I just wanted to say a big thank you to everyone at St Mary's Primary School for giving me such a warm welcome when I visited this week!
It was brilliant to see all the work you've been doing with Varjak Paw, and to hear your enthusiasm for Phoenix too! It was especially exciting to be able to show you Dave McKean's fantastic book trailer for Phoenix – hopefully I'll be posting a link to it here soon, along with some more news!
Friday, 28 June 2013
Thursday, 20 June 2013
The Supernova Is Coming To Edinburgh!
I'm excited to announce that I'll be doing a public event for my new book Phoenix at the Edinburgh International Book Festival this year! The event is titled 'Intergalactic War with SF Said' and it's happening on Tuesday 13th August, from 12-1pm.
I love what they've written about Phoenix on the official event page:
Adventure, space, destiny, aliens, explosions, starships, distant stars and galaxies. Whoa! Amazing! Come join S F Said to hear about his latest breathtaking book, Phoenix. Meet Lucky, an ordinary human boy who wakes to find an incredible power rising in him and a supernova coming, bringing with it a war between humans and aliens. Only one boy can save the galaxy – just as well he’s called Lucky!Tickets are now on sale; here's a link to the booking page! And of course there'll be copies of Phoenix on sale, which I'll be signing after the event.
Sunday, 16 June 2013
Phoenix: Interior Art Preview!
Have a look at this great feature by Dave McKean on The Guardian about his current work, which includes one of his amazing illustrations from my new book Phoenix:
This one totally took my breath away when I first saw it. I hope you like it too... and if you do - please share it!
This one totally took my breath away when I first saw it. I hope you like it too... and if you do - please share it!
Thursday, 13 June 2013
Phoenix To Launch At London Film & Comic Con!
I'm thrilled to be able to announce that Dave McKean and I will be launching my new book Phoenix at the London Film & Comic Con on Saturday July 6th!
Official publication isn't until August, but there'll be advance copies of the book on sale, and we'll be doing a public signing from 11am to 1pm - so come and get your copy first!
Full details and booking forms can be found on the official website. It's going to be an amazing weekend, there are some incredible people coming – Peter Dinklage & Lena Headey (Game Of Thrones), Linda Hamilton (Terminator), Eve Myles (Torchwood), even Peter Mayhew & Kenny Baker (who played Chewbacca & R2D2 in the original Star Wars!) I can't wait!!!
Official publication isn't until August, but there'll be advance copies of the book on sale, and we'll be doing a public signing from 11am to 1pm - so come and get your copy first!
Tuesday, 11 June 2013
Allerton Literacy Festival
I just wanted to say a big thank you to everyone I met at Allerton Primary School, where I was honoured to take part in the Allerton Literacy Festival last week!
Thank you for giving me such a warm welcome – it really meant a lot to hear how much you'd enjoyed reading Varjak Paw. Things like that make all the hard work worthwhile!
It was great to hear about all your own stories too; there was some fantastic work going on there! So good luck with your own writing – and please look out for Phoenix in August!
It was great to hear about all your own stories too; there was some fantastic work going on there! So good luck with your own writing – and please look out for Phoenix in August!
Thursday, 30 May 2013
The Supernova Is Coming...
Exciting update on my new book Phoenix! It's now just two months until publication, and we sent the final files to the printers this week – so I'm absolutely thrilled to be able to post the front cover here!
Hasn't Dave McKean done an incredible job?! Just wait till you see the interior art! I'll be posting some in the not-too-distant future, along with more updates, sneak previews, and announcements about events... In the meantime, please share this image (there are buttons below for facebook, twitter etc), and help to spread the word!
Hasn't Dave McKean done an incredible job?! Just wait till you see the interior art! I'll be posting some in the not-too-distant future, along with more updates, sneak previews, and announcements about events... In the meantime, please share this image (there are buttons below for facebook, twitter etc), and help to spread the word!
Thursday, 23 May 2013
School Visit: Hillsgrove Primary
I just wanted to say big thank you to the Year 3's of Hillsgrove Primary School, who I was very honoured to visit this week!
It was amazing to meet so many Varjak Paw fans, and to see all the great work you've been doing. Thank you so much for your warm welcome and your brilliant questions; I really enjoyed the visit!
It was especially amazing to hear how much some people were looking forward to Phoenix! I hope you'll enjoy it too... let me know what you think when it comes out!
It was amazing to meet so many Varjak Paw fans, and to see all the great work you've been doing. Thank you so much for your warm welcome and your brilliant questions; I really enjoyed the visit!
It was especially amazing to hear how much some people were looking forward to Phoenix! I hope you'll enjoy it too... let me know what you think when it comes out!
Monday, 20 May 2013
Lovely comment!
hi sf said I love your books!!! they're amazing!!! Especially Varjak Paw. We have been reading it at school and it is really interesting. We just wanted to say hi!!! :D
NADINE GREEN
Hi Nadine! Thanks so much for your lovely comment, you've totally made my day! I hope you'll enjoy reading The Outlaw Varjak Paw as well - here's one of my favourite images from it:
In fact, that's one of my all-time favourite pictures by Dave McKean – along with the unbelievably brilliant work he's done for my new book, Phoenix! Publication is less than 3 months away now, so I'll be posting some of those new pictures soon... hope you like them too! And please let everyone at your school know that there is a new book on the way!!!
Tuesday, 14 May 2013
School Visit: Summerhill Academy
I went to Bristol today to visit Summerhill Academy, and I just wanted to say a big thank you to all the Year 4's for their fantastic welcome!
It was great to meet you all, and to hear your thoughts about Varjak Paw. It's an amazing thing for a writer to see readers who are enjoying their books; it really makes all that hard work worthwhile!
I know some people had questions that we didn't have time to answer - but if you still want to ask them, or if you want to say anything else about the visit or the books, this is the place to do it!
It was great to meet you all, and to hear your thoughts about Varjak Paw. It's an amazing thing for a writer to see readers who are enjoying their books; it really makes all that hard work worthwhile!
Friday, 3 May 2013
Recommended: May 2013
As a regular feature on this site, I'm recommending some of my favourite books every month. This month's featured author is Ursula K Le Guin!
The first book of hers I read was A Wizard Of Earthsea. It's the first volume in what was then a trilogy, and is now an amazing six-book cycle. It tells the story of Ged, a shepherd boy who grows into the greatest wizard of his age. It was originally published as a children's book, but has attracted readers of all ages. It remains one of my favourite novels; whenever I re-read it, which I do often, it only ever gets better. This was one of the stories that made me want to write children's books: it showed me how brilliant, ambitious and beautifully-written a children's book could be.
But Le Guin doesn't just write fantasy for younger readers. She's also produced some of the most interesting and thought-provoking adult science fiction. The Dispossessed is another one of my all-time favourite books. It imagines an anarchist society that Le Guin describes as 'an ambiguous utopia'. If you're at all interested in the big questions of human society, this one is for you. Whenever I read it, I feel excited at the possibilities of science fiction, and depressed at the thought I will never produce anything half as good!
Finally, Always Coming Home is perhaps her most experimental work; it's an anthropological report on an imagined future society, complete with songs, recipes, stories within the story... It's not always easy reading, but it creates a whole world of incredible richness and depth, and once you've experienced it, you can't ever forget it.
Here she is talking about her work on YouTube. She's still producing a steady stream of dependably brilliant books, reviews, blogs; at the age of 83, she remains a total inspiration. If you want to know more, her website is full of great information, and really worth a visit...
The first book of hers I read was A Wizard Of Earthsea. It's the first volume in what was then a trilogy, and is now an amazing six-book cycle. It tells the story of Ged, a shepherd boy who grows into the greatest wizard of his age. It was originally published as a children's book, but has attracted readers of all ages. It remains one of my favourite novels; whenever I re-read it, which I do often, it only ever gets better. This was one of the stories that made me want to write children's books: it showed me how brilliant, ambitious and beautifully-written a children's book could be.
But Le Guin doesn't just write fantasy for younger readers. She's also produced some of the most interesting and thought-provoking adult science fiction. The Dispossessed is another one of my all-time favourite books. It imagines an anarchist society that Le Guin describes as 'an ambiguous utopia'. If you're at all interested in the big questions of human society, this one is for you. Whenever I read it, I feel excited at the possibilities of science fiction, and depressed at the thought I will never produce anything half as good!
Finally, Always Coming Home is perhaps her most experimental work; it's an anthropological report on an imagined future society, complete with songs, recipes, stories within the story... It's not always easy reading, but it creates a whole world of incredible richness and depth, and once you've experienced it, you can't ever forget it.
Here she is talking about her work on YouTube. She's still producing a steady stream of dependably brilliant books, reviews, blogs; at the age of 83, she remains a total inspiration. If you want to know more, her website is full of great information, and really worth a visit...
Friday, 26 April 2013
Varjak Paw Around The World, #4
Italy
In Italy, Varjak Paw is called ARTIGLIO LUCENTE! Well, the character is still called Varjak Paw, but the book title is Artiglio Lucente, which apparently means 'Shining Claw'.
Apart from the language, the interiors are the same as the UK edition, with all Dave McKean's art and layouts. Here's a scan of the first page, to give you an idea of how it reads in Italian. You'll notice for example that the Elder Paw is called 'Nonno Paw', which I rather like. Click on the image to see it larger...
And here's the back cover, where they've put one of my all-time favourite quotes! It came from an excellent book review site called bookmunch.co.uk, which sadly seems to have gone offline. They gave Varjak Paw a wonderful review, including this line: "Imagine The Karate Kid directed by David Lynch". The Italian publishers clearly liked this so much that it's the only quote they've used, anywhere on the book!
Are there any Italian readers out there? If so, I would love to hear from you!
Monday, 22 April 2013
School Visit: Eye Primary
Tuesday, 16 April 2013
Recommended: April 2013
One of my readers recently asked me to recommend some books that I'd enjoyed. I thought about this, and decided that it might be interesting to do a regular monthly post about things I've enjoyed - not just books, but also comics, films, music, art - anything, really! So this month, I'm recommending:
This month, I also visited the Ice Age Exhibition at the British Museum, where I saw this Lion Man sculpture. It was carved from mammoth ivory about 40,000 years ago, which makes it one of the oldest surviving artworks in the world - and I love that it's a man with a lion's head! The exhibition is stunning: there's something totally magical about prehistoric art, and these tiny, ancient objects still have incredible power... Here's a short video about it; the exhibition runs until May 26th, and is definitely recommended - I might even go back and see it again!
The Kin, by Peter Dickinson - an epic set in Africa 200,000 years ago, telling the story of human origins and evolution. It's totally gripping, and is powered by all sorts of big ideas about the beginnings of language, religion, politics... I find this subject absolutely fascinating, and this is one of the best treatments of it I've ever read. The only thing I can compare it with is William Golding's The Inheritors, an unforgettable story told from the point of view of a tribe of Neanderthals who are facing extinction.
This month, I also visited the Ice Age Exhibition at the British Museum, where I saw this Lion Man sculpture. It was carved from mammoth ivory about 40,000 years ago, which makes it one of the oldest surviving artworks in the world - and I love that it's a man with a lion's head! The exhibition is stunning: there's something totally magical about prehistoric art, and these tiny, ancient objects still have incredible power... Here's a short video about it; the exhibition runs until May 26th, and is definitely recommended - I might even go back and see it again!
Tuesday, 9 April 2013
Interesting question about Varjak Paw film!
Dear SF Said,
We're huge fans of Varjak Paw! (Books 1+2) And can't wait to read your new book. But please could you tell me if there is an animation film of Varjak Paw. My daughter and her friends are nagging me stupid about it! They say they've found a trailer on Utube - but can't locate the actual movie. Please help!
Thanks so much and really well done for writing two of the best kids books ever! Like the Godfather parts 1+2!
SH
The problem is, it's much harder to get a film made than it is to get a book published, and though we got very close a couple of years ago, it's never quite come together. So at present, there is no official Varjak Paw animation... but I hope that one day there will be!
We're huge fans of Varjak Paw! (Books 1+2) And can't wait to read your new book. But please could you tell me if there is an animation film of Varjak Paw. My daughter and her friends are nagging me stupid about it! They say they've found a trailer on Utube - but can't locate the actual movie. Please help!
Thanks so much and really well done for writing two of the best kids books ever! Like the Godfather parts 1+2!
SH
First of all, thanks so much to you and your daughter, SH! That really means a lot. The answer is that there is no official Varjak Paw film... yet. All the animations, trailers and so on that you see on youtube are unofficial fan works. Personally, I'm glad they exist - but neither Dave McKean nor I were involved in making them.
Having said that, we have had quite a few adventures in Hollywood, trying to make a Varjak Paw film. As well as being a genius artist, Dave is a brilliant film director. So we wrote a script together, and Dave did lots of fantastic designs - here's a poster:
Having said that, we have had quite a few adventures in Hollywood, trying to make a Varjak Paw film. As well as being a genius artist, Dave is a brilliant film director. So we wrote a script together, and Dave did lots of fantastic designs - here's a poster:
The problem is, it's much harder to get a film made than it is to get a book published, and though we got very close a couple of years ago, it's never quite come together. So at present, there is no official Varjak Paw animation... but I hope that one day there will be!
Sunday, 7 April 2013
Phoenix news!
Major announcement: the artwork for my new book Phoenix is now complete! Dave McKean, who also illustrated the Varjak Paw books, has been working round the clock, and this week, he finished all the interior artwork, plus the cover! I'm going to be sharing some of his incredible images with you in the lead-up to publication in August - but I'm going to start by sharing some of the images I gave him for inspiration while he was working on it.
The biggest thing I gave him was a beautiful book of images taken by the Hubble Space Telescope. Phoenix is set in space, across an entire galaxy. It starts with a boy dreaming that the stars are singing to him...
... and in the course of the story, he meets Aliens who believe that the stars are in terrible danger. Together, they must find a way to save the galaxy!
The Hubble has produced some of the most detailed and astounding images ever made of stars, galaxies, nebulae...
I looked at these images a lot when writing, and was glad to learn that Dave also finds them very inspiring!
For more information on space and the stars, the NASA website is always worth a visit. And for more Phoenix news, come back soon... I'll be posting lots more about it between now and August!
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Sunday, 31 March 2013
Varjak Paw Around The World #3
Germany
In Germany, Varjak Paw is called Titus Tatz! I'm not quite sure how they got from 'Varjak' to 'Titus', but apparently 'tatz' means 'paws' in German, so I think that's a pretty good translation!
The German edition of Varjak Paw uses the back cover as the front. I was very excited to see this, as the back cover was always one of my favourite images, and it's nice that they gave it so much prominence. Their back cover is a bit less exciting - just text on a simple background - but I do love that amber colour:
The interiors are the same as in the UK edition, with all of Dave McKean's art and layouts. The same is true in The Outlaw Varjak Paw - or 'Jagd Auf Titus Tatz', as it's known in Germany.
Unfortunately my command of the German language isn't great, but I'm told this means something like 'The Hunt For Varjak Paw', so again, that sounds like a good translation to me!
Are there any German-speaking readers looking at this blog right now? If so, I'd love to hear from you - tell me what you think of the translation, and how the books are seen in Germany...
Friday, 22 March 2013
New Post on DFB Storyblog
I've just made a new post on the DFB Storyblog, my publisher's website. All the DFB authors & illustrators were asked to respond to Eleanor Updale's new book The Last Minute, which is about a massive disaster - so I wrote about the idea of the apocalypse, which is one of the themes of my new book Phoenix (coming in August!) Here's an image I used - the remnants of a supernova:
Click here to read the full post!
Click here to read the full post!
Tuesday, 19 March 2013
School Visit: Bancroft's Prep School
I just wanted to say a huge thank you to the pupils & staff of Bancroft's Prep School, who I had the great pleasure of visiting last week - and an extra-huge thanks to author & head teacher extraordinaire Joe Layburn, who organised my visit brilliantly!
It's always amazing for me to meet Varjak Paw fans - but it's especially amazing when they give me such a warm welcome, and ask me such great questions! I really enjoyed meeting you all, and I hope you will enjoy reading Phoenix, when it comes out in August!
It's always amazing for me to meet Varjak Paw fans - but it's especially amazing when they give me such a warm welcome, and ask me such great questions! I really enjoyed meeting you all, and I hope you will enjoy reading Phoenix, when it comes out in August!
Thursday, 14 March 2013
Varjak Paw Around The World #2
Japan
The Japanese edition of Varjak Paw is one of my favourites, right up there with the Russian one. Although it doesn't use any of Dave McKean's brilliant art, I love the look the Japanese publishers created for it. Here's the front cover of the first book:
And here's the back cover:
Unlike the Russian edition, which has different covers but keeps Dave McKean's artwork for the interiors, the Japanese edition has its own custom-drawn artwork & layouts, unique to this edition. Here's an example - I think this is a scene where Varjak meets the Scratch Sisters:
And here's a dream sequence, which uses the same strategy that Dave did, placing the dream images behind the text, but using the soft charcoal pencil look that the Japanese edition uses throughout:
The cover of The Outlaw Varjak Paw looks pretty similar to the first book at first glance - but look closer and you'll notice lots of small, subtle differences - especially the reflections in Varjak's eye (click on the image to see it large!)
In the first book, you can see the palm trees of Mesopotamia reflected in his eye. But in this one, I'm pretty that it's Sally Bones... and she also appears on the back cover, looking rather terrifying, as she does in the Russian edition.
So what do people think? Did the Japanese publishers do a good job?
Friday, 8 March 2013
World Book Week 2013
What a great World Book Week that was! Here's a huge thank you to the all the hundreds of children & teachers I met in the last few days - at St. Paul's Primary School in Cambridge, Highlees Community Primary School in Peterborough, and Beatrix Potter School in Earlsfield.
It was amazing to meet so many Varjak Paw fans, and to sign so many books! Thanks to you all for making me feel so welcome, and for saying such nice things about my work... I'm looking forward to hearing what you think of Phoenix when it comes out in August!
It was amazing to meet so many Varjak Paw fans, and to sign so many books! Thanks to you all for making me feel so welcome, and for saying such nice things about my work... I'm looking forward to hearing what you think of Phoenix when it comes out in August!
Sunday, 3 March 2013
Varjak Paw Around The World
#1: Russia
One of the nicest things about publishing a book is watching it travel the world. Varjak Paw has been translated into many languages; there are many different editions around the world. One reader recently left me a link to pictures from the Russian edition (thanks, Ivan!), so I decided to do a series of posts about all these editions.
I'm going to start with the Russian one, but I'm interested to hear from Varjak fans in all countries. Please write in and tell me - how does Varjak look in your country? Are the publishers doing a good job with it?! Authors generally don't get any say in how their work appears in translation, so it's very interesting for me to hear people's thoughts.
Here's the Russian front cover of Varjak Paw:
And here's the back cover:
I have to say, I think these covers are amazing. Of course, I love Dave McKean's original covers, and I'm glad the Russian editions use his art inside the books, but it's great to see another take on it. I think they did a good job with the sequel, too - here's the Russian front cover of The Outlaw Varjak Paw:
And here's the back, with an extraordinary image of Sally Bones:
What do my readers think? Have the publishers done a good job?
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