I love receiving new books for Christmas but I'm usually too busy with house guests to sit down and read them. But this year is panning out rather differently. One of the few upsides is that this is going to be a cosy Christmas with only my household and so, for the first time ever, I will be sitting on the sofa with a tin of Quality Street and a stack of books. I may or may not change out of my pyjamas.
So here’s my list to Santa
of most wanted books to find in my sack on Christmas morning:
I follow Joanne Harris on Twitter and
find her threads on writing and being an author very helpful. These have been collated into a just published book: Ten Things About Writing.
I’m particularly looking forward to the chapter – Why am I doing this,
again?
I am guilty of stacking up
writing guides on the shelf which I dust but never open. One of the few I really
like for its relatable simplicity is the screenwriting guide Save the Cat
by Blake Snyder, famed for its beat sheet. Sadly it hasn’t made me a
planner rather than a pantser, but I do like its sections on how to give your
main character more oomph, and the Pope in the Pool trick to hide exposition
and many other quirky revelations that will help your writing or at the very
least change how you watch movies. So I’d like to see how this is applied to
novel writing by author Jessica Brody in Save the Cat! Writes a Novel.
My concentration for reading has
suffered this year, what with one thing and another. So I need a must read which everyone has loved. Hamnet by Maggie O’Farrell seems to fit the bill and if it’s OK with you, Santa, I’d like
the Waterstones special edition. It’s their book of the year, so that’s good
enough for me.
I’d like to look at pictures. Preferably
beautiful, unusual ones. So the Accidentally Wes Anderson book, please,
which I’ve already bought for two other people and had a sneaky peak. Made for me, as it combines my interests in photography, Wes Andersen movies, travel and idiosyncratic places and architecture. Perfect.
In lockdown one I reread one of my
all-time favourites – The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald. There was
something very comforting in dark times in revisiting a book which I knew inside out from
pre-Covid times. I have several copies already but as I’m a bit geeky about
covers of my favourite books, I see there’s a new illustrated edition out in
January which I’d love to coo over. Thank you.
So that’s my list. Which books are
on your Christmas wish list?
Tracy Darnton is the author of YA thrillers The Rules and The Truth About Lies. Please feel free to mention them to Santa.
4 comments:
I would never have known about the Wes Anderson - I'm also a fan - book had it not been for this blog, so a very, very big Thank You, Tracy.
Interesting choices here! Just a tip - whwn I first started Hamnet I found it a bit difficult to get into. But I had another go a few weeks later and absolutely loved it - it's a beautiful book.
Thanks Sue and Tracy re Hamnet.
I think it might be the right book for someone I know.
I heard a review of the Cabinet of Curiosities by Massimo Listri. "That's for me!" I thought. Then I discovered it cost £100! I'll have to wait a bit......!
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