Dedication’s what you need… (and a clicker, apparently)

Penny Dreadful is a Record BreakerSo, got up, ate porridge, corralled angry small menace into school uniform (disappointment at having to go to school dressed as schoolgirl, not Katherine Parr, due to Ofsted swooping in and causing cancellation of World Book Day), set new world record for the biggest ever literacy lesson with 288 children at KES Juniors and Combe Down Primary in Bath. Just your average Thursday really.

See how I affect such nonchalance. I practically radiate boredom, having practiced ceaselessly since the age of thirteen as cover-up for my usually overexcited idiotic self. Because fact is, am still utterly overexcited and idiotic about it. Could barely sleep the night before and several days after. I was in national press, I got free school lunch (beef stroganoff, no salt), I met the Mayor and got to touch his totally bling gold necklace.

I mean, I know it wasn’t synchronized tap dancing for twenty-two hours solid around BBC Television Centre, or long distance hurdling, or eating as many Dairylea Triangles as you can in one minute. And Guinness still have to verify that we clicked everyone in and out on those little machine things and didn’t try to sneak children in twice. But still, I’m pretty proud. It’s the closest I will ever get to Usain Bolt after all.

record 2

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The Life of Riley

Book worm

Book worm

I never wanted to be a writer when I grew up. That is to say, it didn’t occur to me that writing was a “real” job, much less one that I would be capable of, or derive enjoyment from, my talents and skills at that time lying more in maths and singing the books of the Bible off by heart.

And yet I devoured books, I lived in books, I was lost in books. If the weather was bad, I didn’t grumble, just sat in my cushion fort with a batch of Enid Blytons. If it was sunny, I took them into a den in the garden (my idea of the “Great Outdoors” is still limited to somewhere I can read comfortably). Because, while my peers were dreaming of growing up to be a ballerina, or a footballer, or the first female Prime Minister (oh, she’d have been so much better than the one we got), all I wanted was to be IN a book.

I wanted to be Heidi – tending goats all day and sleeping in a hay loft at night. And, of course, nobly helping the crippled Clara to walk again.  I wanted to be George in the Famous Five, solving adventures that no grown-up could possibly fathom, and drinking a lot of lemonade while I did it (banned in our house – my grandfather was a dentist). Then I wanted to be pretty much anyone in the Pony Club series by one of the Pullein-Thompson sisters (kind of like the Brontes of the home counties, only with fewer wild moors and tuberculosis, and rather more plaits and gymkhanas and petty jealousy over who has the best curry comb). IMG_0005

Partly this was aspirational. The lives of these girls were far more exciting than my own small-town Essex upbringing. And partly because I thought I WAS these girls. I could see bits of myself in all of them: moodiness, the feeling of being the outsider, but still the heroine of the piece.

After I outgrew Enid Blyton, I moved on to films. I wanted to be Velvet Brown, winning the Grand National disguised as a boy. Or Andy in Pretty in Pink, falling for the boy on literally the wrong side of the tracks and winning him over with her brilliant vintage dress sense. Or Baby in Dirty Dancing, who got to save the world (or at least join the Peace Corps) AND do the lift with Patrick Swayze sweating in a vest. Note, I didn’t want to be Elizabeth Taylor, or Molly Ringwald, or Jennifer Grey. Well, I wouldn’t have minded. But what I really wanted was to be the characters they were playing.

As I grew up, towards an age where a job become a reality, this feeling – this need to live through fiction – grew rather than lessened. When I applied to study drama, it was because I had read and reread The Swish of the Curtain. Somehow I thought this would be my all-access pass to coolness. Only to discover I would spend most of my time pretending to be an unconvincing toaster. And that, as a graduate, I wouldn’t be at the RSC assisting Trevor Nunn, I would be working for pittance from a backroom in Kings Cross sending out press releases to theatres in places like Wolverhampton or Colchester.

Then I worked in television news, imagining, I guess, I would become Kate Adie or even Jeremy Paxman. Only I spent rather too much time making tea for B-listers and not a huge deal of it writing groundbreaking news reports or interviewing despots.

Then I went into politics. Which, for once was kind of a sensible career choice for a book geek. Having come from a background in TV and radio, I was, for the first time in my life, considered quirky and vaguely cool. I was the go-to girl if any ministers needed briefing on music, or E4.

Yet that wasn’t enough. Because I’m sitting there in the basement of No 10 – which for a lot of people is an impossibly exciting and glamourous place to be. Only the thing is, it really isn’t. Because I’m supposed to be writing three hundred words on why ID cards are really, no honestly, a great idea. But instead, I’m staring out of the window into the ornamental gardens, imagining that, at any minute, the phone is going to ring, and I’m going to get dispatched to the Middle East as an observer for the peace talks. Whereupon fate will intervene and my convoy will be attacked by insurgents, trapping me under a Land Rover. From where I will be airlifted to an army hospital in Germany, and will be languishing in a coma when the gorgeous Deputy Chief of Staff flies across the world to finally profess his dying love for me after years of will they, won’t they intrigue (I had moved on the West Wing by then).

And I guess that’s when I worked it out. That I had spent so long immersed in stories, that, when life turned out not to be exactly like it is in books or films, I was perpetually disappointed. I wanted a Hollywood ending. On a daily basis.

And so I figured, given the huge swathes of time given over to daydreaming, it might just be possible that, instead of waiting for the cliffhanger, or the movie kiss, I could write my own. I’d certainly be happier, because that way I’d get to spend all day in someone else’s head, and in someone else’s world, living in their adventures, and giving them happy endings.

The Life of RileySo why write a series based on my own, uneventful childhood? Well, this way, I get to give my alter ego – the girl who can’t always tell fact from fiction, who lives in hope of becoming Sylvia Plath – a little more drama, a lot more kissing, and maybe, even, the happy ending I was always holding out for.

(The Life of Riley is rereleased tomorrow and available at the  Guardian Bookshop)

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The Lost Boys

Me, radiating ennui

Me, radiating ennui

In 1992, straight out of uni, my head still full of learning, and brand new in a wide world, I first felt the compulsion to write. Not books back then, but journalism. Specifically New Journalism. I swallowed Tom Wolfe, Ken Kesey and Danny Sugerman whole, and this is what came out. One of my first “creative writing” pieces.  Part true, part fable. And while names have been changed to protect the guilty, this was pretty much how the summer I was 21 panned out.

 

 

 

The Lost Boys (Santa Cruz, California, 1992)

“Hey man, I’m kinda famous, I’m in the credit sequence in a movie, it’s called The Lost Boys, didja see that movie?” Yeah, I saw that movie. “You got your Doors playin’ and…”  Echo and the Bunnymen. It was a cover. “Yeah, right, you got your Bunnymen playin’ and there’s me hangin’ out on the boardwalk like all stoked up.”

From our vantage point on the fairground we could command most of low-rise Santa Cruz right up Beach Street over to the Mission and malls. Behind us sat the Beach Flat district like a blister in the sun. Always had been, least since October 1989. The Lowa Prieta earthquake flattened the whole downtown area right up to Pacific Avenue. Three years on the bricks were still lying on a disused building site waiting for orders that never came. Town authorities refused out-of-county funds and so rebuilding was slow and labour cheap. Two blocks west the Beach Flats were bursting their seams. The rickety prefab turf was disputed by Turks, Micks, Spics and cokeheads. All the backyards had chair next to the fences for getaways from cops and robber alike. Plus the dealers had themselves a neat private road system and called back door to back door.

My guide and friend Lucas and his young apprentice Junior hung out in the gardens behind some shitty Mexican hole. Two weeks before his eighteenth birthday Lucas dropped acid in second period Shop class and skipped school. No one would have known except he got caught in a drugstore trying to get his mom’s repeat Quaalude prescription filled. His dad packed Lucas’s bags then and there, took back the Mustang keys, and Lucas ditched Marin County suburbs to sell funnel cake and candyfloss at the fair.

Junior’s mother was a whore and I guess not a very good one.  She couldn’t afford to keep Junior who, at seventeen, was addicted to coke among other things. He and Lucas had hooked up on the boardwalk and were still trying to shake each other off. To get a bed for the night Lucas picked up girls around UCSC campus or in the Silver Bullet. Junior would come along as part of the deal and sit up in the kitchen or out on the porch until someone let him in.

“Hey, man, you can see right up to Johnny’s house. I have to call later. Say, you wanna see the boardwalk and everythin’? Hey, Junior, if I lend you my shoes will you get a guidebook or somethin’?”  Junior needs shoes so bad he’ll do anything for a pair, even on loan. The kid skates down Beach Street in a woolly hat, dead man’s pants and Lucas’s patent loafers. Lucas and I wait counting Camaros in the sun. “You ever read ’bout Ken Kesey, ya know, Electric Koolaid?” Yeah, I read about Ken Kesey.

We’re still on the Boardwalk. “Listen.” Lucas is reading aloud. “‘The elegant’ no shit, ‘The elegant Cocoanut Grove first opened as a gambling casino in 1907 and has recently been restored to its former art exterior. The 1940s swing bands are a welcome addition to the strings of dodgem cars, log flume rides, shootin’ galleries, arcade games and every test of strength and skill that line the beach at the West End.’ No shit. You know what they don’t tell you. Santa Cruz is mass murder capital of the US. No kiddin’.”

I am unsurprised. Looking across the boardwalk, the fair is a mass of Silicon Valley teenagers; Edge City kids flocking to the “last survivin’ seafront amusement park on the West Coast, ma’am.” Making themselves sick on hot dogs and then heading out to the Bullet for underage sex and cheap beer. Or the other way. The age of consent still holds out at eighteen in some California towns and liquor is older.

On the right, out in the ocean, Steamer Lane is packed with upcounty surfers. Some college kids, some professional, all swimming in pelican and sealion shit. “Hey, look. Ain’t that Brett? He’s in Johnny’s lit class. Fuckin’ rich dope. Ya know his dad’s gotta jet? Flies him down to Mexico just to surf. Fuckin’ rich dope.” We double back past the fish canners and head to Johnny’s house. Junior needs to score.

Johnny is in a chair hanging from the ceiling.  His twin TVs are tuned in to two different channels. Neither has any sound on. MTV blasts from the back bedroom. Johnny has the goddamn iguana that’s eating bananas and shitting down his shirt. Lulu the drama queen turned junk queen and Pablo are on the deck playing cards. Pablo, like many locals, claims to roadie for Neil Young who lives just out of town. “Hey, Pablo!” calls Lucas. “Just got back from Capitola, looks like Neil’s back in town. Some kinda rage goin’ on, maybe.” This is probably a lie. Pablo gets the hell out to look for him anyway. Johnny turns off one of the TVs. “You know Pablo’s got himself a gig. Gonna do Lollapalooza, don’t know who for. But I guess there’s a room goin’, Lucas. You know, just ‘til the Fall. Tour’s only a few months.”

Santa Cruz is real white sitting city. A bordello holing up richies and cokeheads and stars on all floors. For Pablo this is a first. Most kids want to look for America but can’t get it together to leave the boardwalk and the strip. Hooking up with bands is a good alternative to running away with the circus. For the summer. Then winter in bars on the pier.  Some even reach San Francisco for a while, but Santa Cruz’s hippy chic is alluring and narcotic.

By the morning Lucas is asleep in Pablo’s bed, Junior is cleaning dishes and iguana shit, and Johnny is still suspended from the ceiling with one TV on. Out on the boardwalk the rides begin to sink the coast town in their tinny merry-go-round music, and I head out to Beach Street to count Camaros in the sun.

 

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Joanna Nadin is a Record Breaker (potentially)

Penny Dreadful is a Record BreakerI have never been a high achiever. Until I started writing (thanks to Penny Dreadful, Solomon Smee and Maisie Morris), the only two things I had won were a Toners hair dye from Jackie magazine in 1982 and the umbrella and yoghurt pot race in the St Mary’s primary annual sports day (the other “races” including “eat a doughnut hanging from a string without using your hands”. This was pre Jamie Oliver, obviously).  It wasn’t through lack of trying, just that perseverance and determination still only ever got me second place.

But now, at the age of *mumbles*, I am finally attempting to get my name in the record books, quite literally. As, to mark World Book Day, and the release of Penny Dreadful is a Record Breaker, I will be attempting to conduct the world’s biggest ever literacy lesson and win a Guinness World Record. And, while I am not sure the process will be quite as bonkers as Penny’s attempts at standing on leg for the longest time ever, or building the highest ever tower out of some soup tins and a plastic horse, I do know it will be exciting.

So, to find out if I, and KES Junior School, manage to concentrate for a full half an hour, check back here in a month’s time. And to find out if Penny manages to stay on the right leg, or get the horse to stay on top of the tin of asparagus consommé, check here right now…

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Funny ha ha

Penny Dreadful is a Record BreakerIn need of a laugh? I certainly am, having spent the morning embroiled in the Francis Report and my own medical disaster i.e. a menace with flu. Then click on this link for my top ten funny reads for 5-8s…

The Guardian Children’s Books

(It’s The Guardian, which, like, I KNOW!)

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Let’s hear it for the girls…

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAAs a child, I was never what was (derogatorily) termed a “girly girl”, in other words, dressed in pink frills, with an army of Barbies marching absurd-legged across my bedroom floor. Partly by accident: mine was a childhood of inherited clothes and toys, many from the children over the road – male and female. And partly by design: my mother, having gone through the same childhood of hand-me-downs, did not believe in gender-specific toys, or the colour pink (although she then faced a quandary when my brother begged to dress as Cinderella on a daily basis).

And I have often had boy best friends, from the brilliant Aidan, with whom I giggled through four years of adventures at nursery and primary school, before he was whisked away to private school (and less “malign” influences), to my once cross-dressing brother James, who shares my sense of humour, my political convictions, and my Neanderthal hairline.

Picture 23And yet girls have been a constant, if not always in real life, at least in my head. They have been friends I have carried with me throughout my childhood and adulthood. Friends who, at times (in the olden days before mobile phones and computers, when friendships survived by letter alone), have been as real to me as Henny, Boo, Jude, Frosties, Rachel, Karen, Catherine and the rest. These creatures are not figments of my imagination, but the imagination of other women: The impetuous, passionate Cathy in Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte; the shy debutante Penny and her dazzling best friend Charlotte in The Lost Art of Keeping Secrets by Eva Rice; Daphne du Maurier’s unnamed narrator in Rebecca, living in the shadow of another woman, and the courageous Dona in Frenchman’s Creek, in love with another man; and, most of all, the “consciously naïve” would-be writer Cassandra Mortmain in Dodie Smith’s wonderful I Capture the Castle.

These women, and their creators, like my true friends, are my companions, and my heroines. Women I turn to for their wisdom and comfort and escape, maybe not constantly, but every few years, as I reread their stories, and who I will continue to reread long into the future, as they continue to inspire.

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Me, Rachel Riley

Rachel 1 new smallerOne of the most-oft asked questions of writers is: “Is the book autobiographical?” Or “Is there any of you in there?”

The easy answer is that every book contains a little of its author: these are, after all, words we have sweated, cried, laughed, sometimes screamed over. But in the case of My So-Called Life (rereleased today in a fancy new jacket), what’s on the page is pretty much all of me. Well, of the thirteen-year-old me that was stuck in a small market town in Essex non-affectionately known as Suffering Boredom.

I had started out trying to write a tragedy. The kind of book I had devoured as an orphan-obsessed teenager (and adult), the kind involving star-crossed lovers, or mysterious benefactors, or just an ill-advised night in a nightclub in Camden. But the thing was, I had never experienced any of these things, been to any of these places, at least not until I was old enough to know better, and be constantly checking my watch to make sure I could get the last tube home.  As Rachel says, “Why is life never like it is in books? Nothing Jacqueline Wilson ever happens to me: I am not adopted, my mum is not tattooed, I am not likely to move to the middle of a council estate or be put into care. My parents are not alcoholics, drug addicts or closet transvestites. Even my name is pants.”

And so I went back to my own diaries I had kept at school, in the hope of unearthing something, anything wracked with even a tinge of tragedy.  I found this: 

5 October 1985

Went to Stephen Howell’s 16th at Wenden’s Ambo Village Hall. Drunk dubious champagne that Lucia won at the bingo in Spain. She and Boo went as Madonna. I went as me because mum won’t let me wear fingerless gloves. Anyway it was totally depressing as the love of my life i.e. Nick, is going out with Big Debbie B. And she does IT.

26 October 1985

Have got off with Guy.

7 November 1985

I really like Guy.

8 November 1985

Have decided to chuck Guy. Karen is going to tell him for me at work tomorrow.

joanna photoboothIt’s not Romeo and Juliet. It’s not even ITV drama. But the thing is, there is a kind of tragedy to it. Not the kind to take a vial of poison over, more the kind to mope about listening to The Smiths to. But it doesn’t make it any less devastating – the stakes still feel as high. No, my first kiss wasn’t on a balcony, to a background of violins, with a boy I was meeting in secret because our families were at war. It was at a lower school disco, to the sound of Spandau Ballet, with a boy who kept pigs. But I still couldn’t eat or sleep afterwards. Or go near the school farm without thinking I might “literally die” from sheer excitement and embarrassment.

And so that’s what I wrote about. Smalltown lives. The ones that don’t usually get immortalized in print. And we’re all in there: my friend Jude became Scarlet, Stuart became Sad Ed though in real life he has never had upper arm issues). I won’t say who the Kylies are based on, but they were very real, and very mean. My family is there too – though it’s me, not James who can sing the books of the bible off by heart – I do have to get some revenge on him for being sick on my Noggin the Nog book aged five.

So this really is my so-called life. Welcome to it…

http://www.guardianbookshop.co.uk/BerteShopWeb/viewProduct.do?ISBN=9780192794512

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Tis the season to be jolly…

Rachel 1 new smaller… fa la la la laa etc etc. And normally I am the first one up with the Christmas tree (fake – I have hoovering OCD) and tinsel, and the first one to overdose on Quality Street, cry at the Brave Little Toaster (why is that always on at Christmas? Since when are toasters festive?), and sneakily poke at the presents under the tree to check whether anyone has bought me a box of Matchmakers (traditional Christmas gift in the Nadin household, since 1975, though we are still struggling to forgive them for making them longer and the box square). But this year, it’s not Christmas I’m waiting for, but the New Year. Partly because I am as keen to take the tree down as I am to get it up (nothing like a nice tidy front room). But also because the New Year brings shiny new books. Or in my case, shiny new books, and shiny new versions of old ones. Not only are there three new Penny Dreadful volumes out starting in March (complete with an attempt at a world record, which I’ll tell you about later) but the whole of the Rachel Riley series has been updated and is being reissued, starting with My So-Called Life on January 1st. Obviously Rachel’s life is still tragically normal, and she’s still desperate for something, anything to happen. But she’s doing it all with fancy new covers, and an end in sight, as the seventh (and final, at least for now) book of the series is also heading your way (though that’s a story for New Year 2014). So, a Merry Christmas, and a Happy New Year, from me, Rachel, Sad Ed, Scarlet, and the Dog, if he isn’t locked in the shed for eating the Matchmakers again.

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The shovel list.

I am a happy person. I am relentlessly optimistic in the face of disappointment. I dance through life with a pair of rose-tinted glasses superglued to my face. I am hopeful to the point of idiocy e.g. when I wake up to the sound of torrential rain, I still hold out hope that when I pull up the blind I will be greeted by at least a rainbow, if not animated bluebirds tweeting.

But this doesn’t mean I don’t get cross. No, I don’t sweat the small stuff, the stuff I absolutely cannot change. But there’s still stuff that riles me. In fact, where many of friends have their “happy board” i.e. a list of things to cheer them up when they are down (kittens, chocolate, amusing memes featuring monkeys) I have what I am now (in honour of Marian Keyes) terming my “shovel list”. In other words, things I hate so much I would like to hit them very hard with a shovel. To wit:

  1. Misplaced apostrophes.
  2. Dog poo. (Or rather, owners who do not pick up dog poo, as I am pretty sure that if I hit the poo hard with a shovel I’d get it all over me).
  3. The term LOL. Particularly when added randomly at the end of a sentence e.g. I’m tired LOL. What does that even MEAN? You’re laughing because you’re tired? Are you crazy?
  4. Too much milk in my tea despite my repeated request to just show carton to cup.
  5. The fact that nine-hole Dr Martens boots do not fit me however many times I try to squeeze my chubby feet into them.
  6. Come Dine With Me.
  7. Shrugging cynicism.

And that last one is, I guess, the point. That what matters is passion – whether it’s about something you adore or despise. There’s nothing more depressing than someone saying: “Oh, nothing changes, why bother.” Or, to put it in simpler terms, “Whatever”. No, NOT whatever. Something. Anything. Stand up for yourself. Speak your brains. Tell the world what you love, and hate. (Go on, what do you hate? What’s on your shovel list? I want to know…)

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The Next Big Thing…

So, I’ve been tagged as part of an internet meme (horrid word. Also odd, as I thought memes were mostly pictures of cats doing amusing things or pseudo-political captions on pictures of sunsets, but I digress…). Last week was Veronique Martin (lovely French writer, good haircut, husband looks like Dexter). You can read about her Next Big Thing here: http://www.vdavidmartin.com/2012/11/the-next-big-thing.html

And you can read about mine below…

 

What’s the title of your next book?

Life on Other Planets

Where did the idea come from?

This is the seventh in the Rachel Riley series, which sees her turn eighteen, finish high school, and attempt to leave the tragically normal Saffron Walden behind.

What genre does your book fall under?

It’s teen comedy. That said I know many grown-ups who are huge fans. As well as some eleven year olds (whose mums are clearly not fazed by the use of the words “knob” or “mentalist”).

What actors would you choose to play the part of your characters in a movie?

Well, the book is somewhat autobiographical, so that’s like asking who would play the teen me in the movie of my life. So, someone geeky, awkward, with bad hair: Alia Shawkat or Lena Dunham, maybe? 

What is the one sentence synopsis of your book?

Smalltown girl decides to escape smalltown to find fame, fortune and man who stirs her in pants-based area.

Will your book be self-published or represented by an agency?

It’s being published by OUP in March 2014.

How long did it take you to write the first draft of the manuscript?

About four months. Though there was a lot of faffing for months beforehand.

What other books would you compare this story to within your genre?

It’s a kind of inverse Princess Diaries so Meg Cabot fans, and also fans of Grace Dent’s Diary of a Chav and Louise Rennison’s Georgia Nicolson books might also like it.

Who or what inspired you to write this book?

I got tired of books always being about troubled teens. Not all of us, thankfully, have or had drug habits or unwanted pregnancies or abusive parents. Though at the time I would have given my right arm for one of these. I wanted to reflect that, and show that there is drama, comedy and tragedy in the normal.

What else about your book might pique the reader’s interest?

A man called Pig, a cat called Nietzsche, and Aled Jones.

Who are you passing the baton to for next week’s Next Big Thing?

To my friends, and almost neighbours:

Catherine Bruton (www.catherinebruton.com)

and Cathy Hopkins (www.cathyhopkins.com)

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