Karen Comer

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Buying Christmas book series for kids

December 8, 2015 by Karen Comer 8 Comments

There’s something special about buying a book series, about seeing all the matching spines lined up together on your bookshelf. Lots of kids are collectors, so collecting, let alone reading, the whole set of books can feel like a mighty achievement.

I’ve listed some of my favourite kids’ book series, for kids aged six to twelve. Later in the week, I’ll post my favourite stand-alone titles for kids. I hope this helps you with your Christmas shopping!

Some of my favourite bookshops – where the staff are knowledgeable and helpful – include Readings, Tim’s Bookshop and The Little Bookroom. I also buy books online from Booktopia, an Australian online store, as well as Readings. You can order in-stock books from Booktopia and Readings in time for a Christmas delivery by Friday 11 December. Of course, these bookshops will also have their own bestseller lists which can be a great starting point for your Christmas shopping.

If you’re not sure whether your child will like a particular series, you could buy the first one and include a bookshop voucher. That way, your child has the option to choose the remaining books in the series or choose another book if they weren’t interested in the series. You could also borrow the first book from the library, and then gauge how your child responds to it. (My lovely Mum did this for me with the Billabong books, when I was ten or eleven. I was so surprised when I received the entire set for my birthday, a month after I had read the first book from the library!) If you do buy the whole series, you have endless options for presenting them. You could set the whole series out on a bookshelf, you could wrap and number each book separately, hide them around the house for a literary treasure hunt, buy one for every special occasion throughout the year …

In no particular order, here’s a list of ten wonderful book series for kids:

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  • The Ranger’s Apprentice by John Flanagan – there are 12 books in this series – that’s reading gold for an obsessive reader! Here’s my review from a month ago. We gave them to Mr 11 for his 11th birthday, and he devoured them. Miss 9 is reading the second one now. Last week, she and Mr 6 dressed up as Rangers with cloaks and tied string around some sticks to make bows. I would suggest that they are more for boys than girls, but the second book brings in a couple of strong female characters so I think they would be fabulous for girls as well. I’m glad Miss 9 is reading widely about wonderful male characters. There is lots of action, so reluctant readers would be enticed. Obsessive readers would love the thrill of reading the whole series. Great for 9-12 year-olds.

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  • Truly Tan by Jen Storer – so far there are five books in this series. I spoke with Jen Storer at a bookshop a couple of weeks ago and she told us that there is another book coming out in May 2016. Tan is a detective type of girl, who writes in a diary and likes to write definitions. Great for 8-11 year-olds, maybe bookish seven-year-olds would love them, too.

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  • Impossible Quest by Kate Forsythe – there are five books – you can buy them separately or in a beautiful slipcase. Such a wonderful fantasy quest theme. Great for girls and boys as there are four child protagonists – two girls and two boys. Mr 11 and Miss 9 have read them – great for 9-12 year-olds. Kate Forsythe is an amazing story-teller – her adult and children’s books are all page-turners.

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  • Tom Gates by L. Pichon – these are similar to the Wimpy Kids books as they have cartoon illustrations with a graffiti bent. Mr 11 devoured these at age nine, and the illustrations really influenced his drawing style for a few years. Great for reluctant and obsessive readers alike. Probably more for boys than girls. There are ten books. Great for 8-11 year-olds.

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  • Princess Betony by Pamela Freeman – these books look beautiful. They have that special keepsake quality about them – gorgeous covers, ribbon bookmark, dust jacket, petite size. There are three books about Princess Betony, the daughter of a king and a dryad. Princess Betony, a pants-wearing sort of princess, has been accepted as part of the Wild Magic, and many adventures follow. The stories are lovely, and I suspect reluctant readers would be tempted to try hard to read these gorgeous-looking books while obsessive readers would appreciate the well-developed characters and interesting storylines. Great for girls aged 7-10. Younger girls may appreciate these books being read to them. While I would never discourage readers of any gender to avoid a particular book, I must admit, these books really are for girls.

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  • The Kingdom of Silk by Glenda Millard – this series is filled with the most beautiful family you could ever imagine. I wish I had read this as a kid – it would have filled me up with creativity and magic and gentleness. It is such a gentle and quiet series, with many beautiful life celebrations and sad moments. There is death and aging and weddings and finding love and making cakes and singing songs and painting and ignoring school rules and finding creative solutions and illnesses and friendships – the gamut of life. Miss 9 read nearly all of these books when she was eight. I might start reading them to Mr 6 over the holidays – he may/may not be quite ready for them. Each book is quite slim, so it would be a nice challenge for a reluctant reader to tackle. This would be a beautiful experience to read these books with your kids. Great for boys and girls, maybe leaning more towards girls because the books are so soft and gentle. Not that boys shouldn’t read soft and gentle books! Great for 7-10 year-olds.

Mapmaker Chronicals - Karen Comer

  • The Mapmaker Chronicles by A.L Tait – I’ve blogged about this fabulous series here when I interviewed the author. Enough said. Adventure, fast pace, page-turning. This series includes more boys, but there is a strong girl character. Great for boys and girls, leaning towards boys. Great for 9-12 year-olds.

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  • Sporty kids by Felice Arena – there are currently six books out in this new series. A bookseller recommended this to me for Mr 6, who sometimes thinks that he is too big to read picture books and wants to read chapter books to keep up with his older siblings. Each book can be read independently, so there is no particular order. Each book has four chapters, pictures and a large font. Mr 6 can almost read them by himself. This type of book is a winner – your child can enjoy you reading them to him, but will also be capable of reading them himself a little way down the track. There’s a great mix of genders across different types of sport. This series would work well for advanced 4-5 year-old readers and would equally work well for reluctant readers, aged 6-7. Great for girls and boys, great for 6-8 year-olds.

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  • Violet Mackerel by Anna Bradford – another gorgeous series with beautiful hardback covers. Violet is a thoughtful, creative girl who deals with her mother’s wedding, making friends at a hospital and many other small and large adventures. Heart-warming, gentle stories. There is also a Violet Mackerel craft book. Miss 9 and I have made a few things from it. This series is definitely for girls, especially lovely for crafty, creative girls, great for 7-10 year-olds.

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  • The Keepers by Lian Tanner – I haven’t read this trilogy but Mr 11 has and recommended it. He read it about two years ago. The back cover of the first book describes the series as ‘a thrilling tale of action and adventure’, and the website looks fabulous with lots of information and quizzes. Great for girls and boys, ages 9-12.

I hope this gives you a few ideas for Christmas! Let me know in the comments if you decide to buy any of these suggestions for Christmas or if you can recommend other children’s series. Next post will offer stand-alone book ideas, and then I’ll write a post for adult fiction suggestions. Happy shopping!

Filed Under: Children's Fiction Tagged With: Allison Tait, book review, children's fiction, Jen Storer, Kate Forsythe, Ranger's apprentice, The Mapmaker Chronicles

Allison Tait – author interview

October 2, 2015 by Karen Comer 4 Comments

Fanned-BooksToday I am excited to bring you my first author interview – with Allison Tait! Allison is a freelance writer, one half of the Australian Writers Centre podcast with Valerie Khoo, and the writer of The Mapmaker Chronicles – a trilogy for children. Her third book in this series, Breath of the Dragon, was released this week. You can read my review of the first Mapmaker book, Race to the end of the world, and you can have a look at the Mapmakers Chronicle website here – lots of information about maps for kids awe well as teachers’ notes.

The Mapmaker Chronicles: Race To The End Of The World was named by Readings as one of the top 10 Best Middle Fiction Books of 2014 and was a Notable book in the 2015 CBCA Children’s Book Of The Year Awards.

The Mapmaker Chronicles website tells us, ‘The king is determined to discover what lies beyond the known world, and has promised a handsome prize to the ship’s captain who can bring him a map. To do that, they’ll need mapmakers – and 14-year-old Quinn is shocked to be one of the chosen. While his older brothers long for adventure, Quinn is content with a quiet life on the farm, but when word of his special talent gets out, he has no choice but to pack his bags and join the mismatched crew of slaves and stowaways on board the Libertas.’

Thank you for joining us, Allison!

KC: I know you’re more of a pantser than a plotter – writing the first draft to see where you end up rather than planning everything in the beginning. Did you have a rough idea of what you wanted each of the books in The Mapmaker Chronicles to cover or did you work on one book at a time? After you finished the third book, did you have a chance to change anything in the first book if you needed to emphasise or delete anything?

AT: When I wrote the first draft of the first book, I started with an idea – a race to map the world and a boy who didn’t want to go – and started writing. I wrote 48,000 words during NaNoWriMo in 2012, and then wrote another 5000 words during the following week. Once I had that first draft, I did a short – one paragraph – outline for the following books.

What I discovered as I wrote books two and three was that things changed. I also discovered that things I’d put into book one really came into their own by the time I wrote book three, particularly Quinn’s family history. I hadn’t had a clear picture of a lot of that in the beginning, but my subconscious was working for me and it all came together beautifully in the end.

The books came out six months apart, so there wasn’t a lot of room for making big changes as I went. I wrote the drafts of books two and three as quickly, and as close together, as the editing process would allow because it did give me an opportunity to seed things in to book two that I knew I would need for book three.

It’s not the most scientific process for writing a series, but the organic nature of it worked for me.

KC: How many drafts did you write and what did you change or refine in each draft?

AT: I did two drafts of each book before I sent them through to my publisher, Suzanne O’Sullivan at Hachette Australia. The first was the ‘get it all down’ draft. Then I read the draft aloud to my son (now 11), which helped me to see what was working and what wasn’t. Once I’d redrafted (which was more a sense of adding bits and deleting bits rather than an entire rewrite), they went to a structural edit. So that’s another draft – and, with one book in particular, that required some hefty additions. The books then went to copy edit – so I went through them again, and this is not just moving apostrophes but also answering a lot of questions that come up when a new person reads the story – and then to proofreading.

So I guess we’re looking at five drafts for each book.

KC: The Mapmaker Chronicles has a great pace – enough details to paint the scene but not enough to slow down the story. How did you balance the details with the action?

 I’m not sure I thought about it that much. It was more a question of writing the kind of story that my sons and I both like to read – none of us are fans of long passages of description… They like things to move along and I’m the same.

Perhaps my journalism training comes into play here as well because I’m used to getting a message across in a limited word count – you want to let the reader know exactly where they are and exactly who they’re dealing with without wasting too many words.

KC: Quinn, Ash and Zain are well-developed, memorable characters with strengths and quirks and particular ways of speaking, thinking and acting. Did you spend a lot of time developing them before writing or did you get to know them as you wrote?

AT: Very much the latter. Quinn appeared to me as a fully-formed person even as I was having the idea for the series. Zain developed for me even as he developed for Quinn. At first, he was this large, taciturn Deslonder and I was thinking, ‘what am I going to do with you?’, but he slowly revealed all his different facets over time. As for Ash, well, as soon as she popped up in that garden, complaining about the fact that girls weren’t even allowed to apply for Mapmaking school, I knew we were going to get along beautifully.

KC: Did you ever get stuck while you were writing your trilogy? If so, what did you do to work your way out?

AT: I did get stuck, of course. I remember sending out a tweet during the writing of Prisoner of The Black Hawk saying ‘I’ve put my character down a hole and have no idea how to get him out…’

But I find when I get stuck that the best solution is to walk away and do something else for a while. I walk for miles with my dog. I weed the garden. I wash dishes. And while I’m doing active, repetitive things, my mind quietly goes about its business.

Having said that, the biggest problem I had actually came up during the writing of Breath Of The Dragon, and it was my good friend Anna Spargo-Ryan who reminded me, during one desperate phone call, that every character is the hero of his or her own story. Even the villains.

KC: Are you planning any more adventures for Quinn and Ash? We hope so!

AT: Unusually for me, I do have plans. They’re plans that change daily, depending on where my thoughts wander, but I’m hoping we’ll see them again. They’re both telling me that there’s more to the story, so fingers crossed!

KC: Are you working on any fiction now?

AT: I’m working on a new kids’ novel, this time a contemporary story with a most delightful heroine. I’m not sure what will happen with it just yet, but I’m really enjoying getting to know her.

KC: What advice do you have for young and adult writers?

AT: Much like my plans, my advice changes on a daily basis. Today, I have three tips:

  1. Write a lot. It takes a long time to develop your voice and to discover how you write a book (which is probably very different to the way I write a book). Don’t just talk about writing, do the writing.
  2. Read a lot. I know this comes up all the time, but, really, read widely. Not just things that you know you like, but things you’ve never tried. When you write a novel, you bring every single book you’ve ever read to the page in a funny way, so make sure you’re drawing on a wide library.
  3. Finish what you start. I know a lot of aspiring authors who have drawers full of half-finished novels. They get halfway through writing a manuscript and become distracted by a shiny new idea. The thing is, the middle of ANY manuscript is hard. ANY other idea looks better than what you are writing when the writing is hard. Finish what you start so that you know that you can.

Thank you so much, Allison!

Filed Under: Children's Fiction, Writing, Writing Resources - Adults, Writing Resources - Children Tagged With: Allison Tait, Author interview, children writing, children's fiction, The Mapmaker Chronicles

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