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Guest post from author of YA novel ‘Pieces of Us’, Stewart Foster: Don’t Hide Behind the Songs

My character, seventeen-year-old Jonas, felt the same way. In the first chapter, he says to his best friend: ‘Louis, if ever I thought anyone would actually read this, I’m not sure I would write the first line.’ And I sat back from the screen and thought, ‘God, that is so true for me too.’

I kept writing, still with those worries in my head, not just about the bulimia but also the closeness of Jonas’s relationship with Louis. Later in the book, there’s a poem called The Cormorant. I wrote it one Sunday evening after watching a nature programme on TV showing a cormorant regurgitating food for its young. It repulsed me; an instant picture of what I was doing to myself in the bathroom. That poem went under my bed with thousands of other pieces of poetry I’d written since the age of ten.

I eventually showed it to my best friend two years later as we put songs together to record. He had no idea what The Cormorant was about, until late one night, I explained it – that it wasn’t about an ugly seabird, it was me. Like others, like my whole family, he had no idea of my secret, just thought I’d lost weight as I’d got taller. The next evening as we recorded it onto tape, he stopped midway through and said, ‘Stew, you could have told me, you didn’t have to hide it in a song.’

Looking back, I realise I wasn’t hiding behind the songs – showing him was my way of telling him, in the same way that you might write a diary and secretly hope someone might read it.

In a secondary school visit recently, I was reminded of how I used to feel at school, even later at university, because I believe this can be what mostly holds us back, like the Year Seven student I met recently who told me he found it hard to write.

‘Why?’ I asked him.

‘Because I always end up on my Xbox.’

‘No, why?’

‘Because I want to talk to my friends.’

‘No, why?’

‘Because I don’t have confidence, and I’m scared what my friends will think.’

‘There you go!’

The giggling in the room didn’t hide that that’s what the majority of classmates were thinking too: confidence, trust, peer pressure, what will my friends think?

Students are in the middle of the most confusing years of their lives, often feeling isolated in class, often (at university) hundreds of miles from home. Whether through song, poem, short story, third person, first person, or writing about dreams, it’s OK to put your feelings and emotions in them. In my case, a novel. And in that novel, what it took for me to write it – to block out those worries, block out those I thought would cast doubt – was to come up with this plan.

When my friendship ended with the person I’d first shown The Cormorant to, I was guilty of pushing those poems back under the bed until years later, whilst at university, I met someone who resurrected those feelings of close friendship and trust. They backed me with my writing – from emails to Facebook messages full of poetry, lines, thoughts, and chapters. They joined me in dreams of huge contracts and winning The Booker Prize.

And on those nights where doubts crept in, when Jonas’s actions became explicit and his secret eating disorder came out (along with it mine), I would hesitate over paragraphs, lines, words, and then I’d gather myself and say, ‘If I can say this to my friend, then I can write it in this book.’

It’s hard to put our feelings out there.

In poetry.

In songs.

In books. But for me, it became harder to say nothing at all.

Two secrets, an unbreakable bond … and a powerful and heartbreaking love letter to a life-changing friendship, from award-winning author, Stewart Foster.

As the summer before college begins, Jonas is hiding a secret. He suffers with bulimia, but no one knows. Not even he knows how bad it really is. Until he meets Louis, a confident dreamer who believes in a better future for Jonas and together they enjoy a sun-kissed summer filled with music, memories and life-changing moments.
But when tragedy strikes, Jonas must decide if he has the strength to face things alone ….

Stewart Foster is an adult and children’s novelist, born in Bath. His books have won multiple school and library awards and are recommended by Empathy Lab and Reading Well.
His first children’s book, The Bubble Boy, was published in 2016, winning Sainsbury’s Children’s Book Award in 2016 and many schools and libraries awards, as well as being nominated for The Carnegie Book Award.
Since then, Stewart has written four more children’s books: All the Things That Could Go Wrong, Checkmates, The Perfect Parent Project and Can You Feel the Noise?

PaperBound Magazine is an online magazine for the young, and the young at heart. We are dedicated to showcasing authors and illustrators for children’s and young adult fiction and we strive to deliver inspiring content, uplifting stories, and top tips for young and aspiring writers yet to burst on to the literary scene.

All our issues are completely free and run by volunteers, however if you would like to support PaperBound and the work we do, you can help us out by buying us a virtual book. We appreciate any support you can give us!

Don’t forget you can read with the latest issues of PaperBound Magazine – completely free – here.

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Interview: ’Til Death by Busayo Matuluko

’Til Death is a cosy-until-it’s-not mystery about a bride who is poisoned on her wedding day. After receiving threats telling her to cancel her wedding for over six months, her super sleuth cousin, Lara – who has a true passion for mysteries – decides to take it upon herself to solve the mystery of who is sending the notes and who has poisoned her cousin.

’Til Death came about after watching YouTube videos of Nigerian traditional weddings during the pandemic. I had a very morbid thought and said, “Wouldn’t it be crazy if she just died right now?” Now, that’s not a normal thought for a person to have, and I was like, “Busayo, that’s horrible… but as a mystery? Genius!” However, if I was going to write it, I had to know who did it, so I went to the worst-case scenario possible, and the story was born.

I wish I could say that I had a very intricate system and my own murder board like Lara, but unfortunately, it was a lot of back and forth editorially, trying to make sure everything fit in its place perfectly – especially because it was in such a short timeline. I had to make sure it was even possible to do this much in so few days. I will definitely be taking notes for my next book on how to keep a better system, I’ll just say that!

But to be honest, it was very easy to keep track of the characters because they lived in my head so naturally, and I very easily knew what one would say versus another. I also planted red herrings while I was writing, and a lot of them stuck, thankfully, through the editorial process. So, it’s nice to know that I at least did something right.

I think with weddings it would be hard not to include family dynamics and a huge cast of characters. When I set out to write ’Til Death, I knew that I wanted to introduce readers to not only Nigerian culture but Nigerian wedding culture, so the fusion of these was something I took much delight in.

Weddings already bring so much drama, but I feel like it is heightened when it’s a Nigerian wedding. You’ve got caterers arguing with mothers of the bride, and you’ve got guests moaning because they didn’t get enough party bags. All of these tidbits I definitely wanted to feature – I could write a whole book about weddings if you let me.

My favourite character to write, apart from Lara, would be Joseph. He’s just so annoying in the best way. I really loved finding pieces of dialogue that were extremely irritating but made a very good point. I also loved writing Seni and Derin’s feud as the wedding went on because I understood both sides equally. I see a lot of myself in Derin, in that I can be too trusting, but I understood some of Seni’s motives also – I can be just as petty, haha.

I think my interests with Lara align in the fact that we both love mystery novels. While I do like some aspects of true crime, I’m definitely not a buff like she is. I need to have a surge of energy to want to sit through a true crime documentary. But, of course, I feel as though if I were ever in the predicament, I could do it better than the criminals in the documentary.

It is funny that I say this because, at one point in my life, I did think I was going to be a forensic psychologist… but that dream was short-lived. Like Lara, my mum thought it wasn’t the best fit for me, but unlike Lara, she was right, haha.

Well, firstly, I hope they leave the book with a better understanding of sickle cell, but I also hope readers gain a new or better understanding and recognise the validity of invisible illnesses. These conditions can seem covert, even if it looks like someone’s life is fully under control and, in my character’s case, quite glamorous – but sometimes, there are factors they can’t control. I really hope it helps start up conversations about stigma.

So, I was writing before I became a BookTokker, but I used BookTok as an outlet to talk about my works in progress and get people excited about them. I can talk for days and will if you let me, so even when I didn’t think these books were going anywhere, I was still telling a lot of people about them –strangers, though, not my friends, because I felt embarrassed.

When I would post about my book, it made me want to continue writing because people were eager to read it based on just the basic premise. BookTok also helped me be introduced to my current agent, so in a way, I really have it to thank for helping me meet my agent, and then her to thank for everything after. It’s such a special little community.

  1. Put. The.  Words. Down. On. The. Page.
  2. Find what works for you and stick to it. You don’t need to listen to outside voices about their processes if it’s not going to work for you.
  3. There is someone out there that wants to read your story, and there is someone’s representation you will be fulfilling with your story.

I don’t think I am, but just for you guys!

My next novel is Desperate Housewives meets Devious Maids x Greenleaf.

If you are older (or just love nostalgic TV shows), it is based on the episode of Desperate Housewives where the wives have a dinner party at each other’s houses. Renee starts with drinks and appetisers, and Gabrielle ends with desserts… but when they get to Gabi’s house, there’s a dead body.

Set in Nigeria again, it will follow three housewives and their maids, with one character aiming to find out what they did with the dead body.

I think that’s all I can say.

Well, that and a familiar character will be coming back… and maybe going undercover.

GIVEAWAY

Like the sound of this novel? We’ve teamed up with Simon and Schuster to giveaway 3 copies of ’Til Death. Check out the details on our socials: Twitter/X (@paperboundmag) and Instagram (@paperboundmagazine). Giveaway ends 23:59 10/2/25. UK Only.

BUSAYO MATULUKO is a Black British-Nigerian nurse, YA/Crossover mystery and romance writer, and an extremely opinionated, award-nominated BookToker. As someone who grew up reading many books without the representation she desired, she started writing to fulfil that need. Her books are filled with vibrant Nigerian leads that talk too much, and she will always find a way to wriggle in two Black people falling in love. When she’s not writing, you can find her on Twitter at three a.m. tweeting her most random thoughts or binge-watching TV shows she’s already watched about a thousand times.

PaperBound Magazine is an online magazine for the young, and the young at heart. We are dedicated to showcasing authors and illustrators for children’s and young adult fiction and we strive to deliver inspiring content, uplifting stories, and top tips for young and aspiring writers yet to burst on to the literary scene.

All our issues are completely free and run by volunteers, however if you would like to support PaperBound and the work we do, you can help us out by buying us a virtual book. We appreciate any support you can give us!

Don’t forget you can read with the latest issues of PaperBound Magazine – completely free – here.

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Interview: The Vulpine by Polly Crosby

The Vulpine is a dystopian novel set in a world where disability and chronic illness have been outlawed. Children born with any sign of illness are labelled as ‘Imperfect’ and sent to the ‘Hospital for the Imperfect’. If parents refuse to give them up, then they risk them being snatched away by The Vulpine – hooded, cloaked monsters who live underground and feast on Imperfect children!

Ora is fifteen years old, and as far as she knows, she is perfectly healthy. But then one day she learns that her parents have been secretly giving her black-market medication, and that she too is Imperfect. Forced to confront a very different and frightening future, Ora sets out to confront the Vulpine, and in doing so, begins to unravel a web of dangerous secrets.

I love the freedom of writing dystopian fairytales, and the world building it allows, which is very different to writing my historical novels. I wrote This Tale during the Covid pandemic, when I was classed as extremely clinically vulnerable, and it was a wonderful world to escape to when my own world had shrunk to the size of my house.

I find writing for teens more challenging than writing for adults, because I remember the books I read as a teenager, and they meant so much to me. They helped shape who I am, and I feel I have a duty to be honest with and mindful of my readers – but this only means writing YA is even more rewarding!

I didn’t realise quite how much I was writing about my own chronic illness until I was deep into writing this story. In past years, I have shied away from writing about my own health, but the pandemic really made me analyse just what it’s like to be seen as different.

I hope The Vulpine will make readers a little more aware of diversity and difference in our own world, because every person has much to give to society, in spite of their differences – and quite often, because of them.

I have always loved folklore and fairy stories, and even in my earlier books for adults I use magical realism to heighten the feeling of ethereality in my novels. I really enjoy the play between reality and fantasy – the thought of a ghostly world that we can’t quite see. To me, it feels so much more enticing than full on horror (oh, and also, I’m a wimp!)

As someone who sits alone for hours writing, I crave time with other people to balance out those times alone. Life is never black and white, is it? No one person is all good or all evil, and I like the idea that we can be fearful and anxious but still have hope and love. 

“Crikey, that’s hard!” – is that good enough?! OK, umm … 

Fear…hope…and claws! 

Never give up. It took me twenty years – and four complete manuscripts – to finally get published. But writing is not just a job. It’s a passion. To me, it’s like breathing – it’s something I have to do. My top tip is to write every day. Set aside half an hour. Use your phone to make notes, write snippets of dialogue, ideas, settings. A successful story for me comes from the amalgamation of three different things.

With The Vulpine, those were a world where disability is banned, a monster hidden beneath the ground, and a girl who thinks she is healthy, and whose world is turned upside down when she finds out she is not.

I often find dialogue really helps me get into what a character’s like. It’s not until they start talking to people – arguing, joking, crying, laughing, that I realise exactly who they’re going to be. Also, writing in first person is great because it gives you a real idea of a person’s internal thoughts.

As to which character inspires me the most, I would have loved to have read Ora’s story when I was a teen, as she is far more fearless than me – I’m not sure I’d set out underground in search of monsters that crunch children’s bones! 

I’ve just finished writing a new novel for adults, a witchy, folkloric book set 250 years ago. YA-wise, I’m currently planning my next teen novel. I can’t say too much about it at the moment, but it’s going to have a huge, sweeping romance, and I’ll be doing some strange things with time… 

Polly Crosby grew up on the Suffolk coast, and now lives with her husband and son in the heart of Norfolk.

Polly writes dystopian fairytales for teens and gothic historical mysteries for adults, her latest of which, The House of Fever, came out last August. 

Huge thanks to Laura Jones for preparing the interview questions. Laura is one of our regular contributors and her reviews feature in issues of PaperBound Magazine. Read her review of The Vulpine in our forthcoming spring/summer issue, out later this year.

Laura Jones is a secondary school teacher in Cornwall. She teaches English and Media and recently completed an MA in Publishing. Laura is part of a local writing group and hopes to eventually complete one of the many book ideas she has saved on her laptop, some of which are inspired by the Cornish landscape.

PaperBound Magazine is an online magazine for the young, and the young at heart. We are dedicated to showcasing authors and illustrators for children’s and young adult fiction and we strive to deliver inspiring content, uplifting stories, and top tips for young and aspiring writers yet to burst on to the literary scene.

All our issues are completely free and run by volunteers, however if you would like to support PaperBound and the work we do, you can help us out by buying us a virtual book. We appreciate any support you can give us!

Don’t forget you can read with the latest issues of PaperBound Magazine – completely free – here.

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Author of ‘Honeysuckle and Bone’, Trisha Tobias, on why we need Messy Protagonists

Young adult fiction is constantly changing. Part of that change can include making large leaps away from what’s old. But those leaps can create their own problems, like overcorrection. And while YA fiction has come a long way in depicting marginalized protagonists, allowing those same characters to embrace their imperfections on the page is the next step in crafting memorable heroes with relatable, meaningful stories. And I think we’re ready for it.

In my debut novel, Honeysuckle and Bone, eighteen-year-old Carina accepts an au pair job with a wealthy political family in Jamaica. But Carina isn’t just in Jamaica to pad her bank account. She’s got a history, one that fills her with so much shame that she runs away to escape the guilt—and the consequences of her actions. Except Carina soon learns that no matter how far she runs, she can’t escape what haunts her.

Carina is a Black teen who does her best, but “her best” tends to be a bit off. Honestly, it takes Carina a while to figure out how to properly deal with her issues. And in the meantime? She does almost everything…kind of wrong. At times, she’s more focused on self-preservation than “doing the right thing.” Which could make Carina frustrating to root for as a protagonist. But it also makes her very real.

Today, underrepresented YA protagonists are most at risk of being sanitized. In an extreme attempt to counterbalance decades of poor portrayals, these characters can sometimes find themselves flattened, no longer emulating how real teens think or behave. Instead, they present something more aspirational. They know what they shouldn’t do, and they’re rarely tempted to do those things anyway. They’re minimally judgmental or biased. They’re largely “unproblematic.”

It’s a strong swing of the storytelling pendulum, but it’s understandable. In the not-so-distant past, young adult fiction presented its marginalized teen protagonists (the few that existed, anyway) in…interesting ways. As a kid, it seemed to me that many books with characters who resembled me were either reductive reflections on American slavery or stories about troubled, “urban” Black teens. If not this, then my archetypal characters were sidekicks or “magical” helpers, probably with too much sass and a roll of the neck. It wasn’t great.

Cue the big push toward better depictions of characters with underrepresented identities. That shift towards positivity and away from stereotype was needed. Organizations like We Need Diverse Books have been instrumental in their vision, messaging, and education on this, and there’s still more work to do.

But where do we go from here?

We let the flawed marginalized main characters loose.

Of course, readers shouldn’t expect fake people to act in completely “real” ways all the time. After all, protagonists are meant to be bigger than life, and oftentimes, the audience feels they should be better than us common folks. But all of us, at some point, make decisions that stem from recklessness, selfishness, or prejudice. It’s not who we are at our best, but it is honest. We need to see some of that honesty in our protagonists.

Imperfect protagonists aren’t just fun—and challenging—to read about. They serve an important function for the audience. They act as models of personal growth and positive change. They reveal the complexity that comes with being a human in an ever-changing world. And these messy protagonists offer less-represented readers permission to be normal people rather than feeling like they must live up to an impossibly high standard of living—a standard that is often forced upon them.

Because the truth is this: we are all fallible. Yes, we should aspire to our ideals. But we will make mistakes. Luckily, fiction shows us that we can acknowledge our faults and choose to be better. Messy protagonists reveal that redemption is available to all who accept it, and change is possible, no matter where on the path someone starts.

Carina is deeply flawed—and that’s okay. She joins the growing ranks of marginalized teen protagonists who remind the rest of us that perfection isn’t the goal. Trying our best is. And all the missteps and mistakes? They’re unavoidable. In fact, they’re the whole point.

A deliciously dark YA contemporary gothic ghost story where even paradise is haunted, from debut author Trisha Tobias.
After a tragedy rips her life apart, Carina Marshall is looking to reinvent herself in her mother’s homeland of Jamaica. With her new gig as the au pair for the wealthy and powerful Hall family at Blackbead House, Carina wants nothing more than to disappear into their world of mango trees, tropical breezes and glamorous parties.
At first, Blackbead House seems like the perfect escape, but new beginnings don’t come easy. Because Carina isn’t who she says she is, and Blackbead House already knows…

Trisha Tobias grew up listening to her mother’s hushed ghost stories, tales of towering spirit wolves and the warning scent of honeysuckle because a duppy might be nearby. She isn’t sure if the myths are true, but they fuelled her imagination and her love for stories that are often only told in whispers. She is a 2019–2021 Highlights Foundation Diversity Fellow and a 2018 Walter Dean Myers Grant recipient. She is currently an associate developmental editor at Dovetail Fiction.

PaperBound Magazine is an online magazine for the young, and the young at heart. We are dedicated to showcasing authors and illustrators for children’s and young adult fiction and we strive to deliver inspiring content, uplifting stories, and top tips for young and aspiring writers yet to burst on to the literary scene.

All our issues are completely free and run by volunteers, however if you would like to support PaperBound and the work we do, you can help us out by buying us a virtual book. We appreciate any support you can give us!

Don’t forget you can read with the latest issues of PaperBound Magazine – completely free – here.

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Interview: YA author Cynthia So on their new release ‘This Feast of a Life’

This Feast of a Life centres on the lives of two teenagers, Auden and Valerie. Auden is learning how to cook from their parents, and they start a food blog where they can record their family’s recipes along with the stories that come with them. It’s also a space for them to use their new name, Auden, which they just picked for themself and don’t feel comfortable using anywhere else yet. 

Valerie’s mum, who loved cooking, passed away over a year ago – and the kitchen’s been left unused because Valerie and her dad both don’t know how to cook. But when Valerie discovers Auden’s food blog, it sparks a curiosity about food and cooking – as well as about the writer of the blog. Soon Auden and Valerie are meeting up and reviewing restaurants together, but will they figure out what it is that they’re truly hungry for in their lives? 

The initial idea for the book came from thinking about food blogs and how everyone always complains about the long preamble you have to scroll through before you get to the recipe. But sometimes I actually find the preamble kind of charming! So I thought: what if you fell in love with someone through reading their recipe preambles? It’s not quite what happens in the book in the end, but that’s the nugget of an idea that I started with.

I always knew that it had to be dual narrative based on the story I was trying to tell, which boiled down to this: the love story of two chaotic bisexuals who are deeply terrified of committing to a relationship for very different reasons. (Or at least Auden thinks of themself as bisexual in the beginning of the book, although their understanding of their sexuality evolves.) 

It’s crucial to the book that Auden and Valerie have extremely contrasting approaches to romance and dating, and I wanted to give them both equal space to explore their feelings.

I’ve never written a food blog, but I was a book blogger for a while. That and my experiences in fandom as well showed me what it was like to connect with someone online through a shared interest, and how absolutely vital some of those connections can feel. 

I’m very inspired by a lot of food blogs I come across! I especially love the Woks of Life, written by a family of four Chinese American cooks who also share stories from their travels. I love the warm vibe of this blog and the fact that there’s a whole family working on it together.  

Similarly, Made with Lau is a blog created by the son of a Chinese chef, to share his father’s recipes with the world, and the recipes are so wonderful because they’re also accompanied by videos of his father making them.

Yes, absolutely. As mentioned above, part of the joy of writing a dual narrative book is contrast, and it was fun to flesh out what makes Auden and Valerie so different. I loved writing a bigger, bustling family and exploring the pros and cons of being the baby of that family. It was nice to alternate between that and the quiet stillness of Valerie’s life – and I took care to show how important chosen family is, and how Valerie spends a lot of her time with her best friend and her best friend’s older sister. They’re family to her. But there’s still so much emptiness, especially when she goes home. I wanted to contrast that against Auden’s home life to really emphasise what’s missing from Valerie’s. 

However, both Auden and Valerie are in fact quite lonely characters, even if Auden has a much bigger family. I wanted readers to understand that it doesn’t matter how many people you have around you – loneliness comes from not being seen, and neither Auden nor Valerie feel very seen at the beginning of the book.

I’d love to say I have a writing routine, but I sadly don’t. Writing my first book and writing my second book felt like such different experiences, and I expect it will be the same every time I write a book – I will have to find a new way to write it. 

I’ve been writing stories ever since I can remember, but I stopped dreaming about publication somewhere along the way. Being selected as a New Voice for Proud, the 2019 LGBTQ+ YA anthology published by Little Tiger, changed my life. It helped me see a path towards writing as a career, and I started working hard on my first novel after that. My first book, If You Still Recognise Me, came out in June 2022, and it was wonderful to be shortlisted for the Waterstones Children’s Book Prize and the YA Book Prize in 2023. I love getting messages from readers who tell me that If You Still Recognise Me made them feel less alone, and I hope that This Feast of a Life will reach people in the same way. .

Know why you want to write for young adults, that’s the first thing. For me, it’s because I know how formative books were when I was that age, and how life-saving the right book could be. I felt a lot of things as a teenager that I really relied on books to help me navigate. 

The second thing is to have a very clear understanding of why you want to write this particular story, and what is most important to you about it. Writing a book takes a long time, and sometimes it’s easy to lose sight of why you’re doing it, and the overall shape of the story you want to tell, when you’re in the middle of wrangling plot points and herding characters. So make sure you know the heart of it: what about this story makes you feel alive writing it? Never forget that part. 

I’m always, always fond of writing moments of realisation in romance – when characters realise they want each other, and when characters give into that want.

Valerie’s journey with her grief felt very meaningful to me, and I loved giving her the space to express that grief in a variety of ways. 

I’m always, always fond of writing moments of realisation in romance – when characters realise they want each other, and when characters give into that want. This book was no exception! It’s like a roller coaster for me, the ones with the long, slow climb towards the top that feels almost torturous, and then the exhilarating rush of descent at the end. 

And of course, the food! I never tire of writing descriptions of food, honestly.

Cynthia So

Cynthia So is the author of If You Still Recognise Me, which was shortlisted for the Waterstones Children’s Book Prize and the YA Book Prize in 2023. They were one of the new voices in Proud, an anthology of LGBTQ+ YA stories, poems, and art by LGBTQ+ creators, published in 2019. Their short fiction and poetry have also appeared in Uncanny Magazine, Strange Horizons, and Anathema, among others. Cynthia was born in Hong Kong and lives in London with their wife.

PaperBound Magazine is an online magazine for the young, and the young at heart. We are dedicated to showcasing authors and illustrators for children’s and young adult fiction and we strive to deliver inspiring content, uplifting stories, and top tips for young and aspiring writers yet to burst on to the literary scene.

All our issues are completely free and run by volunteers, however if you would like to support PaperBound and the work we do, you can help us out by buying us a virtual book. We appreciate any support you can give us!

Don’t forget you can read with the latest issues of PaperBound Magazine – completely free – here.

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Halloween Special: ‘The Dark Within Us’ by Jess Popplewell

Of course! The Dark Within Us follows Jenny, a 16-year-old girl who is having a rough time. She’s fallen out with her mum and is therefore sleeping on her auntie’s sofa, which is clearly unsustainable. She’s fallen out with her best friend and been dumped by her first boyfriend – so when she meets a boy at a party who claims she doesn’t have a soul, this makes a weird sort of sense. Maybe if she can get her soul back, she can fix everything else as well. So, she decides to go with Luc – who it transpires, is a demon – into Hell in search of her soul. It’s inspired by a lot of things – not only did I leave home quite young, I also used to host for a youth homelessness charity so the idea of teenagers surviving via sofa-surfing is something I feel very strongly about. The book’s set sort of roughly in 2006, which is when I was a teenager, so I’ve also taken inspiration from TV, books and music of that era, most notably the TV show Skins.

Yes! When I was a teenager, I was a massive Goth and obsessed with religious and mythological perceptions of the afterlife. Some people get into horses and dolphins, I was slightly more morbid. I was always specifically interested in the way that rituals and beliefs around death evolve across cultures and over time – so I liked the idea of a modern teenager confronting centuries’ old beliefs and conceptions of the afterlife, especially ones like Inferno that have had such an influence on popular ideas of it even today (particularly in the West).

That’s a lovely thing to say, thank you! I have been known to say that Jenny is a cooler version of me as a teenager, but that’s not the whole truth. She was conceived more as someone I might have been friends with – I imagined her with my group of friends, and her personality was influenced by that. Also, as I mentioned earlier, I have some experience of working with young people, and I genuinely think teenagers are the most interesting people on the planet, mostly because they’re doing a lot of work all the time in figuring out how to navigate the complicated stuff life chucks at us. I wanted to show that through how Jenny navigates… some seriously complicated stuff.

In some ways no, because I do love all the characters in this book (well, maybe not Amber), but in terms of fun, probably Chloe-Lee and Joey. They’re such cryptic little weirdos, and cryptic little weirdos are almost always my favourite characters in any media. I’ve written so much backstory for them that had no place in the book, they still pop up in my head all the time.

Sure, how long do we have? The very first iteration of this book came about when I was 16. Over the years, characters have come and gone, plotlines have shifted, the relationship between Jenny and Luc has been wildly different, but the things that have always been the same are that Jenny starts out homeless, she goes to Hell because of Luc, and it’s heavily influenced by Dante’s Inferno and mythological references. I’ve written other things as well, but when the 2022 Chicken House Prize came around I knew this was the story to submit. For one thing, they ask for a full manuscript and this one was somewhat finished. I was in Reykjavik with a friend when I discovered I’d won, and Icelandic people seem to love ice cream an appropriate amount so we went out after the phone call and I had a mint choc chip in celebration. I met my agent through the prize as well, since she was one of the judges, and the whole process was incredibly positive. I’m so grateful the judges got what I was trying to do.

One: find a way to make time, whatever that means for you. For a long time I was working multiple jobs, or studying and working at the same time, and that’s the main reason it took me so long to write the book, because I just didn’t have the headspace for writing unless I was forced to by doing a writing course or my Creative Writing MA. It’s easier now because I know I’ve done it once and can do it again, but when you’re at that early stage it’s important to think about what you can do to make it happen.

Two: at the same time, don’t make yourself ill with the pressure. If you have lots of other responsibilities (parents, I don’t know how you do it!!), writing is often the thing that goes on the backburner, and that’s OK. Don’t beat yourself up over it. Remember that daydreaming the next scene you want to write before you get chance to write it… counts as writing!

Three: to help with the above, explore different ways of writing. Personally I use the notes app on my phone to jot down random dialogue snippets or an especially productive daydream. I like it because I can email it all to myself in one go when I’m next at my PC. I’ve also played a bit with speech to text dictation – I’m not great at the punctuation yet but it’s a great way to get quite a lot of work done in a short space of time, even if it all needs editing later on. You can’t edit an empty page, so something is better than nothing!

You can’t edit an empty page, so something is better than nothing!

I usually have 7 or 8 projects on the go at any given time – some of them are just for fun, like a 5-book series planned out in a cyberpunk dystopia (I call those projects my palate cleansers), but I’m also working on a couple of more serious projects. I do have ideas for more stories set in the world of The Dark Within Us; I’d love to write a follow up inspired by the themes in Purgatorio, but we’ll have to see if that pans out!

Photo by João Daniel Pereira

Jess Popplewell

Jess Popplewell is the author of The Dark Within Us, winner of the Times/Chicken House Chairman’s Prize 2022. She’s also a careers advisor in Higher Education, and has a series of free Careers Advice for Writers videos on TikTok (@jesspopps) and her website (jesspopplewell.com).

PaperBound Magazine is an online magazine for the young, and the young at heart. We are dedicated to showcasing authors and illustrators for children’s and young adult fiction and we strive to deliver inspiring content, uplifting stories, and top tips for young and aspiring writers yet to burst on to the literary scene.

All our issues are completely free and run by volunteers, however if you would like to support PaperBound and the work we do, you can help us out by buying us a virtual book. We appreciate any support you can give us!

Don’t forget you can read with the latest issues of PaperBound Magazine – completely free – here.

Blog, Blog series, Bookshelf, Interview, Interviews, on writing, Writing craft

Halloween Special: ‘Let’s Split Up’ by Bill Wood

Let’s Split Up follows a group of teenagers who investigate the murders of the IT couple at their school. Their search takes them to the supposedly haunted Carrington Manor. This book is my ode to Scooby-Doo, as well as 90s/2000s horror movies!

Honestly, anything Scooby-Doo. I had so many old VHS tapes that I watched over and over. Power Rangers was also a big one for me, but that didn’t exactly inspire this book. Then, as I got a bit older, and dipped my toes into horror, the late-90s films were my obsession for a while.

Definitely! My favourite thing about those 90s/2000s themed stories is the aspect of teen friendship. So, when I set out to write a ‘scarier Scooby-Doo novel,’ channelling this era was a no-brainer. It just felt so right.

Other than my dog, Macey, who is in the book (I had to!), the rest of the characters are not inspired by anyone. I did try and subvert a lot of cliché characters from horror movies though. Cam, for example, is the jock of the group but he’s not completely useless like a lot of depictions. He’s got a heart and has a lot more to him than you might expect.

For sure! I guess you can say there’s an element of the final girl trope in Let’s Split Up, but that’s also something I’ve tried to play with as well. Another big one is obvious from the title. Splitting up… But again, when the characters do have to split up, I tried to make a very good reason for it so you’re not screaming at the pages!

I started writing this at university, so it was all really fresh in my mind. I’m unsure if Let’s Split Up would be so inspired by film if I hadn’t started writing it when I did. But screenwriting is so helpful when it comes to writing dialogue because scripts are ninety-percent dialogue. I’ve found studying that for three years has really strengthened how believable my characters are.

TikTok is such a great social media because it connects you with people who enjoy the exact same things as you do, so you’re finding the ‘perfect audience,’ …

There’s pros and cons to it, of course, but it’s really helped with promoting the book. That’s a given. TikTok is such a great social media because it connects you with people who enjoy the exact same things as you do, so you’re finding the ‘perfect audience,’ if you will. TikTok also demystifies the author, if that makes sense. When I grew up, I never met any authors, so they seemed like these faceless people. Social media has definitely changed that.

I have a new YA mystery horror releasing autumn 2025. Like Let’s Split Up, it follows a group of teenagers. But this time around, we find ourselves in the Scottish Highlands…

Bill Wood

Bill Wood was born and raised in Birmingham, England. He has always had a love for all kinds of media and graduated from Birmingham City University in 2023 with a degree in Film & Screenwriting. When not writing, he is often found with a book and an iced coffee in hand, or filming ‘bookish’ social media content for his TikTok channel billreads, where he has amassed a following of over 124K. He currently lives with his family and Staffordshire Bull Terrier, Macey.

His debut novel Let’s Split Up (Scholastic, 2024) has become an instant bestseller and is a nail-biting and perfectly formed thriller for the YA BookTok generation – think Scooby Doo meets Pretty Little Liars.

PaperBound Magazine is an online magazine for the young, and the young at heart. We are dedicated to showcasing authors and illustrators for children’s and young adult fiction and we strive to deliver inspiring content, uplifting stories, and top tips for young and aspiring writers yet to burst on to the literary scene.

All our issues are completely free and run by volunteers, however if you would like to support PaperBound and the work we do, you can help us out by buying us a virtual book. We appreciate any support you can give us!

Don’t forget you can read with the latest issues of PaperBound Magazine – completely free – here.

Blog, Blog series, Bookshelf, Interview, Interviews, on writing, Writing craft

Interview: John Hearne chats about his speculative sci-fi novel ‘Someone’s Been Messing With Reality’ for middle grade readers

So here’s my tagline – ‘When Martin Ryan sees a video of his father flying unaided through the air, he realises that everything he has assumed about his life up to this point has been a lie’.

The whole novel arose out of the following proposition: ‘What if you were an alien, but didn’t know it?’ The moment Martin discovers the truth is also the moment that his parents disappear. He and his friends Tina and Enda realise that their disappearance is part of a larger conspiracy which they must unravel and thwart.

What inspired me to write it? I liked that proposition. Like a lot of writers, I log all the different story ideas that occur to me. Most of these ideas will never go anywhere, but if I hit one that’s sufficiently intriguing and exciting, I’ll start sketching out where I might go with it. What kind of characters could carry this kind of plotline? Where could I set it? Where will the intrigue come from? Once the ball gets rolling, it takes on a life of its own.

I’m a plotter and a planner. I like to work out where I’m going to go before I get there – but things always surprise you during the writing phase. I like to think of my outline as a map. I’m going to use it to get to where I’m going, but if I spot something interesting that doesn’t lie along the planned route, I’ll go explore it. The writing process tends to generate fresh ideas, and I think you’ve got to be open to evaluating them rather than sticking rigidly to the original plan.

Also, I often find as I write that that clever little plot detail or character quirk that I thought would work actually doesn’t, so I often stop midstream and rethink things. I find too that once you’ve established how a character acts, you’ve often got to give them more freedom that the original plot allowed. In Someone’s Been Messing with Reality, Martin’s friend Tina caused both him and me a lot of grief through her impulsivity – I had to keep readjusting things when I realised that ‘Hmmm, Tina would never do that…’

The process was similar, though it did have a lot more steps. I spent a lot of time figuring out exactly what would happen with Indigo before I dived into draft 1, but because this was my first attempt at anything like this, draft 1 was pretty much like the first chair that a trainee carpenter might make. The back was crooked and all the legs were different lengths. It went through several redrafts before I arrived at something that I would willingly show anyone – and the finished product didn’t bear much resemblance to the first draft. It’s true that most books aren’t written, they’re rewritten.

The Very Dangerous Sisters of Indigo McCloud had a fictitious setting – the absurdly miserable town of Blunt, and was choc-full of outlandish characters. I wanted to set Someone’s Been Messing with Reality in the real world, and make the characters a little more human. This is sci-fi – yes – but the relationships and problems and characters themselves are all real, or as real as I could make them.

Enda is one of the three friends at the centre of the book. He’s recovering from a brain injury. The emotional arc of the story rests on the different ways in which his two friends deal with this. I’ve always had an interest in brain injury. I made a radio documentary for RTE Radio 1 a few years ago about someone who was recovering from a very serious head injury. The weird thing is that after I had started work on this book, and after I had written Enda into it, I fell and hit my head. I gave myself what would be termed a ‘mild brain injury’. It may not have been life threatening, but it was very debilitating.

To cut a very long story short, I suffered from prolonged bouts of fatigue and could do very little work of any kind for a long time. Thankfully I’m fully recovered now, but the process took a couple of years. I couldn’t use a computer for much of that recovery. I had damaged the visual cortex at the back of the head, and my brain simply couldn’t deal with the kind of light that emanated from the screen. So much of this book was actually written longhand.

It has been lengthy! Much rejection, much rethinking, rewriting, repositioning. Getting published is hard and getting harder. This book – my second – was a little easier than the first, because I had a good relationship with the publisher, and they were happy to read what I wrote, but it had to reach a higher standard to get through. Rising costs have made it more difficult for independent publishers to take a chance on something, so they’ve got to love it before they’ll agree to put scarce resources on the line.

Since my book is science fiction, I’ll stick to that. My favourite in the genre is When You Reach Me by Rebecca Stead. A wonderful book, with a plot that rumbles slowly under the surface – you don’t quite realise that it’s sci-fi until close to the end. I also really like Ender’s Game by Orson Scott Card, the Dune books and The Iron Giant. My kids also love Hilo: The boy who crashed to earth by Judd Winick.

Much of the standard advice is correct. I think you need to do three things – read in the genre you’re writing in, develop your craft by reading about writing or taking classes, and finally, get feedback on your work. The third one is the one that most of us struggle with, but if you’re ambitious for your writing, you need to show it to people – and not just any people – I’m talking about people who understand the market and know what good writing looks like.

The other thing I’d say is that if your sole ambition is to get published, you are probably letting yourself in for a great deal of misery. Unless you’re exceptionally talented and blindingly lucky, the chances of getting published early in the game are low.

I write because I want to get published, yes, but I also write because I love to write. If you don’t love it for its own sake, I would chuck it in. You only get so much time on earth, so you’ve got to get something out of the journey. Without a love of the process, the time will feel wasted, and the destination – even if you do reach it – will not live up to expectations.

I’m working on something alright, but as we speak it’s an unholy mess. I’ll let you know if and when something readable emerges from it …

Photo courtesy of David Ruffles

John Hearne was born in Wexford, Ireland in 1970. He worked as an economist in Dublin before changing direction and becoming a freelance writer. He has ghostwritten and edited a range of bestselling books, while his journalism has appeared in numerous national and international newspapers and magazines.

His first middle grade novel, The Very Dangerous Sisters of Indigo McCloud was published to critical acclaim by Little Island in 2021. His second book Someone’s Been Messing with Reality is out now. You can find him on Instagram @johnhearneauthor.

www.johnhearneauthor.com

PaperBound Magazine is an online magazine for the young, and the young at heart. We are dedicated to showcasing authors and illustrators for children’s and young adult fiction and we strive to deliver inspiring content, uplifting stories, and top tips for young and aspiring writers yet to burst on to the literary scene.

All our issues are completely free and run by volunteers, however if you would like to support PaperBound and the work we do, you can help us out by buying us a virtual book. We appreciate any support you can give us!

Don’t forget you can read with the latest issues of PaperBound Magazine – completely free – here.

Blog, Blog series, Bookshelf, Interview, Interviews, on writing, Writing craft

Interview: Louise Finch chats about her brand-new YA novel ‘Iris Green, Unseen’

Sure! Iris Green, Unseen is about a talented, but shy street photographer who, on the day she discovers her boyfriend is cheating on her with her best friend, starts turning invisible. As she tries to put herself and her life back together, Iris has to work out some difficult truths about herself and the people around her as well as trying not to fade away entirely.

It’s a novel about self-discovery, self-confidence and allowing yourself to be really seen.

First of all, I have to confess that I’m actually married to a photographer! So that was not only immensely helpful when it came to some of the technical questions, but also certainly contributed to the inspiration behind Iris’s art.

Also, although I’m not a particularly good photographer myself, I have always been interested in art and studied History of Art at uni. One artist whose work and story really inspires me is Vivian Maier, and she features quite prominently in the novel. Maier was an amazing and prolific street photographer who was entirely unknown in her lifetime, but her posthumous discovery has brought not only acclaim and recognition for her work, but also a lot of interest and speculation about her life. Her story raises so many interesting questions about why we make art and the exposure that comes with sharing it, which are certainly things Iris grapples with.

I also dabbled with a little darkroom photography once upon a time too and remain fascinated by the process. That moment when the picture begins to develop really is special and reminds me of how ideas arrive for novels – emerging on the blank page seemingly out of nowhere, but actually with a lot of hidden work and time to get to that stage.

I am a pantser to my core, unfortunately, writing my first drafts in a sometimes quite fragmented and chaotic way before going back through and attempting to impose order through edits. I’d love to be able to piece together a plot without writing the whole thing down scene by scene, but that doesn’t seem to be how my brain works.

Similarly, my ideas can start from anywhere and aren’t usually something I sit down and try to make happen. With Iris, the concept arrived first, but it brought the character along with it, because I knew immediately the kind of girl who would be manifesting her own invisibility.

What felt important to me was to focus on the interaction between all those relationships and how Iris feels about herself. From the start this was always about being seen and known by yourself and others, why that matters and how much it hurts when people get it wrong. While I had a sense of that when starting to write, I did end up going off on tangents during the writing that were less relevant and eventually had to be cut, which I think is inevitable when you’re not a plotter.

One thing that emerged during drafting which I enjoyed exploring was all the contradictions in Iris’s character and her relationships. For example, she’s someone who feels unworthy and doesn’t want to ask for anything from anyone, but ends up needing people to be there for her quite a bit. She’s hyper observant when it come to small slights, or the detail of a street scene, but fails to see Baker’s genuine interest in her.

My main advice is to be as honest as possible while also offering hope and empathy. I’m always mindful that, while my characters aren’t real people, my readers are. I believe that when writing about emotional real-world issues, writers have a responsibility to leave readers feeling safe and with a sense of optimism, even if things aren’t perfect in character’s lives by the final page.

Other than that, it’s always a good idea to ask trusted readers for feedback, because none of us can never see all angles of our own work. I’d be nowhere without my brilliant writer friends!

I do! I’m currently working on a horror novel, which is a slight change of direction, but not a total departure as it weaves together some real-world horrors with their supernatural counterparts.

Louise Finch is an autistic author who lives on the Surrey/Hampshire border with her partner and two dogs surrounded by vintage furniture and too many houseplants. The Eternal Return of Clara Hart, Louise Finch’s YA debut, was published by Little Island Books in 2022. It was shortlisted for the Yoto Carnegie Medal for Writing, the Branford Boase Award, the Great Reads Award, and the Bookseller YA Book Prize.

http://www.louisefinch.co.uk

PaperBound Magazine is an online magazine for the young, and the young at heart. We are dedicated to showcasing authors and illustrators for children’s and young adult fiction and we strive to deliver inspiring content, uplifting stories, and top tips for young and aspiring writers yet to burst on to the literary scene.

All our issues are completely free and run by volunteers, however if you would like to support PaperBound and the work we do, you can help us out by buying us a virtual book. We appreciate any support you can give us!

Don’t forget you can read with the latest issues of PaperBound Magazine – completely free – here.

Blog, Blog series, Bookshelf, Interview, Interviews, on writing, Writing craft

Interview: L.M. Nathan speaks to PaperBound about her new YA dystopian novel ‘The Virtue Season’

The Virtue Season is the story of Manon – a debutant who wants nothing more than love, but love is also the thing that terrifies her the most. Now that she is eighteen, and about to attend the virtue season balls, it is tantalisingly close. At the end of the season, she could have found the one – if her match is sanctioned by the council. But she lives in a world that holds some very spurious beliefs as truth, a world where genetic flaws are feared, and it is believed that bloodlines must be pure. And Manon is hiding a secret about her family that would be viewed as a defect. If it is discovered, Manon will be decommissioned. She will not be allowed to marry, or to have children, and will live as an outcast with her future decided by the oppressive council… just like her best friend Agatha.

Growing up I never really felt I fit anywhere. It took me a long time to realise that’s how most people feel – regardless of how confident they seem or how much they appear to be winning at life. When I was teaching, I saw it all the time, that feeling of being different, of being wrong in a world full of rights and I wanted to write something that was a clarion call to young people to shout: you do not define me, and, hopefully, to believe it too.

Like Manon, I felt from a young age my tendency for interiority and reflection might become something more insidious later in life, and I have had my struggles with anxiety but, also like Manon, I am strong and resilient and never give up. So it’s fair to say, she was inspired by own experiences.

I didn’t realise it when I was writing, but I was also weaving my dad’s experience into the story through the decoms. I would describe my dad as extremely able-bodied, if that is a thing. He was the kind of dad who threw you over one shoulder and carried you around giggling or launched you across the swimming pool, further than anyone else’s dad could. But then he was struck with illness and left disabled and though it didn’t change him – or his spirit – one bit, I saw how it changed the way society viewed him.   

I’m not a plotter. I tend to have a general gist of where the story will go and some sense of the main beats within it, but I like the way the story reveals itself to me through writing. There’s a magic to it. The story becomes a living, breathing thing and it takes me with it.

Calde Valley was inspired by the Ribble Valley, which is every bit as majestic as it appears in the story. Shortly after I moved there, it flooded and I found myself standing at the top of Clitheroe Castle, on a very windy, rainswept day, staring out at Pendle Hill and wondering…what if? Most people who are inspired by Pendle Hill tell stories about witches, but I managed to turn it into an apocalyptic dystopia.

My experience of finding Manon and Agatha verges on the supernatural. Once I had the setting of Calde Valley, they seemed to wander onto the hillside, take a bow and introduce themselves. I’m not a fan of character development exercises – what’s in their handbag and so on – but I know lots of writers swear by them. Because this was my first book, and I was finding my way, I did do this for Manon but very little of it was used. I think the only thing I kept from those types of questionnaires was her most treasured possession, which was her grandmother’s recipe book, which gifted me her cooking ability. So, I suppose it was worth doing but I prefer to tease out character through writing exercises. I might write a scene from a different character’s point of view and watch as Manon or Agatha reveal themselves through observation. I wrote lots from the perspective of Councillor Torrent and some from Wick’s as well. It allowed me to watch the two girls rather than being in their head all the time. Another great exercise is to put your character in a scene ‘outside’ the story – perhaps as a child or reflecting later in life, or in a location they don’t visit as part of the story. That’s always revealing, and no writing is ever wasted, even if it doesn’t make it into the book. 

Looking back, I wish I’d understood how much of the ‘writing’ happens after the first draft is finished. I wouldn’t have procrastinated over that draft for so long if so, but it felt like the stakes were high and I put it off for a lot of years.

Without a doubt, the most enjoyable part of this process has been meeting other people going through the same thing, discussing plot and character and motivation and all things bookish. It might seem strange, but the moment of publication has been the least enjoyable part. Sharing this story, which has been such an important part of my life, is scary and vulnerable and surreal. I have to hold fast to my own belief that the story is good.

I could go on writing about these characters forever. There is so much more for Manon and Agatha to accomplish. Real change happens slowly and, without giving away any spoilers, it didn’t feel right to gift them utopia at the end of this book and so, there is unfinished business, I think. There are also characters whose backstories I’d love to explore – Torrent, Drewis and Trent, Gillam and Cayte. And there are the stories that represent Calde Valley’s future too. Agatha’s sister Wren pleads her case often. Even Bertie, who I think is brave and dear and understated. They have so much life yet to live in my head. 

L.M. Nathan grew up in the East Midlands, moving from there to Bristol where she studied English and Drama and then to Malta where she completed an MA in Literature. She also has an MA in Journalism which she studied for in Manchester. She now lives in rural Lancashire, in the shadow of Pendle Hill, and teaches English.

Her first novel, The Virtue Season, was inspired by the wild landscape of home and completed when she was selected to be part of the Curtis Brown Creative novel course.

PaperBound Magazine is an online magazine for the young, and the young at heart. We are dedicated to showcasing authors and illustrators for children’s and young adult fiction and we strive to deliver inspiring content, uplifting stories, and top tips for young and aspiring writers yet to burst on to the literary scene.

All our issues are completely free and run by volunteers, however if you would like to support PaperBound and the work we do, you can help us out by buying us a virtual book. We appreciate any support you can give us!

Don’t forget you can read with the latest issues of PaperBound Magazine – completely free – here.