Writers on Wednesday: Sally Odgers
Welcome once again to Writers on Wednesday. This week I am chatting with prolific Australian author Sally Odgers. Sally has been writing for a long time--in fact, I can remember borrowing her book Amy Amaryllis from my local library when I was in my upper years at primary school. (I think I may have owned a couple of the Blinky Bill adaptions as well.) Anyway, welcome Sally ...
Tell me a bit about yourself …
I was born in
Tasmania and still live in the same road. I grew up on a dairy farm with one
elder sister, and a lot of animals. My sister and I used to share books and
pets and played a game called “quotations” in which one of us came up with a
quote from one of the books we’d both read and the other had to identify it. We
did this while walking, rowing, riding and feeding or grooming animals. My
first story was published in 1970, and my first book in 1977. Since then, just
two years have passed without a new book coming out. As well as writing, I run
a small manuscript assessment and editing service called Affordable Manuscript
Assessments, a tiny publishing collective called Prints Charming Books, an
artist-promotion blog called Promote Me Please, and a speakers’ listing called
Tassie Book Talks. My husband and I have a lot of Jack Russells, which inspired
us to write three series narrated by dogs. We have two children and two
grandchildren.
Tell us about your most recently
published book?
Three books are
available this quarter. Two are books one (Farm Rescue) and two (Bush Rescue)
in the Pup Patrol series I co-write with my husband. The other is Heather and
Heath, a long historical novel coming from Satalyte.
Tell us about the first time you were
published?
My first story
came out in the NSW School Magazine when I was twelve or so. After selling more
stories to that market, I wrote a farm adventure and two fantasies called The
Kamarand and The Kamarand 2. I subbed The Kamarand to a publisher and the
editor rejected it, but suggested I should put together a collection of short
stories. This I did when I was fifteen/sixteen. The book was published in 1977.
As writer, what has been your proudest
achievement so far?
Surviving, I
think! My writing career has spanned six decades which isn’t too bad for a
person who is still in her fifties. (It’s a strange feature of maths that this
is possible.)
What books or writing projects are you
currently working on, if anything?
I’m working on
Book #4 of the Pup Patrol series and also a little project called The Fairies
of Farholt. I have several other WsiP.
Which do you prefer? eBooks or Paper
Books? Why?
Paper books. I
find it disturbing that eBooks are so cheap. It’s as if we’re implying the
paper of a book is worth hundreds of percent more than the actual story. I also
prefer not to read on screen, because I do that for hours and hours a day for
work. In fact, my preference is for audio books, because I can read those while
walking, gardening or cooking.
Indie Publishing, or Traditional
Publishing?
Both. I am an
enthusiastic supporter of both forms of publishing. Indie is more difficult to
make a living from, but indie gives us some glorious books that might not have
the mass-market appeal trad publishers need. I’ve read some darned good
self-published books too in recent times. Self-publishers often hire me to
assess and edit their work so I have a ringside seat to see what’s out there.
Aside from your own books, of course,
what is one book that you feel everybody should read?
The Perilous
Gard, by Elizabeth Marie Pope.
Finally … is there anything you would like
to say to your readers in Adelaide, Australia?
Several things!
Don’t lend, recommend. Don’t read a book just because you think you should. Have confidence in your own
opinion. Read books you love. If you enjoyed a book, why not let the author
and/or publisher know? If you write to an author, please don’t just say, “I
love your book(s).” Tell us what you loved, specifically, and why. Finally, if
you are an author, aspiring, novice, seasoned, mainstream, midlist or whatever
else, improve your own chances by buying new
recently-and-locally-published books in your own genre. If possible, buy
them from your local book shop. Our local industry depends on sales.
Links
http://satalyte.com.au/
Any of these will find me.
www.printscharmingbooks.com
http://promotemeplease.blogspot.com.au
http://tassiebooktalks.weebly.com
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