The Australian SF 'Ditmar' Awards were announced at the Con, and The Corpse-Rat King was beaten to the Best Novel gong by Margo Lanagan's Sea Hearts. There's no shame in that: Lanagan is an immensely popular, multi-award winning author, and Sea Hearts has already collected a swag of award nominations and wins. After losing out to Kirstyn McDermott in the recently-announced Australian Shadows Award, it makes me 0 for 2 in short lists this year. I'm disappointed-- if you're on a shortlist you want to win the thing-- but not hardly surprised.
All of which means it's time to get off my lazy arse-- I'll admit, I've been the very personification of slackness this last couple of weeks, as day job stress and general mehness overwhelmed me-- and get back to finishing the works in progress. Father Muerte & The Divine is ready to line edit, I'm waiting to hear if Agent Rich can place Naraveen's Land before I launch myself towards finishing the edits on it, and Magwitch and Bugrat, the children's novel I started at the behest of Luscious and the kids, is 3/4 complete and needs to be rounded off.
As a way of finding the time, we set the alarm a half hour earlier this morning, rose in the dark, and I managed to shoot out 500 words before having to get ready for work. This will be the pattern from here on in. It's nice to be nominated for awards, and sickening to watch a procession of everybody else get them all. work is the only cure.
So here's a little extract from the first draft of Magwitch and Bugrat as a little literary sourdough starter:
Bugrat found his own voice as he grew, and used it
to ask questions, “What is this?” and “What’s that called?” and “What is this
for?” and “Why?” and “Why?” and “why?” over and over again. Magwitch had never
taught anybody before. She didn’t know how to make someone sit and listen and
believe that she was the only one who knew the real truth about things. So she
listened to Bugrat as much as he listened to her, and because he was allowed to
do some of the talking, their little world slowly changed to fit his view of
it, as much as it had once changed to fit her.
“Why
are they called headstones?” he asked, pointing to the slabs of stone that lay
face down amongst the grass. And because she didn’t know, and because neither
of them really believed that “Because they are,” was a real answer, headstones
became jumpstones, because jumping from stone to stone was what Magwitch and
Bugrat used them for.
“What
are they?” he asked of the stars that flickered uncertainly beyond the edges of
the surrounding roofs when they night sky cleared and the smog went to bed. And
Magwitch would tell him her dreams of windows in the sky, and the blackness
around them where little boys and girls could play safely with no walls to hold
them in, and never have to worry about anybody looking out.
“What
are these for?” he would wonder, while he stretched out to try and touch the
cold, unfriendly glass of the windows around them, and Magwitch would pull on
his arm until her greater weight slowly dragged him away, back into the safety
of the brambles and the deep, comfortable shadows.
“You
must never touch them,” she warned him. “never, ever, ever.” “Why?” he would
ask, and “Why?” and “Why?” but Magwitch would not answer.
3 comments:
yeah, bummer about the awards - but I'll definitely be buying Bugrat to read for Harriet.
I don't suppose you need an illustrator??
I had a chat to Marc Gascoigne at the con, and he's very impressed with your work. Very impressed. I told him he'd be more impressed with Father Muerte. Don't let me down, big boy.
Adam: I might just do. It's a bit early to tell what path to publication I'll be taking-- as far as I know, my agent doesn't actually represent kids' books, so I might be on my own with this one. Time will tell.
Ian: You have no idea how disturbing it is to picture you calling me 'big boy' :)
But let's hope Marc is genuine, and the pitch I currently have with Angry Robot finds some favour.
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