Writers on Wednesday: Sharon L Norris
Welcome back to Writers on Wednesday, this week I'm talking to an amazing Australian writer, Sharon L Norris ...
Tell us a bit about yourself …
Having written
since I was about nine years old, my greatest dream was to become a published
author. I’m thrilled to say that dream came true nearly a decade ago when the
first of my four children’s books was accepted for publication.
Now aged in my
late forties, I’d love to tell you that I am living the writer’s dream and
spending my days at the computer writing full time – but I can’t! I write
around my full-time Government job, my family responsibilities (my youngest
child is just entering high school) and my volunteer activities.
Having lived all
over my home state of Queensland while growing up, as well as a spell in
England in my late twenties, I currently live in the small township of
Nhulunbuy in the Northern Territory. It’s a very remote location in eastern Arnhem
Land – right at the top of the Gulf of Carpentaria – and the land here is owned
by the indigenous Yolgnu people. The Arafura Sea separates us from Papua New
Guinea and the eastern isles of Indonesia. It’s remote. It’s wild. It’s wonderful.
It’s also a great place to stir the creative spirit.
Tell us about the first time you were
published?
I strongly
believe that writers need to serve an apprenticeship and learn all they can
about the industry and the genre/s they favour, as well as how to learn to
write. In this way, ‘time’ becomes both the writer’s friend as well as their
enemy.
I started writing
for children in 1996, while pregnant with my first child, and spent the next seven
years in the first part of my apprenticeship. I learnt all I could about
writing, the industry, and how to use the internet to find out more about
publishers and what they were looking for. Two of my works were accepted in
2003 - junior novels aimed at upper primary readers which were published in 2004.
Finders Keepers was published by an
ePublisher, Writers Exchange, and The
Balloonatic! was published Macmillan Education. When the acceptance for Finders Keepers came through by email, I
ran around the house screaming, so much that it frightened my youngest child,
who was then just a year-old toddler.
Over time my
apprenticeship has continued and taken on different elements as my focus on
writing has changed. Two other book publication credits have also come my way
via traditional publishers. I’m now taking my time as I work on the biggest
project of my career – a two-book story aimed at young adults.
As writer, what has been your proudest
achievement so far?
For the first
time ever, I entered a writing competition in 2013 and made the final three
shortlist. The CYA (Children’s and Young
Adult Writers and Illustrators) Conference has a prestigious annual writing
competition which features a section for published authors. I decided to try my
hand by submitting the first three chapters of my current work-in-progress, a
young adult novel whose story will be told over two books.
Titled The Land of the Free, this story was
shortlisted with two other works (including that of my friend and fellow
critique group member RJ Timmis) and the final placings in the competition were
decided by an editor from a major publishing house. My story didn’t come first,
but with feedback of 100% from the preliminary judges and a 5/5 for the ‘wow
factor’, I felt like I’d won lotto. This result has encouraged me to go on and
continue writing this story. My goal for 2014 is to finish the first book.
What books or writing projects are you
currently working on, if anything?
In 2013 I
started turning my hand to young adult fiction. This is completely new for me
as my writing to date has been firmly aimed at the ‘tween audience. I’m now
working on a two-book story that is categorised as ‘futuristic dystopian’ – a
story set in the future in a society that is far from perfect. Inspired by The Hunger Games, I’m writing about teens
living in an oppressive society where a lot of personal freedoms have been
removed from what remains of the world’s severely depleted population. It’s
titled The Land of the Free, and the
second book will be titled The Home of
the Brave. You may well recognise these as the iconic words of the American
national anthem. They are also the themes of this two-part young adult story.
My other writing
projects are (hopefully!) interesting. I’m looking to start creative writing
groups to cater for primary and high school writers in my town, and I’m
developing a project to obtain books for libraries in the remote indigenous
towns in Arnhem Land.
The first
project, the writing groups, is really important to me. My own writing has
benefited greatly by being involved in writing critique groups and I’m
currently in two that are physically located in south-east Queensland. As I now
live in the remote NT, I use Facebook’s video facility to ‘dial in’ to my
writing groups when their meetings are held, and I can participate from afar in
that way. There is no group locally that I can join for this specific
genre-specific writing, and there’s nothing like this for children, so I am
determined to start up writing groups for older and younger students, hopefully
meeting at the town library.
I say
‘hopefully’ because our town is going through tremendous turmoil at present and
the population will change dramatically in the coming months. Mining giant Rio
Tinto will close its bauxite refinery by 1 July 2014 and its 1100 workers will
leave our town of 4,000, taking their families with them. How many writing
children will be left when the aluminium dust settles is anyone’s guess. I will
have to wait and see.
My other
project, tentatively titled Authors and Others
For Arnhem, is important on so many levels. The average Australian has no
idea what life is like in remote communities – in particular, remote Indigenous
communities. In east Arnhem Land, English is often a fourth or fifth language
for Yolgnu people. There aren’t that many books in languages the locals can
read. The libraries are very small or may not exist at all in some communities.
In one community I visit regularly, the library is set up on one side of a
community meeting room. In another community, the library is inside a converted
shipping container.
Every day,
mainstream TV blasts us with ads asking us to give money to support the less
fortunate and people doing it tough in other countries. While that’s important,
it’s also important to remember Australia is the size of Europe and we have
less fortunate citizens and people doing it tough right here at home. But
because you often don’t get to hear about what’s happening in remote areas, you
don’t know about it. Right now, I’m at concept-development stage with this
project. There’s a lot of thinking that needs to be done about how to get
people to donate books for these communities, and how to distribute them across
the distance. I aim to progress this project in 2014 to the point where I can
start asking for books to be donated.
Do you have a favourite place to write?
The kitchen
table has always seemed the perfect place to write for me. It’s where my
writing comes together. The thought of closeting myself away in a closed space like
an office doesn’t sit well with me. Not that I’m claustrophobic or anything,
but I prefer the open space.
I also ‘write’
when I’m outdoors. In my current location, I’m just five minutes’ drive from
the beach so I walk up and down the beach every day. The fresh air and exercise
certainly help with my creative process. Of course, there are saltwater
crocodiles in the sea where I live in Northern Australia, so walking on the
beach can sometimes be fraught with peril. It’s important to always keep one
eye on the water, especially at high tide, and never walk the same stretch of
beach at the same time every day…
Which do you prefer? eBooks or Paper
Books? Why?
I like both,
actually. eBooks make it so easy to take large works with you on the bus, to
work, to the park or the beach, and lazing on your bed. Paper books are great,
but bulky. I’d much rather put my Kindle in my handbag than a huge 350-page
novel.
Aside from your own books, of course,
what is one book that you feel everybody should read?
I think everyone
should take the time to read The Diary of
Anne Frank. It’s a book that has touched hearts everywhere, made tears
tumble down cheeks, and has brought resolutions that we must stand up to
tyranny so that the children of the future have a safe place to live (another
theme of my current work-in-progress). With all the conflict going on around
the world at present, much of it because followers of different religions can’t
accept or tolerate each other, it’s increasingly important for people to be
reminded that the genocidal horrors of the past are still happening today and
should not be happening.
Finally … is there anything you would
like to say to your readers in Adelaide, Australia?
If you look
directly north from Adelaide on a map, you will find the township of Nhulunbuy
where I currently live. So we’re aligned on the map and aligned in our support
of the written word. May you enjoy whatever you’re going to read today!
Web: www.sharonlnorris.com/my-books.html
Twitter: @SharonLNorris
Facebook: www.facebook.com/sharonlnorris.ozauthor
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