*POSTPONED* Events at St Giles Cathedral

Please note this Saturday afternoon’s events have been postponed – check back in a little while for the new date and further info.

In the run-up to World Book Day on the 3rd of March, and The Sky Beneath the Stone‘s official launch date on 24th February, I’m doing an event at St Giles Cathedral on the Royal Mile in Edinburgh! Two events to be precise, this Saturday 19th February at 1pm and 2.20pm.

We will be mapping our most magical places, creating characters and writing a story with the help of some props and prompts! The book is aimed at ages 8 and over but the event will be suitable for the whole family.

Links here for 1pm and 2.20pm.

Hope to see you there!

2021 Wrap-Up

I’m not going to comment on the state of the world (except for that) but I am doing a lot of chilling this festive season and looking forward to 2022. Plus I’m about to turn 30 (flirty and thriving)!

I was planning to do a lot of visuals but honestly I’m a bit wiped so I’m just gonna list some of my favourites from this year, in no particular order, and intersperse some pics of our adventures in France. My parents were living in their campervan when Covid started so they’ve ended up settling in rural France. We came over in early December before the borders closed, but we’ll be home for New Year’s.

Pre-orders

You can now pre-order The Sky Beneath the Stone! Preferred options are direct from Kelpies or through my Bookshop.org affiliate page. I’ve heard tell that Aussies have been ordering from Booktopia. I’m not sure when you’ll be able to order through your local indie bookshop but it can’t hurt to check with them!

Books of the Year

Adult / Non-fiction

  • Know My Name by Chanel Miller
  • Diary of a Young Naturalist by Dara McAnulty
  • Sword Stone Table: Old Legends, New Voices edited by Swapna Krishna and Jenn Northington
  • Drowned Country by Emily Tesh
  • Gideon the Ninth by Tamsyn Muir
  • Finding the Mother Tree by Suzanne Simard
  • Solar Storms by Linda Hogan
  • The Secret History by Donna Tartt
  • Fathoms: The World in the Whale by Rebecca Giggs
  • Jade Legacy by Fonda Lee

Children’s / YA

  • Lakesedge by Lyndall Clipstone
  • The Song That Sings Us by Nicola Davies
  • The House with Chicken Legs by Sophie Anderson
  • Across the Risen Sea by Bren MacDibble
  • Secrets of the Last Merfolk by Lindsay Littleson
  • Ace of Spades by Faridah Àbíké-Íyímídé
  • Greenwitch by Susan Cooper

I watch a lot of films and don’t keep track of them very well but some of my favourites from this year have been Dune, The Mitchells vs. the Machines, Raya and the Last Dragon and most recently Don’t Look Up and The Matrix: Resurrections.

Some of my highlights of 2021 have been getting to hang out with my parents for the first time since 2019 and my whole immediate family for the first time in years, starting a business with one of my best friends, training to be a Marine Mammal Medic and helping in the aftermath of Storm Arwen, travelling in the Highlands and managing to do some normal things with friends whenever we were actually allowed. I even went to roller derby training a few times!

Have a restful holiday season and Happy New Year!

Kelpies Catalogue & Reading Video

I received my first finished copy of The Sky Beneath the Stone at the end of last week and it is more magical than ever!

The Kelpies Spring-Summer 2022 Catalogue is out now and has a very colourful spread about TSBTS. I can’t get over how surreal it feels.

For the catalogue I recorded a reading from Chapter 2, ‘The Hole in the Wall’. I had to rearrange a lot of furniture and even take apart an armchair and put it back together to build my set! My phone also ran out of storage several times but I got there in the end.

In the bottom right you can also see a present from Laurel – a tin that opens to show the hole in the wall and Underfell beyond (plus Callum sitting on the wall).

Exciting times, but now I should really be getting on with the next book!

Witchtober

Over the past month I have been writing a piece of flash fiction every day, using prompts from @willowandroxas on Instagram for #WillowWitchtober. I have really been feeling the spooky season this year so even though I think the challenge is mainly aimed at visual artists, it seemed like a lot of fun to write about different witches every day for a month!

When I was younger I used to scribble short stories all the time, but in my twenties I seem to have been mainly focused on writing and redrafting a few big projects so it was a nice change of pace to exercise my imagination and come up with new ideas every day. Some might even become longer stories down the track, who knows?

Here are a couple of unedited pieces I wrote this month and a few photos from my October camera roll.

Glass

“Pass it to me.”

Niamh extended her hand and Cole dropped the object he was holding into her palm. Niamh had half a second to take it in – pale blue glass, frosted white and edges smoothed by years beaten on the sea floor – before the memory took her.

A glass bowl, held in two pale, soft hands. Glass – not very practical for a sea voyage, but nothing about this young man was particularly practical. He lifted one of his hands to pluck a gleaming gold hoop earring from the collection of jewels the bowl held, but as he reached up to his ear he set down the bowl – and the memory was severed.

But Niamh was still holding the smooth piece of sea glass, and she could feel the other pieces that had once made up the bowl as if they were tugging her on strings, reaching for the shard in her hand as though to make the bowl whole once more.

Niamh closed her fingers around it, and with her other hand pointed out to the horizon.

“Set a heading!” Cole called, and the crew leapt into motion.

Grave

Calla was out of breath by the time she reached the windswept hilltop. Though the graveyard was protected by trees, wind rattled through their branches. The sound in the winter forest was like teeth chattering.

She approached the overgrown grave and lifted the bunch of flowers from her basket. Out of season, but that hadn’t been a problem for her. She knelt down in the grass and plucked the flowers one by one from the bunch, setting each stem to the ground and calling down its roots until it stood firmly before the mossy grey stone. Calla had been cultivating the moss over the past few years, and now she saw a sprout of ivy peeking out of the soil. She reached out and encouraged it up the curved edge of the gravestone, emerald leaves unfurling around the name etched into the stone.

“There you go, Gran,” Calla said, settling back into the twilight.

“Thank you, my dear.” The voice shivered through the leaves.

Pet

Claribel sat beside the fire, feeding it pinecones, her eyes glazed. It was coming up on a decade since that wizened old man had imprisoned her in this cave. Though she had used her abilities to fill the place with comforts, she had never succeeded in breaking the enchantment that held her captive.

There was still time, of course. What was ten years when you’d lived 800 already? An evening, maybe. The passing of time didn’t disturb her the way it had as a young woman. Back then the world had been filled with infinite possibilities and there could never be enough time to see them all through. But as she’d aged those endless opportunities had faded away, unimportant, as her life and her cares crystallised. No; she could wait.

Still, one did get lonely eventually. And though she was in no doubt that eventually she’d find her way out of her cosy prison and make that wizard rue the day he’d turned his tricks on her, it would be nice to have some company in the interim.

The embers cracked and threw up sparks, catching her attention. Her eyes came into focus on the burning logs in the hearth. She twirled her fingers, gently coazing the blackened wood into form, a smile pulling at her lips as the creature took shape. A head like an arrow, its eyes glowing embers. The lithe body and flicking tail that brushed over the fire, coal-black.

She held out a hand and the flame marten flowed up her arm like lava, its paws pleasantly hot, and settled in the crook of her neck.

Cover Reveal – The Sky Beneath the Stone

One week ago today the magical cover for The Sky Beneath the Stone was revealed on My Book Corner!

I hadn’t dared to imagine that the cover would be so beautiful, so full of wonderful details from the story, in such a gorgeous style. Thank you so much to the illustrator Diana Renzhina and the team at Kelpies!

More info about the book is now available on my Books tab above(!) and on the Discover Kelpies website.

Copies will be available for pre-order after Christmas and the book is officially released on February 24th 2022.

I’m so excited! I think I must have used that word more times this year than ever before. Except maybe the year I got married… maybe.

A Guide to Inglewood Forest

My partner Laurel and I released our first tabletop RPG collaboration on Friday! Well, that’s not strictly true as I did do “assistance and additional research” on her game The High Seas, but this is the first one we’ve developed from scratch together.

If you don’t know what any of this means, a tabletop RPG is a game you can play with friends around a table (or on discord/zoom etc in these times) with pencils, paper and dice. Dungeons and Dragons is the most famous example. It’s basically like group storytelling which is what I love about it.

A Guide to Inglewood Forest is a setting guide, so it isn’t a game in itself. Last year I ran a session of a Robin Hood themed game called Merry Outlaws for some friends. The setting I developed as background for the story was Inglewood Forest, the most northerly Kingswood in England during the later medieval period (and in Cumbria, where I grew up). It also has its own famous outlaws, Adam Bell, William Cloudesly and Clym of the Clough.

After the game Laurel and I expanded the setting, adding descriptions of the seasons, places, notable characters, wildlife and plants. The guide is designed to be used in conjunction with Merry Outlaws or similar medieval RPGs, basically to help you add detail to your game and give some story prompts.

This was a really fun project to work on between drafts of different books. You can buy it for $3.50 and for every copy sold we put up a free copy for anyone who can’t afford to buy it.

For more information visit the game page on itch.io.

The Sky Beneath the Stone Announcement

I am very excited to officially announce that my first book, The Sky Beneath the Stone, will be published by Kelpies in spring 2022!

13-year-old Ivy North is an adventurer. She can pitch a tent in four minutes flat. She’s a pro navigator with a map and compass. There’s just one problem: she’s too afraid to go outside.

But when her brother, Callum, is turned into a kestrel before her eyes and spirited away to another world, Ivy knows that she’ll brave anything to get him back. Leaving the safety of her home, she follows him through a hole in the garden wall into a distorted mirror image of the Cumbria she knows. And in the strange world of Underfell, the longer he’s a bird, the less boy is left behind…

The book is aimed at older children and I hope that readers of all ages will enjoy it too!

I can’t wait to welcome everyone into the world of Underfell next year.

StoryGraph Shelves

I switched recently from Goodreads to StoryGraph to get away from the Amazon monopoly (and then also learned Audible doesn’t pay writers if their audiobooks are returned, which they can be even after they’ve been listened to, up to a year later).

Anyway, I’ve been collecting together all my favourite nature writing and books about animals, everything from Ring of Bright Water to Mythago Wood, and I thought I’d share the links here.

Nature Writing

Animal Connections

So if you’re looking for any recommendations for slow-paced reflections on the natural world and our animal friends, these are all my recommendations!

I’ve also got shelves in progress for my Favourite Children’s Books and Favourite YA.