Jenny Downham is one of my favourite authors and her book Before I Die, about a girl with terminal cancer has been made into a movie called Now is Good, starring Dakota Fanning and Jeremy Irvine (Joey’s master from the War Horse movie). I’m not sure when it’s due out in NZ but I’d love to see it.
young adult
Interview with CRYPT author, Andrew Hammond
Andrew Hammond is the author of a seriously creepy new series called CRYPT (Covert Response Youth Paranormal Team). The series is about a group of teens who work in a secret government agency to protect the world from paranormal forces. It’s perfect for guys, especially any who like horror or authors like Darren Shan and Anthony Horowitz. Andrew’s latest book, CRYPT: Traitor’s Revenge has just been released in NZ so I caught up with Andrew to ask him a few questions about his books.
1. Did you write a history of the CRYPT organisation before you started writing The Gallows Curse?
Yes, I did. It’s important when writing the first title in a series to ‘redefine the world’ containing CRYPT. Up until that point, there was no CRYPT and so it’s important to consider its history, its future and all the little inconsistencies in between. Readers are sharp these days – and they’ll spot mistakes if I haven’t considered how, why and when it all started.
2. Did you interview real ghost hunters when you were writing the CRYPT books?
Although I have not spoken to a real ghost hunter, I read many books, magazines and blogs written by ghost hunters whilst preparing for this series. I’m keen to use the right equipment and the right terminology, so that it seems as real as possible. But the great thing about ghosts is that everyone has a different opinion about them – so that leaves lots of scope for writers like me. We know so little about what really makes up the universe – even at the atomic level – and so I am open to the possibilities of ghosts. Why wouldn’t anyone be? Without proof they don’t exist, it seems strange not to believe that they do.
3. Are the CRYPT gadgets based on real technology or did you create these?
Yes, every piece of equipment issued to the CRYPT agents is real and available to purchase on line. It’s a well known fact that higher levels of electromagnetic energy are found in haunted places, so I’ve based much of the agents’ work in this area. Energy never dies – it remains as electro static and electro magnetic traces in the atmosphere and in the objects around us, and I believe it’s this energy that ghosts harness to take shape and return.
4. Which of the CRYPT gadgets is your favourite?
It has to be the tri axis EMF detector – it’s faster and more accurate than other detectors at measuring the levels of electromagnetism in the air – often a sure sign that paranormal activity is occurring.
5. Have you witnessed any paranormal events yourself?
Yes. I lived with a ghost for years in a big old Victorian house in Yorkshire, England. We often used to detect strange smells in the house, always around dinner time – the smells of fried onions, herbs, spices, sometimes even roast dinners. But it was never when any of us were cooking. Weird. Eventually we found where the smells were coming from – a small cupboard on the first floor of the house. We opened the cupboard door and were swamped in the smells of something cooking. But there was nothing inside it. We decided to look at the old floor plans of the house, dating back to Victorian times. Then we understood. The cupboard was a recent addition – before it was added there was once a small, spiral staircase which led directly down to the kitchen. That is precisely where the smells of dinner would gently waft into the house every evening in Victorian times.
6. What movies, books and music inspire you?
I don’t watch scary movies or read many scary books – I’m just too easily frightened. I have a vivid imagination and just can’t sleep after something like that. But over the years I’ve found that being so sensitive can make you an effective writer – because I know what fear feels like. I can remember the sweaty palms, the prickly neck, the sinking feeling in my stomach and the palpations in my chest. I don’t wish to numb those senses – not just yet!
Besides, I don’t want to be affected by other people’s notions of what horror could or should be. I like to come at this afresh.
But as a kid, my favourite book was always Arthur Conan Doyle’s Hound of the Baskervilles. I’ve read it so many times now and one summer I even rented a cottage on the fringe of Dartmoor and read it on location. Scary stuff.
7. How many books do you plan to write in the CRYPT series?
There are five books in the series. I’m working on Book 4 right now, which takes us back to Viking times – and some pretty ghastly rituals they carried out on their enemies. I like my history – always have done. I’m pleased to have the opportunity to write about real historical figures, events and places in each of my books. Recently, someone said of my CRYPT series: ‘This is great, history just got scary.’ I like that.
And I don’t plan to kill off the main characters in the final book in the series, as you just never know – there’s a lot of gruesome history out there still to be explored. …
Thanks to Andrew’s publisher, Hachette NZ we have copy of Gallow’s Curse and Traitor’s Revenge to give away. Enter my CRYPT competition to be in to win.
Win a copy of Gallows Curse and Traitor’s Revenge
Thanks to Andrew Hammond’s NZ publisher, Hachette NZ I have a copy of the first two books in his CRYPT series Gallows Curse and Traitor’s Revenge to give away.
To get in the draw just enter your details below and I’ll draw a winner on Thursday 5 April. Open to NZ only.
Thank you for your response. ✨
2012 Carnegie and Kate Greenaway Medal Shortlist
The shortlist for the 2012 Carnegie and Kate Greenaway Medal have just been announced and they both include some amazing books. I’d both love and hate to be a judge of these awards because I love the books they choose and would find it really hard to pick just one.
The Carnegie Medal is awarded annually to the writer of an outstanding book for children. This year’s shortlist includes:
My Name is Mina by David Almond- Small Change for Stuart by Lissa Evans
- The Midnight Zoo by Sonya Hartnett
- Everybody Jam by Ali Lewis
- Trash by Andy Mulligan
- A Monster Calls by Patrick Ness
- My Sister Lives on the Mantelpiece by Annabel Pitcher
- Between Shades of Gray by Ruta Sepetys
The Kate Greenaway Medal is awarded annualy for distinguished illustration in a book for children. This year’s shortlist includes:
Wolf Won’t Bite by Emily Gravett- Peter Puffin by Peter Horacek
- A Monster Calls illustrated by Jim Kay
- Slog’s Dad illustrated by Dave McKean
- Soloman Crocodile by Catherine Rayner
- The Gift illustrated by Rob Ryan
- There Are NO Cats In This Book by Viviane Schwarz
- Can We Save the Tiger illustrated by Vicky White
SO many great books! I’ve read (and LOVE!) quite a few of them and will try and read the others before the winners are announced.
Which ones are your favourites?
Slide Book Trailer
Slide by Jill Hathaway is about a girl who can ‘slide’ into other peoples bodies for a brief time. She has narcolepsy and when she passes out she slides into other people’s heads and ends up seeing through their eyes. Then, one day she finds herself in the head of a killer, who is standing over the body of one of the girls from her school. I’m only 50 pages in and the story’s already gripped me.
172 Hours on the Moon book trailer
172 Hours on the Moon is a chilling sci-fi thriller by Norwegian author Johan Harstad. It’s a creepy, fast-paced read and I spent the whole day yesterday totally engrossed in it. It’s out in NZ on April 1st and my review will follow soon.
Will Hill introduces Department 19: The Rising
Department 19: The Rising is the sequel to Will Hill’s 2011 debut. It’s one of my most anticipated April new releases and I can’t wait to get into it. Will Hill’s Department 19 books are perfect books for boys, especially those who like Anthony Horowitz and Robert Muchamore. There’s plenty of action, violence, blood and guts, and vicious (non-sparkling) blood-sucking vampires.
Will Hill will be joining me on the blog in April to tell us why he writes (and reads) scary stories, and I’ll have a chance to win the first two Department 19 books.
Win a signed copy of Balthazar by Claudia Gray
To celebrate Claudia Gray’s visit to NZ and her NZ Blog Tour I have two signed copies of her latest book, Balthazar to give away.
To get in the draw just read my interview with Claudia today and answer this question “What is Claudia’s advice to teenage guys interested in teenage girls?” Thanks to HarperCollins NZ for this fantastic prize.
Thanks to everyone who entered. The winners were Lisa and Scott.
Claudia Gray’s NZ Blog Tour – Interview with Claudia
Claudia Gray is coming to Auckland on 31 March and in the lead up to her visit, she’s doing a New Zealand blog tour. I was curious about romance in Young Adult fiction and in her books in particular so I caught up with Claudia and asked her some questions.
Romance is a major part of each of your books. How do you create realistic relationships between your characters?
I think the trick to writing a three-dimensional romance between two characters is to make sure each character is three-dimensional in his or her own right. Often you read a book or see a movie where the hero is portrayed in a lot of detail — but the girl is just “the girl,” and she’s always wearing makeup and looking perfect and possessing zero personality of her own. You also see books and movies where the woman is the center of the piece and the guy is just this toneless, unthreatening slice of beefcake. You never really buy those romances, do you? But when you feel like both people in the romance are real — that they have motivations of their own, flaws of their own, humor and personality that set them apart — then it is also going to feel real when those two people “click.” My rule of thumb is that I would have to want to read a book about either member of the couple that was just about that one person, with no romance. They need to be well-developed enough for that.
Guys often get put off my romance in books. Why should guys read your books?
First of all, I think it’s just not true that guys hate romance. Guys are told they SHOULD hate romance — and I think sometimes they pretend to more than they really do, because of this weird societal expectation that they’re not supposed to care. (For much the same reason, many girls play down their enjoyment of sports, etc. It’s all very silly.) But guys fall as deeply in love as girls do.
Also, if you are a teenage guy who is into teenage girls, a helpful hint: Spend some time exploring what teenage girls are interested in. This gives you shared interests and something to talk about. You will meet more girls, and these girls will know you’re a little different — more independent, more open, and usually way more attractive to them than the average guy. There are always a handful of guys at my signings — and they are invariably accompanied by about three to six girls each. These are good odds, people. These are the kind of odds you want.
Finally, while there’s a lot of romance in my books, they aren’t purely romance novels. Just as even thrillers and crime novels often have romances folded in, my books have a lot of adventure and action amid all the kissing.
As a teenager would you rather have fallen in love with a vampire or a werewolf?
As a teenager? Probably a werewolf, because you’d only have to deal with the scary hairy stuff one night a month. (At least, in traditional folklore.) It would have made a conflict with the prom far less likely.
When you were a teenager was there a character like Lucas that you fell in love with?
When I was a teenager, sadly, I was Lucas-free. I went to a very small school — 200 people, kindergarten through 12th grade. All of us had known each other since we were babies, which made dating a challenge; the guys all felt more like my brothers than like people I’d want to go out with. No hot, brooding loners with mysterious pasts ever transferred schools into my class, and more’s the pity.
Why do you think paranormal romance appeals so much to teens?
I think paranormal romance appeals to teens because the paranormal allows us to acknowledge the element of fear. Honestly, right now, I believe we are in this cultural place where no one gets to admit vulnerability. Nobody gets to say that they’re afraid, or they’re intimidated, without people treating it as some kind of problem to be overcome. We can’t admit that some experiences are just flat-out terrifying and being afraid of them is a completely natural reaction — and I think falling in love is definitely in this category. Falling in love is SCARY. Having sex for the first time = scary. Being that vulnerable and that open to someone = terror! We all know it’s true, even if right now we have to pretend to be jaded, sophisticated, and so totally over it all.
So, enter the vampires. And the werewolves. And all the other scary things that have become romantic in the recent past. We’ve hung monster masks on our own fears, so that we can admit them.
Make sure you stop by these other great NZ blogs to find out more about Claudia Gray and her books:
- On the Nightstand (http://onthenightstand.net/) on Thursday 22 March.
- Fangbooks (http://fangtastic.co.nz/) on Friday 23 March.
My Most Anticipated April New Releases
Department 19: The Rising by Will Hill
After the terrifying attack on Lindisfarne at the end of the first book, Jamie, Larissa and Kate are recovering at Department 19 headquarters, waiting for news of Dracula’s stolen ashes.
They won’t be waiting for long.
Vampire forces are gathering. Old enemies are getting too close. And Dracula… is rising.
Fear by Michael Grant (Gone series, book #5)
It’s been one year since all the adults disappeared. Gone.
Despite the hunger and the lies, even despite the plague, the kids of Perdido Beach are determined to survive. Creeping into the tenuous new world they’ve built, though, is perhaps the worst incarnation yet of the enemy known as the Darkness: fear.
Within the FAYZ, life breaks down while the Darkness takes over, literally—turning the dome-world of the FAYZ entirely black. In darkness, the worst fears of all emerge, and the cruelest of intentions are carried out. But even in their darkest moments, the inhabitants of the FAYZ maintain a will to survive and a desire to take care of the others in their ravaged band that endures, no matter what the cost.
Revived by Cat Patrick
Daisy has died five times. She’s a test subject for a government super drug called Revive, which brings people back from the dead. Each time she is revived, Daisy has to move cities and change her identity to avoid suspicion. Daisy has always gotten a thrill out of cheating death, but her latest move has come with unexpected complications: a new best friend, and a very cute new crush. As Daisy’s attachment to her new home grows, she discovers secrets that could tear her world apart. And the more she learns, the more she feels like a lowly pawn in a sinister game.

Rainbow Orchid: Volume 3 by Garen Ewing
At the beginning of Volume Three, Julius and Lily are recovering from the electrifying end of Volume Two. What does the future hold for Evelyn Crow and her gang of desperate villains? Do Julius and Lily have the strength to prevent Urkaz Grope from enacting his evil plans? Don’t miss the stunning conclusion to the biggest adventure in comics!
172 Hours on the Moon by Johan Harstad
Everyone said sending teenagers into space would be their opportunity of a lifetime… It’s been decades since anyone last set foot on the moon. But three ordinary teens are about to change that–and their lives–forever. Mia knows this will be her punk band’s ticket to fame and fortune. Midori believes it’s her way out of her restrictive lifestyle in Japan. And Antoine just wants to get as far away from his ex-girlfriend as possible. But little do they know that something sinister is waiting for them on the dark side of the moon.



