A
CRY FOR THE OCEAN looks like a great children’s book with a wonderful message. Any plans to release similar books?
Not
yet. Although I think Sukara, the heroine in my story, could definitely go on
more adventures, and help to save the world from some of the many other pressing
environmental issues we are facing.
How
did you come up with the story in A CRY FOR THE OCEAN?
I
read about the plastic gathering in the gyres 7 years ago and was shocked.
Originally I planned to write a short story for adults, but as I did the
research this children’s book idea took hold. The inspiration for the mermaid’s
tears was when I read that it was a term beachcombers use to describe the small
pieces of plastic you find on beaches after larger pieces of plastic have
broken up. I loved the irony of something so beautiful and ugly at the same
time.
What
will readers get out of your book?
I
hope it will educate readers, both young and older, about how much the ocean is
suffering, and call them to be more aware of their plastic use and reduce it as
much as they can. I believe there is a sense of urgency right now in the world
that we need to act, and I hope that this book helps to communicate that.
What
inspired you when writing A CRY FOR THE OCEAN?
I
read everything I could find on plastic pollution including a Plastic Ocean, a
book by Charles Moore, an environmentalist who in 1997, discovered the world's largest collection of floating
trash—the Great Pacific Garbage Patch. The more I read the more I realized what
a problem it was.
I was inspired to publish this book
seeing Greta Thunberg and the Fridays for Future strike for climate movement.
My character Sukara is a fictional Greta, and I am so excited to see how much
Greta has achieved in such a short time. I tell my kids she is the Martin
Luther King for our climate crisis.
I
started teaching writing in school to elementary students about ten years ago,
and loved seeing them engage with their imagination, and then took some courses
and stated to take my writing more seriously, so I could be a better teacher. I
always read voraciously as a kid, and would write a diary, poems and short
stories.
It
was only recently that I was pushed into publishing, as one of my students
challenged me on all the books I was publishing for other people, but never
published my own work. Thanks Argi!
When
writing A CRY FOR THE OCEAN did anything stand out as particularly challenging?
Yes,
it is such a sad and desperate situation, and I didn’t want to make it too
awful for children, so finding the right balance between showing the harm and
being hopeful was difficult.
What
do you like to do when not writing?
I love to teach. I have a dream job. I work with
newcomers in Toronto schools and teach them creative writing, My students write
their own chapter books and I help to publish them. I love to see their
imagination come to life, and the biggest challenge with this project is to get
them to stop and finish their stories. Some of them write A LOT. I had one
grade 8 student this year write an excellent 400 page novel!
Where
can readers find out more about your work?
I hope to publish more books, my own and other
authors. I have a website www.bluejaypress.ca
where you can find out more about plastic in the ocean. There are discussion
questions and activities relating to my book, and other lessons, activities and
information from some amazing organizations working for the ocean. I am
constantly adding to it, so please check back often.
Tell
me about your illustrator
Working with Tamara has been an absolute joy. I sent
her the text and very little direction, and what she came up with was
exceptional. I feel like she added a whole new dimension to the story,
especially the way she communicated the relationship between Sukara and the
mermaid. I feel very lucky to have worked with such a talented and dedicated
illustrator. She lives in Serbia, and we have never met, but I hope one day we
can meet in person.
A Cry for the Ocean is available from Amazon, Barnes and Noble and other bookstores now in soft or hardcover. Accompanying the book are free activities, lessons and more information for parents and teachers to download on the website.
A Cry for the Ocean is available from Amazon, Barnes and Noble and other bookstores now in soft or hardcover. Accompanying the book are free activities, lessons and more information for parents and teachers to download on the website.