best television series of all time, and explain why it's the best.
My formative years were spent watching and obsessing over Kung Fu. Martial arts movie, Oriental philosophy starter's kit and spaghetti Western all rolled into one ? what could possibly be better than that? Well, possibly Lost ? which, although not always a perfect show, still dares to take risks and to explore well off the beaten track.
Who's wilder on tour, rock bands or authors?
Rock bands. Authors drink alone.
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