Happy News in Sad Times: Misha Herwin
Right now, the
world feels a very unsafe and frightening place. Every time I switch on the
news there is more on the war in Ukraine and the suffering of the people
fleeing for their lives. I do what little I can by signing petitions to allow
more refugees into the country, writing to my member of parliament and donating
money. Even so it doesn’t feel enough and it would be so easy to slide into a
sense of helplessness.
At times like
these it feels almost wrong to announce any happy news and yet there is no
point, and it doesn’t help anyone, to allow myself to sink into despair. It may
be a cliché but life must go on and after I’ve counted my blessings and made up
my mind never to moan about the small stuff again, I am trying to keep things
as normal as they can be.
And so I find that
I am in the middle of a marketing campaign for “The Further Adventures of Poppy
and Amelia.” This is the second book I’ve written with my granddaughter Maddy.
The first, “The Awesome Adventures of Poppy and Amelia” was the by-product of
home-schooling during the first lockdown, the second has a similar beginning as
last spring yet again the schools were closed. As before, Maddy’s parents asked
if I could help out with the English teaching and once again the reward for
working hard during each session was story time, out of which came another tale
of the apprentice witches and their vampire friend Mia.
Having been
through the process of co-authoring once, I was aware of the pitfalls as well
as the pleasures. This time I felt we needed to keep the story tighter and to
have an overarching theme. This evolved naturally out of the narrative and
became an exploration of friendship and responsibility. The young witches learn
how to care for and interact with their familiars while their relationships
with each other and Bayonica, the new girl at school, are challenged by the
demands that Bayonica makes of them.
Like Poppy and
Amelia, Bayonica has magic powers that she uses to cause trouble, but as Poppy
eventually realises, “It’s all so complicated,” …“What Bayonica did was evil,
so why don’t I want her to be turned into a slug, or squashed or anything?”
“She doesn’t
deserve that. She has been bad but that’s what she thought she was supposed to be,”
Amelia said. “It’s what her parents brought her up to be and now they don’t
want anything to do with her.”
Like the other two
books all the profits from “The Further Adventures of Poppy and Amelia” will go
to Leukaemia research in memory of my daughter and Maddy’s aunt, Posy Miller.
Comments
Yes, the world feels unsafe and frightening just now. It's hard to avoid the war and I've just written a blo connecting it to past wars which will probably soon be outdated.
I hope your books are successful in raising funds for the Leukemia research.