Sophia Bennett's Blog, page 12

December 15, 2011

Everything on it …

The five year-old did most of the tree this year. This was because he did an awesome job on the bits he could reach last year, but they were only about the bottom two feet of it. This time, he did the whole bottom half and I mirrored the effect as best I could on the top half.


It involved every bauble we own, pretty much. He has an eye for these things, and I am very proud. Maybe he'll end up doing the Ritz or Claridges one day …


My lovely editor, Imogen, has asked for a picture, so here we go.




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Published on December 15, 2011 13:45

December 7, 2011

Those winning entries …

I must remember never to run a competition. They are the icebergs of authorial websites.


The good bits – the bits I remember and that make me do it again, despite everything – are choosing the theme, getting the entries in, hearing from readers and new fans about what they're up to, reading some truly great stories, admiring some great pictures (and now video too), and enjoying the countdown to the big announcement.


Actually, that adds up to a lot of good bits. Maybe I will run another competition. One day.


Anyway, they're the pretty white tip of the iceberg sticking up above the water. What you don't see – and I tend to forget – is the dirty great grey bit underneath. First of all, there's whittling down my favourite entries (generally a dozen or so) to the few who will finally get a mention and win a prize. During this process, which lasts for days, I feel mean. Seriously. Mean. So many girls put in so much work – or just showed a natural talent, you can never always be sure – and some of them are going to be disappointed, thinking I didn't like their entries when I did, I DID!


Then there's the admin that goes with fighting with the back end of a website, trying to put up all the winning entries, so you can admire them. It takes ages! Anyway, it's done now, so check out the Competition page of the Threads website, follow the links, and enjoy the 5 entries that made it to the top.


But if your picture or story didn't make it this time, that doesn't mean I didn't think it was good. I almost certainly thought it had something really special about it. And there's always next time …


… Which means I'm going to have to run another competition sometime, aren't I?


I guess I suppose I am.



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Published on December 07, 2011 04:06

December 1, 2011

Competition winners

Well that was hard.


As one waiting period starts (I love Advent), another one finally ends.


I took a couple of days to judge the 'The Girl in the Picture' competition because all the entries were great (THANK YOU, guys!) and there were about 10 I really loved, and it was almost impossible to pick my winner and runners up from among them. But I've done it, and if you want to know who I chose, go to www.threadsthebook.com and check out the Competition page.


If you're one of the winners, I'll be contacting you soon to sort out getting your prize to you.


And don't forget, if you didn't win, but you'd still like to get the Threads series to give to a friend (or friends) for Christmas, you can get the set from The Book People here, for less than £5. What a bargain! Or – even better – you can go into your very fabulous local independent bookshop and get them to order them for you. They'll arrive very fast – they have the most amazing ordering system – and you'll make an independent bookseller very happy, which is a good thing to do at Christmas time.


Enough about buying books. Well done again to everyone who entered the competition. When I have a moment, I'll put up the winning entries in a gallery on the threadsthebook site, so you can admire them all.


Happy Advent! xxx



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Published on December 01, 2011 04:03

November 29, 2011

Visiting the Chickens

In these times of gloom and doom, every now and again a day glows out like a warm ember, and it's enough to keep you going through the cold.


Saturday was one of those days. I went to visit the lovely Chicken House, to make a couple of quick videos for the launch of The Look next year. Now, most authors have to travel from the country to the metropolis to see their publishers. For me, it's the other way around. But I love visiting Frome in Somerset. It feels like the centre of the craft and vintage universe, and you can't get much better than that for me. (And yes, despite all the gloom and doom I bought a pink silk vintage tea dress, a necklace, a few Christmas presents and an amazing arrangement of narcissi in an old chamber pot. I came home weighed down with bags, but not having spent very much money – the perfect combination.)


The Chicken House offices are one of my favourite places. They're very arty and bohemian and as soon as you step through the door you just know you're in good hands. I hope they don't mind me showing you a few pictures – of some chickens (there are, as you can imagine, several); the window, which they dressed up for the day to look like my own personal book window (thank you!); the table where THEY DECIDE WHETHER OR NOT TO BUY THAT MANUSCRIPT YOU JUST SLAVED OVER; and Barry's famous hat.



Chicken House - 1
Chicken House - 2
Chicken House - 3
Chicken House - 4
Chicken House - 5

I was videoed by a promising young film maker called Gulliver Moore, who made the trailer for The Look (which you can see on YouTube), and who I hope did a brilliant job of disguising my many chins. For those of you who have read Threads, think slightly Harry, but wearing proper shoes, and you'll know how happy I was to meet him.


I thought we'd be there for days, with me doing trillions of takes, because I find it really, really HARD to talk about the book, and what it means to me, and what I was trying to do in a short and pithy way. However, with the help of Tina, who's a bit of a wizz as a director among her many other talents, we were out in time for lunch. And we got to eat the table decorations – which were a selection of extremely yummy cupcakes.


Some days just make you smile.



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Published on November 29, 2011 04:31

November 11, 2011

A few of my favourite things …

Today's favourite things have come from recommendations on Twitter, Facebook and at the school gate. Let me share them with you.


The sweet ending to the new John Lewis ad (although I still can't get my head around the idea of super-miserable and single-minded Morrissey from The Smiths letting a middle-class shop use his song for an advert. He must have agreed with a strong sense of irony, unless he's finally going soft. And also, have you seen how many [SPOILER ALERT] presents Santa leaves by the bed? Way more than our kids get first thing in the morning, I can tell you. Maybe John Lewis wants Father Christmas to get more toys in their shop to distribute. That's my theory, anyway.)


Another, simpler delight has been the truly fabulous imagery in the trailer of the new Snow White and the Huntsman movie that's coming out next year with Kristen Stewart and Charlize Theron. VERY VERY BEAUTIFUL. If you watch, I'm sure you'll agree. (Excuse the link to the Daily Mail, but it's got the best pictures I've seen.)



And finally, I heard about a new doll called Matilda (website here), who comes from Tudor times and who I would have killed for when I was ten. (Or, more accurately, begged one of my grannies for and then yearned for like the boy in the John Lewis ad and, in fact, probably not got even then because she's really expensive and people were a bit more sensible with their cash in the 70s and even Father Christmas wasn't that generous, but I would have imagined having).



She's aimed at 8-12 year-olds, and comes with a book about her Tudor adventures, and lots of ideas for imaginative play. How many girls that age are there who like history and costume and adventure stories and things they can do with their friends? Oh yeah – LOADS. Despite her eye-watering price tag, I think she's going to be a hit.



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Published on November 11, 2011 10:47

November 5, 2011

Where it all begins …

This has been a week of highs and lows.


The high was definitely Wednesday. It started with a big cappuccino (the size of a soup bowl, honestly) and a croissant in a cafe in Soho, talking about the launch of the new book next year. There were four of us round the table: me, Rachel, Mary and Tina, who are three of my most favourite people to work with. As business breakfasts go, you couldn't get much better. They gave me lots of homework to do for the launch and I'm looking forward to all of it. Already, Rachel has turned my story into a very beautiful artifact that I can't wait to share with everyone. The teamwork involved in publishing a book is one of my favourite things about it.


As it happened, we were just around the corner from where I set the opening scene of The Look, which is Carnaby Street. So afterwards, I took a picture to celebrate:



I used to work a street away from here, in my last job before I sat down to write Threads, and they were busy, happy times. It always gives me a bit of a thrill to come back. And it was extra lovely to do it with Tina, who's the marketing lady for Chicken House and who, we then discovered, looks VERY GOOD INDEED in the posh new silk hairbands they're selling in Liberty at the moment. I made her try several of them on, and they were all gorgeous. I really hope she gets one for Christmas.


Then it was on to lunch with my lovely publisher, Barry, and Elinor, who sells the foreign rights all over the world (Threads has lately gone to Spain, I discovered, and will be out in Japan quite soon – yay!). They were meeting two Dutch publishers and very kindly invited me along. As someone who writes about fashion, I was deeply impressed by the Chinese top and palazzo pants worn by the very elegant Heleen. We talked books for a couple of hours, and it was bliss.


So Wednesday was one of those pretty ideal days that don't happen to a writer very often, and have to be tucked away and treasured so they can be appreciated later, when it's all a lot more difficult and complicated.


Which is what the rest of the week has been like.


That lovely new story I was so looking forward to writing has hit a brick wall. It. Will. Not. Come. And now I'm thinking about another one, which originally occurred to me as a radio play, but might work as a book. But that's no picnic either. I think I'm just going to have to read, and think, and wait until something clicks and a voice emerges and I can start again.


I love my job, but it's not always easy. Actually, it's not ever easy. If you're reading this because you can't decide what to write, I sympathise!



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Published on November 05, 2011 11:30

October 27, 2011

Girls Heart Books

Check out my new post today on www.girlsheartboooks.com. It's all about the amazing exhibition I took the family to at the Tate Modern.


From now on I'll be there on the 21st of every month. Look out for me! xxx



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Published on October 27, 2011 03:49

October 21, 2011

The Girl in the Picture – competition

At last! Here it is …. That competition I've been promising you.


It's called The Girl in the Picture and it's based on a couple of workshops I did earlier this month. You have to write a short story, or the opening of a book, or you can do an illustration of a book cover or even a trailer of a book …


YOU HAVE OPTIONS, PEOPLE! OPTIONS!


It just has to have 'The Girl in the Picture' as its title. Oh, and it can be comedy or romance or horror or whatever you think it should be. Just make it exciting, and intriguing, and make me want to know more.


You've got until 28 November to enter and the winners will get advance copies of my new book The Look (which is OFFICIALLY the most beautiful YA book coming out next year. As judged by ME.) as well as a bunch of other stuff. All the details are on the Threadsthebook website, here.


If you need any more information, you can contact me via a comment on this blog.


Good luck! Have fun! And happy half term!


sophia xxx



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Published on October 21, 2011 08:22

October 19, 2011

Projekt C


Threads has come out in Poland, and they've called it 'Projekt C'. Which I love. There is indeed a 'Project Crow' in the book, and it's very important. I wish I'd had the idea of 'Project C' when various people who didn't like 'Threads' as a title wanted an alternative. It rocks.


Oh, and the cover. I adore it. It's the edgiest cover so far, and therefore one of my favourites. Something about the way that thumb is tucked into that pocket suggests the girl on the cover means business. You wouldn't want to mess with her. And the background? I instinctively loved its mathematical messiness, but on close inspection it looks like industrial pattern design. I guess you'd program a machine to tell it where to cut.


Thank you, Egmont, for the amazing work you did on this. You've made an English author very happy. I can't wait for my own copy, so I can see what Nonie, Crow and co get up to in Polish. Project Big Success, I'd say.



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Published on October 19, 2011 02:00

October 18, 2011

Picture this …

Want to see how I imagined the setting for the climactic scene of the new book? Exactly? Look behind Beyoncé here.



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Published on October 18, 2011 01:36