Wednesday, 14 September 2011

An Interview With Vickie Johnstone : Author Of Kiwi In Cat City


AUTHOR

Vickie Johnstone

BOOK TITLE
Kiwi in Cat City

AUTHOR BIO:

Hi, I live in London and have a thing about fluffy animals. I work as a sub editor on business magazines – at the moment it’s all about mining, geodrilling and tunnels! I have been writing since I was a kid. I love it. I also like nature, music, films, travelling and cheese.



SHORT SYNOPSIS:

Amy and James live in a house with their parents and their little black cat, Kiwi. One dark night, Amy cannot sleep and she looks out of the window into the garden to see Kiwi transfixed by the moon, which has taken on a weird, glowing shape like a cat's claw. Waking her brother, Amy suggests they follow Kiwi that night to see where she goes... whether it involves a hunt for mice or something else. Little do they know that, with a flick of her tail, Kiwi is going to lead them on the adventure of their lives to a land they never knew existed in their wildest dreams. In the blue-lit world of Cat City, they gain an understanding of what it's really like to be a cat. They get to help Inspector Furrball solve the mystery of the missing catizens and find out what really happened to Madame Purrfect.



GENRE:

Book for children, teens and adults


WHERE AVAILABLE

Click the site name to be taken to the relevant pages.



Amazon US





HOW DID YOU DECIDE ON THE TITLE OF YOUR BOOK

The main character is Kiwi, so I thought she has to be in the title, and then it just seemed obvious to put Cat City. Then there’s the alliteration, with the sounds making the title sound cute! Maybe!



WHAT OTHER BOOKS HAVE YOU WRITTEN ?
Kiwi and the missing Magic – book 2 in the Kiwi Series
Kaleidoscope – a collection of 119 poems on different subjects
Travelling Light – a free sample of poems
I’m writing book 3 in the Kiwi Series – it will be spooky!

WHY DO YOU WRITE?

Because I enjoy writing. If I go too long without writing, it’s like an itch you have to scratch. It gets frustrating. Also, there’s all these ideas and characters running around – you have to get them down on paper. If I wasn’t working I would write all of the time. It’s the best thing. Complete freedom.


WHERE DID YOU GET THE IDEA FOR YOUR BOOK?

It’s based on a cat I used to have called Kiwi, who was a real character. Intelligent, cute, individual, independent and very cheeky. She loved people and she wasn’t scared of anything. I grew up with a load of animals. We had a menagerie of animals really. My mum took in abandoned ones and my dad was also bringing in injured birds. At one time we even had a duck. I loved animals from when I was little and enjoyed reading about them. I was obsessed with Enid Blyton’s books – I loved the Faraway Tree and all of the characters, and the books with animals in. I guess it was only a matter of time before I wrote a book about them. I had been made redundant, had a lot of time on my hands, and the book began then. I started writing about Kiwi, imagined a city inhabited by cats, and it all emerged from there.


WHO IS YOUR FAVORITE CHARACTER IN THIS BOOK ? 

It has to be Kiwi.



HOW MUCH, IF ANY OF THE STORY WAS INSPIRED BY YOUR OWN LIFE EXPERIENCES? 

None at all. It’s all invented. But when I was little I really thought you could talk to animals! Mine were great friends! So I wish Cat City really existed. I’d be taking holidays there all of the time!


DID THE STORY PROCEED AS YOU ORIGINALLY CONCEPTUALIZED IT, OR EVOLVE AS THE WORK PROGRESSED?

It evolved as the book progressed. I didn’t know where it was going. The characters emerged as I wrote. There was Kiwi, so I thought about her, her description, her character. Then I thought what if she had an alternative home? I thought of the two children who live with her, how Kiwi could take them to her other world. How the children would react. I wondered what could happen there – there had to be a mystery, some good characters, some bad, someone had to learn something, there had to be something exciting going on. It all sort of developed as I wrote it. I think I wrote it in chronological order, except that I put the introduction in last – to show something exciting would happen later. I also wanted the reader to be surprised by things and not give too much away, and I wanted Cat City to be a different world – one that the reader could sink into and imagine they were somewhere else…
With book 2, I did more planning. I took notes, wrote parts, took more notes and wrote some more. I knew where it was going, although I didn’t have all the details. I didn’t write the scenes in order. I imagine the characters in my head, say when I’m walking down the street, think up scenes and conversations. Then I put them in my notebook and embroider it all later. When I’m writing poetry, it’s like flash poetry – it’s quick and just ideas or characters that come into my head.



WHO DO YOU USE AS A SOUNDING BOARD FOR YOUR WRITING?  

There’s no-one really. The Book Junkies group is great for discussing writing though. I think it’s too much for friends! When I published Kiwi in Cat City on kindle, no-one had read it. None of my friends knew that I had written a book. Then I was praying that people wouldn’t hate it. I had no idea if anyone would like it. I had contacted one publisher years ago, got rejected and I never tried again. When I published Kiwi, I had no idea what feedback I would get. You can’t imagine how great it feels to have people reading my books. It’s just the greatest feeling. I honestly felt that no-one would ever read the book.


IN WHAT GENRE WOULD YOU BE LEAST & MOST COMFORTABLE WRITING?  

I think romance might be a problem! Fantasy and children’s books, and poetry the easiest.


IS THE FOLLOWING STATEMENT FACT OR MYTH, FOR YOU PERSONALLY AND WHY?
“WRITING THE FIRST SENTENCE IS THE MOST DIFFICULT PART OF WRITING A BOOK.”

Myth because sometimes I don’t start at the beginning. With poetry, the first sentence is important because everything flows like water from there. But with my books I may go back and change the first sentence. With Kiwi 2, I didn’t begin with the beginning. With Kiwi in Cat City, the first sentence is important as it’s a poem about Kiwi, and that’s the first line I wrote!



WHO IS YOUR FAVOURITE AUTHOR ?

Roald Dahl


WHAT IS YOUR FAVOURITE BOOK ?

Fantastic Mr Fox


THIS IS ALSO A BLOG ABOUT FILMS TOO, SO WHAT IS YOUR FAVOURITE FILM ?

Oh god, this is hard. How to choose? MMMMM. I don’t think I can choose.


APART FROM WRITING DO YOU HAVE ANY OTHER HOBBIES ?

Art, visiting galleries, going to gigs, watching movies, I used to draw and paint when I had more free time, tarot, dancing, yoga


HOW DO YOU MARKET YOUR BOOKS ?

I find this really hard. I also find it hard to find time to do it as I work full-time.
I use Facebook and have FB pages for my books; use twitter; I have a blog, and I’ve joined Book Blogs and Networked Blogs; I market other people’s books on my blog by writing interviews; I chat in FB groups such as Book Junkies; I offered my books for free in the Smashwords sale; I’ve probably given away about 150 copies of books, hoping to gain some new readers; I joined Goodreads and Kindleboards, although I barely find time to use them enough; I ask people if they would like to review any of my books; I tell friends (now!) and family. I think I don’t do enough to be honest. A lot of other writers are a lot better at it than me. I keep praying readers will discover my books somehow! There must be a secret to it J



WHAT ELSE WOULD YOU LIKE YOUR PROSPECTIVE READERS TO KNOW ABOUT YOU OR THIS BOOK?

That I really enjoy writing my books and I hope they enjoy reading them too! And I wish I could write for a living. That’s my dream. And my message to readers who want to write – just go for it. Now’s the time!

AUTHOR
Vickie Johnstone

BOOK TITLE
Kiwi in Cat City

AUTHOR BIO:

Hi, I live in London and have a thing about fluffy animals. I work as a sub editor on business magazines – at the moment it’s all about mining, geodrilling and tunnels! I have been writing since I was a kid. I love it. I also like nature, music, films, travelling and cheese.



SHORT SYNOPSIS:

Amy and James live in a house with their parents and their little black cat, Kiwi. One dark night, Amy cannot sleep and she looks out of the window into the garden to see Kiwi transfixed by the moon, which has taken on a weird, glowing shape like a cat's claw. Waking her brother, Amy suggests they follow Kiwi that night to see where she goes... whether it involves a hunt for mice or something else. Little do they know that, with a flick of her tail, Kiwi is going to lead them on the adventure of their lives to a land they never knew existed in their wildest dreams. In the blue-lit world of Cat City, they gain an understanding of what it's really like to be a cat. They get to help Inspector Furrball solve the mystery of the missing catizens and find out what really happened to Madame Purrfect.



GENRE:

Book for children, teens and adults


WHERE AVAILABLE/PRICE:

Smashwords
http://www.smashwords.com/books/view/55227

Amazon
http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B004YKSZMM

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B004YKSZMM

Publishmybook.ie

Breakthrough Bookstore

$2.99


HOW DID YOU DECIDE ON THE TITLE OF YOUR BOOK

The main character is Kiwi, so I thought she has to be in the title, and then it just seemed obvious to put Cat City. Then there’s the alliteration, with the sounds making the title sound cute! Maybe!



WHAT OTHER BOOKS HAVE YOU WRITTEN ?
Kiwi and the missing Magic – book 2 in the Kiwi Series
Kaleidoscope – a collection of 119 poems on different subjects
Travelling Light – a free sample of poems
I’m writing book 3 in the Kiwi Series – it will be spooky!

WHY DO YOU WRITE?

Because I enjoy writing. If I go too long without writing, it’s like an itch you have to scratch. It gets frustrating. Also, there’s all these ideas and characters running around – you have to get them down on paper. If I wasn’t working I would write all of the time. It’s the best thing. Complete freedom.


WHERE DID YOU GET THE IDEA FOR YOUR BOOK?

It’s based on a cat I used to have called Kiwi, who was a real character. Intelligent, cute, individual, independent and very cheeky. She loved people and she wasn’t scared of anything. I grew up with a load of animals. We had a menagerie of animals really. My mum took in abandoned ones and my dad was also bringing in injured birds. At one time we even had a duck. I loved animals from when I was little and enjoyed reading about them. I was obsessed with Enid Blyton’s books – I loved the Faraway Tree and all of the characters, and the books with animals in. I guess it was only a matter of time before I wrote a book about them. I had been made redundant, had a lot of time on my hands, and the book began then. I started writing about Kiwi, imagined a city inhabited by cats, and it all emerged from there.


WHO IS YOUR FAVORITE CHARACTER IN THIS BOOK ? 

It has to be Kiwi.



HOW MUCH, IF ANY OF THE STORY WAS INSPIRED BY YOUR OWN LIFE EXPERIENCES? 

None at all. It’s all invented. But when I was little I really thought you could talk to animals! Mine were great friends! So I wish Cat City really existed. I’d be taking holidays there all of the time!


DID THE STORY PROCEED AS YOU ORIGINALLY CONCEPTUALIZED IT, OR EVOLVE AS THE WORK PROGRESSED?

It evolved as the book progressed. I didn’t know where it was going. The characters emerged as I wrote. There was Kiwi, so I thought about her, her description, her character. Then I thought what if she had an alternative home? I thought of the two children who live with her, how Kiwi could take them to her other world. How the children would react. I wondered what could happen there – there had to be a mystery, some good characters, some bad, someone had to learn something, there had to be something exciting going on. It all sort of developed as I wrote it. I think I wrote it in chronological order, except that I put the introduction in last – to show something exciting would happen later. I also wanted the reader to be surprised by things and not give too much away, and I wanted Cat City to be a different world – one that the reader could sink into and imagine they were somewhere else…
With book 2, I did more planning. I took notes, wrote parts, took more notes and wrote some more. I knew where it was going, although I didn’t have all the details. I didn’t write the scenes in order. I imagine the characters in my head, say when I’m walking down the street, think up scenes and conversations. Then I put them in my notebook and embroider it all later. When I’m writing poetry, it’s like flash poetry – it’s quick and just ideas or characters that come into my head.



WHO DO YOU USE AS A SOUNDING BOARD FOR YOUR WRITING?  

There’s no-one really. The Book Junkies group is great for discussing writing though. I think it’s too much for friends! When I published Kiwi in Cat City on kindle, no-one had read it. None of my friends knew that I had written a book. Then I was praying that people wouldn’t hate it. I had no idea if anyone would like it. I had contacted one publisher years ago, got rejected and I never tried again. When I published Kiwi, I had no idea what feedback I would get. You can’t imagine how great it feels to have people reading my books. It’s just the greatest feeling. I honestly felt that no-one would ever read the book.


IN WHAT GENRE WOULD YOU BE LEAST & MOST COMFORTABLE WRITING?  

I think romance might be a problem! Fantasy and children’s books, and poetry the easiest.


IS THE FOLLOWING STATEMENT FACT OR MYTH, FOR YOU PERSONALLY AND WHY?
“WRITING THE FIRST SENTENCE IS THE MOST DIFFICULT PART OF WRITING A BOOK.”

Myth because sometimes I don’t start at the beginning. With poetry, the first sentence is important because everything flows like water from there. But with my books I may go back and change the first sentence. With Kiwi 2, I didn’t begin with the beginning. With Kiwi in Cat City, the first sentence is important as it’s a poem about Kiwi, and that’s the first line I wrote!



WHO IS YOUR FAVOURITE AUTHOR ?

Roald Dahl


WHAT IS YOUR FAVOURITE BOOK ?

Fantastic Mr Fox


THIS IS ALSO A BLOG ABOUT FILMS TOO, SO WHAT IS YOUR FAVOURITE FILM ?

Oh god, this is hard. How to choose? MMMMM. I don’t think I can choose.


APART FROM WRITING DO YOU HAVE ANY OTHER HOBBIES ?

Art, visiting galleries, going to gigs, watching movies, I used to draw and paint when I had more free time, tarot, dancing, yoga


HOW DO YOU MARKET YOUR BOOKS ?

I find this really hard. I also find it hard to find time to do it as I work full-time.
I use Facebook and have FB pages for my books; use twitter; I have a blog, and I’ve joined Book Blogs and Networked Blogs; I market other people’s books on my blog by writing interviews; I chat in FB groups such as Book Junkies; I offered my books for free in the Smashwords sale; I’ve probably given away about 150 copies of books, hoping to gain some new readers; I joined Goodreads and Kindleboards, although I barely find time to use them enough; I ask people if they would like to review any of my books; I tell friends (now!) and family. I think I don’t do enough to be honest. A lot of other writers are a lot better at it than me. I keep praying readers will discover my books somehow! There must be a secret to it J



WHAT ELSE WOULD YOU LIKE YOUR PROSPECTIVE READERS TO KNOW ABOUT YOU OR THIS BOOK?

That I really enjoy writing my books and I hope they enjoy reading them too! And I wish I could write for a living. That’s my dream. And my message to readers who want to write – just go for it. Now’s the time!

2 comments:

  1. A big thank you for interviewing me :)
    Purrs...

    ReplyDelete
  2. My Pleasure :)
    Looking forward to reading and reviewing your books too.

    ReplyDelete