Sally
Prue first started making up stories as a teenager, when she realised that designing
someone else's adventures was almost as satisfying as having her own! At school,
Sally was always fascinated by words and their histories, but was never particularly
good at creative writing and her stories inevitably ended up a splattery blotty
mess! Sally then went on to join practically all of the rest of her family working
at the nearby paper mill and ended up marrying the man who sat opposite her. They
live in Hertfordshire and have 2 daughters. Sally now works as a recorder and
piano teacher and enjoys walking, painting, day-dreaming, reading and gardening.
She has two elderly guinea pigs, one of which, Sophie, appears in Cold Tom.
Cold Tom is Sally's first book published by OUP.
We asked Sally a
few more questions...
Q. Where did you get your inspiration from when you
were writing Cold Tom?
A. It started off with me reading a clever article
which proved that there is no such thing as love. I didn't understand it at all,
so I tried to imagine a society where love was taboo. The great woods near my
home helped too, as well as seeing a boy who looked like Tom playing the violin
at a concert.
Q. What job did you want to do when you were a child?A.
When I was a child, if you were a girl and fairly bright but not posh, you could
only be a nurse or a teacher. That was depressing, because I quite fancied being
an explorer.
Q. What was your favourite book as a child?A. I had
a brilliant teacher called Miss Wheeler who read us Paddington and the Narnia books.
Later on I enjoyed Jennings and books by Ronald Welch. Q. What's the best
thing about being an author?A. Exploring, without having to get wet or
cold. And having people listen to what I'm saying for once. Q. Who is your
favourite children's author?
A. Diana Wynne Jones; I really fancy Chrestomanci. Q.
What book are you currently reading?A. Shadow of a Hero by Peter
Dickinson. Q. If you could be a character in a novel, what kind of character
would you be?A. I'd probably be handing out packed lunches and saying "have
a nice time and watch out for dragons." Either that or Wondermum! Q. Do
you have any tips for someone who wanted to write a novel? - They
say that if a monkey sits at a keyboard long enough eventually he'll type the
works of Shakespeare. So that means that anyone human can write a novel.
- Daydream
a lot. This gives you lots of practice at stories without actually having to bother
to write anything.
- Start at the beginning and aim straight for the end.
(It does help knowing where the end's likely to be.)
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