Moira Butterfield
www.moirabutterfield.com
@moiraworld
A cover from the work in progress described below. |
“I like your story. When I
read it, it’s like a movie in my head.”
That was part of a lovely email sent to me
by a young US reader this week, and I was delighted with the phrase she used
because it struck a chord with me, and made me think about my work process.
I work on books for all ages and in several
genres. Whether I’m working on story material, non-fiction or practical
make-and-do ideas. I’m doing my best to take my reader on a journey, and to do
that I’m trying to imagine what effect the words and images are going to have.
If my reader can ‘see a movie’ in their head, I’ve succeeded.
This chimes with something I’ve been
working on in the last few weeks, so I thought I’d share the work process on
the project, because it’s a particularly lively one. By-the-by, it’s also a
peek into a different kind of author commission – intensive, fast and team-led
– rather than picture book texts that develop over time without a specific
brief. However, there are similarities.
The brief I’m going to explore came from an
educational publisher Wayland. They wanted a series for children who are in the
very first years of school (and who would therefore still respond to a picture
book approach). For the visuals we had to use existing photography from
photo-libraries where possible, combined in some way with backgrounds. The
subject of the series was to be ‘my feelings’. The feelings were already chosen
– When I’m - sad, angry, surprised, happy. The size was set – 210 x 210mm, 24pp. Now it was down to me
to think of a way to do it (and do it very fast!).
The first step I took was to get out my
sketchbook, and I began to think and to doodle ideas. What would a child think
about being angry or being sad? How could words and pictures help them to think
about it? How could I create books that were helpful and positive but not
moralizing and patronising? How would the books work in a classroom or with a
parent?
I didn’t think of all these questions at
once. They came to me as I mused and doodled and, crucially, when I started
running mini movies in my head imagining children using the books. I guess I
started to imagine myself as a child. Yes, that sounds a little weird, and I do
occasionally wonder if I am, in fact, crazy when I do this – But then I think
most authors must probably feel this way at times.
I soon realized that I wanted a great deal
of fun in the ‘feeling’ books, and I wanted lively imaginative action – such as
feeling angry enough to blow up like a volcano, making a face angry enough to
scare monsters or feeling angry enough to bellow like an elephant.
Rough sketches and scribbles for 'Angry' |
Each book needed to be crafted to create a
strong shared experience and give opportunities for role-playing. Above all
they needed to be fun. That approach could only work if we combined the
photographs with very lively graphics.
Here's me playing about with ideas for an 'angry' contents page (and repeating myself!). |
Soon I was writing, sketching and selecting
a range of possible photos, and luckily I found I was working with a fantastic
design/illustrator team at Rocket Design in East Anglia. They really ‘got’ my ideas, ran with
them and made them work.
The designers took my text, sketches and photo suggestions and made them dynamic. |
After writing an initial draft of the first book
I realized that I needed to add more interactivity. I added extra
words that children could say, such as ‘pop’ or ‘boom’, that could be
integrated into the visuals. I wanted my young readers to really start acting
and to have a laugh whilst thinking about themselves! I even added a whole
acting spread at the back.
An 'acting' spread in the process of being designed (the text relates to the rest of the book) |
The words needed to be rhythmic so that
they were easily and satisfyingly read aloud (perhaps by a teacher to a whole
class, or by a child to a reading mentor). They had to get across the meaning,
obviously, and also give the designers opportunities for those lively graphics.
Of course, the text evolved as it went along, and I went down one or two wrong
routes and had to reverse:
“Is angry really the right emotion for
stubbing a toe? Hmm…Now I come to think of it, probably not. I’d be more likely
to blub.”
The whole project sounds a bit complicated
when written down, but it was mostly intuitive. However, it only gelled because
I made sure I constantly thought of the child who was my reader. It’s the same
technique I would use for any age-group or children’s book genre I was working
on. It sounds quite intense, and does feel intense. For any genre, I'm putting in maximum effort and thought.
The thinking process would be similar in a picture book, but then one would have the time and space to go in any direction, unfettered. You might make a mood board, perhaps, or simply sit and play with words. You’d be unlikely to send sketches with your story, but perhaps you might do a few privately to help you think about a character. I’d be interested to hear. Do you perhaps run a movie in your head, then change it and follow different paths? And do you feel a bit crazy sometimes? Is it, at times, a very intense experience?
The thinking process would be similar in a picture book, but then one would have the time and space to go in any direction, unfettered. You might make a mood board, perhaps, or simply sit and play with words. You’d be unlikely to send sketches with your story, but perhaps you might do a few privately to help you think about a character. I’d be interested to hear. Do you perhaps run a movie in your head, then change it and follow different paths? And do you feel a bit crazy sometimes? Is it, at times, a very intense experience?
Perhaps I should do another ‘feelings’ book especially for authors: ‘When I’m creating...’!
PS: the books are still being worked on and
haven’t gone to press yet. Many thanks to Debbie Foy and Steve White-Thomson
for agreeing to let me write about the project.