Ask the Author: Lynda A. Calder
“To celebrate the publishing of the second book in "The Enigma Diaries" trilogy, feel free to contact me here and ask questions.”
Lynda A. Calder
Answered Questions (10)
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Lynda A. Calder
"Hang on, let me just put the phone down to answer the front door," Jenny said.
After a long pause, Marcia called out, "Jenny, are you there?"
After a long pause, Marcia called out, "Jenny, are you there?"
Lynda A. Calder
Fittingly, this question came to me on the birthday of the author and main protagonist of my preferred fictional book world. I would LOVE to go to Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry. To take the classes and live the life of a Hogwarts student would be amazing. Doing potions with Prof Snape, Transfiguration with Prof McGonagall and Arithmancy with Prof Vector! I would love to be in Ravenclaw and play Quidditch. And who hasn't fantasised about being in this world? I did join an online forum where we could play out this fantasy and the Prof for Defence Against the Dark Arts was amazing. He taught me a lot about writing and description and emotion in words.
Lynda A. Calder
At the moment I am re-reading the Harry Potter series. It's been a few years and having just seen the first movie with the Sydney Symphony Orchestra I felt inspired. Not least inspired by the fact that all those little tid bits that didn't make the movie had gone from my head. I'm going to enjoy them slowly and just dwell in the land while I prepare to get one of my manuscripts moving forward again.
Lynda A. Calder
Inspiration, initially, comes from dreams. "The Enigma Diaries" was all due to a small snippet of a dream and then is just grew from there. The "what if" is also a great inspiration - thinking about situations where "What if" this happened. For example, the new YA I am working on was inspired by sitting at my son's many violin lessons looking out a small, round window wondering, "What if that window was the portal to another dimension, another world."
Lynda A. Calder
This answer contains spoilers…
(view spoiler)[Dear Tito,
Thank you for your interesting question. I have to say that I did not intend a didactic or formative purpose apart from valuing the written works of the past (in the Treasure Cave) as a heritage that should not be lost and can inform our actions in the future. Hence the reason for Cassandra needing to write the Enigma Diaries and discovering the Hidden History. In fact, the Forgotten Future is also undocumented and will be up to Cassandra to document, as well, so future generations can be more informed about their history.
I did only intend an adventure yarn with a brain-teasing setting; essentially the book I wanted to read when I was 9-14 years old. Not so much of a message but perhaps something that I could take from it, if I so wished.
As was once said by a writer in the 1800's (I believe it was children's writer, and Bishop, George MacDonald, would need to look this one up to be precise) that man may intend some meanings, but God can intend all meanings. Thus sometimes readers take out of a written work meanings that the writer may not have intended or purposed, and this is perfectly fine. Actually, this is a topic I am contemplating for further study and research: what a reader brings to a written work, in terms of meaning making and how the various types of readers (those with different bents of thought - English prodigy versus Maths prodigy) can interpret works differently, with neither being essentially wrong (except the Maths nerds being marked wrong in school because their brains operate differently from their teachers).
THANKS Tito! ;) (hide spoiler)]
Thank you for your interesting question. I have to say that I did not intend a didactic or formative purpose apart from valuing the written works of the past (in the Treasure Cave) as a heritage that should not be lost and can inform our actions in the future. Hence the reason for Cassandra needing to write the Enigma Diaries and discovering the Hidden History. In fact, the Forgotten Future is also undocumented and will be up to Cassandra to document, as well, so future generations can be more informed about their history.
I did only intend an adventure yarn with a brain-teasing setting; essentially the book I wanted to read when I was 9-14 years old. Not so much of a message but perhaps something that I could take from it, if I so wished.
As was once said by a writer in the 1800's (I believe it was children's writer, and Bishop, George MacDonald, would need to look this one up to be precise) that man may intend some meanings, but God can intend all meanings. Thus sometimes readers take out of a written work meanings that the writer may not have intended or purposed, and this is perfectly fine. Actually, this is a topic I am contemplating for further study and research: what a reader brings to a written work, in terms of meaning making and how the various types of readers (those with different bents of thought - English prodigy versus Maths prodigy) can interpret works differently, with neither being essentially wrong (except the Maths nerds being marked wrong in school because their brains operate differently from their teachers).
THANKS Tito! ;) (hide spoiler)]
Lynda A. Calder
The most recent thing I am writing "Bringer" I was inspired to write when sitting in my son's violin lessons week after week and staring out this tiny window at the world outside and I thought, what if that world out that window was not the world you entered when you went out the door. What if it were some other world? And thus "Bringer" came about. Now I need to finish writing it. But with "The Enigma Diaries" trilogy, that was inspired by a dream where I was the protagonist walking around a destroyed city with empty cars and buildings and it had become that way because of supernatural beings that had invaded. Three books later (third book still being written) I think I used that dream pretty well!
Lynda A. Calder
Having others read and enjoy your work and then having a conversation with them about it. I want to be able to do that more and more. The theories people have and the guessing and the intrigue and meaning they build into what I have written is fantastic.
Lynda A. Calder
Most writers say to write through it. I can't do that. I find that if I go back to the beginning, I sometimes find something that will enhance the point I am up to and then I can continue when I get there. Other times, I just set it aside and work on something else for a while and come back to it.
Lynda A. Calder
Learn your craft. Accept advice graciously.
Lynda A. Calder
I'm currently working on Book 3 in The Enigma Diaries Trilogy and a YA called "Bringer".
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