Like a Gannet - Book Launch

🥳 Like a Gannet Launch 🥳

Thank you to everyone who came along to Murwillumbah Library yesterday to help @debi_hudson and I launch our new picture book Like a Gannet! 🥰 🙏

It was so wonderful to have a packed house of family, friends, colleagues and kidlit crew @writelinks celebrating with us 🥳 Thank you for your amazing support 🙏

It was so lovely to meet Deb for the first time 🤗🎨 Thanks for coming all the way from Melbourne and bringing Mike - what fun we had 💛

Thanks @zewlanmoor for being our perfect MC 😘

Thanks to Kym and everyone at @richmondtweedregionallibrary Murwillumbah branch for sharing your beautiful space and making us feel so welcome 🙏

Thanks for selling books for us @boardwalkbooks - and yay we sold out!!! 🥳

Loved seeing all the children who came along to enjoy the story, craft and cupcakes 📚✂️🧁 I loved reading Like a Gannet to you for the very first time! 💛

💦 Urrah! I couldn’t have asked for a more perfect debut launch!!!

The Twelve Curly Questions Interview

I loved doing the Twelve Curly Questions with Kids Book Review. Thanks, Penny, for this great opportunity. I have linked to the Kids Book Review page down below if you want to check it out.

1. Tell us something hardly anyone knows about you.

I came equal dux of my primary school because I very unexpectedly topped the grade in creative writing with my story A day in the Life of a Car. Wish I kept it – I’d love to read it now.

2. What is your nickname?

Family and old school friends call me Kirst, though I was Big Bird for a while in high school after the incident of the bright yellow dress.

3. What is your greatest fear?

Putting aside my biggest mortal fear of bad things happening to people I love, my biggest everyday fear is getting a chai latte when I ask for a chai tea – it’s a totally different drink and it really needs a totally different name.

4. Describe your writing style in 10 words.

Fresh, relatable and hopefully leaving the world a better place.

5. Tell us five positive words that describe you as a writer.

Supportive, interested, considered, honest, playful.

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Like a Gannet - The Extended Metaphor

Thanks to Joy Lawn for the opportunity to write a guest post about Like a Gannet for her blog Paperbark Words. 

In a previous interview, someone had asked me about my favourite part of Like a Gannet. On reflection, I realised it was the extended gannet metaphor that I loved most and had most enjoyed writing. So when Joy asked me to do a guest post I decided to explore this extended metaphor a bit more.

The gannet is such an important part of the story, representing how we can feel awkward or out of place in some areas of life, but find our flow and confidence in others. I love how the gannet’s transformation — clumsy on land but magnificent out at sea — mirrors Francie’s journey, and I love being able to share more about how this idea took shape. I have included a small excerpt from the blog here as well as a link to the full post down below.

I wanted to show this unbridled joy and exuberance in Francie, the main character, when she was doing what she loves – swimming at her local pool. Comparing her to different water birds, like a duck, swan and cormorant, was a way to show Francie’s wonderful imagination and just how confident she was feeling in the water.

So confident, that when she sees her cousins diving like gannets off the high diving board, she wants to do it too.

So, the idea of being like a gannet really came from Francie and I thought it could be an effective literary device to create an extended metaphor throughout the whole story. It could help create this idea of Francie wanting to be like a gannet for young readers, while also helping to create a point of difference for this first experience story.

When my publisher wanted an extra beat in the story I used this as an opportunity to strengthen the metaphor even more. I had Francie push ‘back through the squawking, jostling flock’ which was a great way to, not only show the crowd of children and how they were behaving, but also how Francie was feeling at this moment. And to learn a bit about gannet behaviour in the gannetry at the same time!

Then the line ‘Do gannets blush?’ again shows the reader how Francie is feeling. But I really love this line because the gannet has a rosy buff-yellow coloured head – almost like a blush.

The final line in the extended metaphor comes right at the end. To show Francie’s joy, I had written ‘Francie hooted.’ The sentiment was perfect, but it felt too owl-like. So I researched gannet calls, looking for something that was a better fit, and I found out that one of the noises a gannet makes is urrah. I was thrilled because urrah is so much like ‘hurrah’ and it expresses exactly how Francie is feeling at that moment! So no, it’s definitely not a typo. It’s the last hurrah of the extended metaphor in Like a Gannet!

Read the full guest blog here

Paperbark Words Blog

Like a Gannet - The Quick Six Interview

I loved doing The Quick Six Interview with Romi Sharp for my debut Like a Gannet. I’ve always loved reading other authors’ answers and I’m super happy to have a turn. And a big thanks to Romi for all she does to promote Australian Kid Lit creatives – it’s such a wonderful support. I’ve included some of the interview here and the link to the full interview.

What is your favourite part of this book?

Ooh, hard question. I think my favourite part is the gannet metaphor that runs through the text. I love how Deb has cleverly brought the gannet into the illustrations by having a mural at the pool with diving gannets on it. Many people have never heard of a gannet, even though they have probably seen one diving for fish off the east coast of Australia. I love how the mural shows the gannet in the different stages of the dive, as it tucks its wings back and becomes almost like an arrow as it hits the water. There are old faded murals at many regional public pools, so I love how she has captured this.

When did you begin writing this book?

My first draft was written in January 2021. It went to acquisitions at Windy Hollow and I was offered a contract in October 2022.

Why is this book meaningful to you?

It’s inspired by my memories of being a child with a bigger body shape who wasn’t very sporty but who felt capable and graceful in the water. So I really wanted Francie to have a bigger body type too. It’s slowly getting better, but I still think there’s a lack of representation of diverse bodies in children’s books. I hope Francie shows kids that, with courage, they can face their fears and strive for things out of their reach, learning along the way to accept their limitations and do it their own way. Just like gannets whose short legs and webbed feet make them slow, clumsy waddlers on land, but who transform into Queens of the Sea when they dive.

Read the full interview here

Like a Gannet - Newspaper Article

Thank you to Samantha Elley at The Northern Rivers Times for writing this article about my new book and my year of firsts as a debut author. This interview, done over the phone while I was on my lunch break at the library, was another first to add to the list. Thanks for making it such an enjoyable experience Sam - it's so lovely to have the support of my community.