Natasha’s 2020 book, The Voyage of the Sparrowhawk, won the Costa Children’s Book award, and her group of adventure stories extends to two further books: The Children of Castle Rock and The Rescue of Ravenwood. Of course, we have all of these titles in our Junior School Library – come and borrow them!
We were all eager to soak up Natasha’s tips about writing. We loved meeting Dobby in Natasha’s photos - the cutest chihuahua with big brown eyes and crazily floppy ears, the starting point for Sparrowhawk. Inspiration, Natasha explained, comes from anything and everything. Driving a story forward relies on the writer’s curiosity: keep asking questions, and the story will follow through the answers you find. Natasha offered us a technical tip, too: she prefers to keep her writing in third person past tense, enabling her to track different points of view across her characters, positioning herself as the omniscient author.
In fact, using inventive questions, the girls began a story with Natasha, there and then, during an impromptu few minutes of creativity! What was Natasha’s cat looking at through the window? What was the cat’s interest in the soft white dove? And what happened when the cat got hungrier and hungrier...?
Natasha’s own favourite childhood reading includes The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe by C.S. Lewis. She remembers feeling the magic of stories for the first time as Lucy pushes her way past the fur coats to the back of the wardrobe. Natasha also loves Journey to the River Sea by Eva Ibbotson, an adventure story set on the Amazon. Currently, Natasha admires contemporary children’s writers Katya Balen, author of October, October; and Ross Montgomery, author of I am Rebel. Happily, we have all of Natasha’s favourites in the library, ready for you to come and read!
Look out for further events and activities in the Redmaids’ High Junior School library. This term, we have enjoyed two book clubs, creative writing workshops and two writing competitions, with lots more to come. Our Year 5 team of librarians have shouldered their responsibilities admirably; whilst Year 3 have been making friends with new book characters, introduced to them in a dialogic reading session each week. Parents have been welcomed regularly in their very own book club celebrating novels in the 8-12 years category. Parent / daughter browsing time after school on Wednesdays and Fridays is also available – come and snuggle up together with a cup of tea and a book in the Midnight Garden, there’s no better place to be on a winter’s afternoon.