Archive for the ‘Comments on Hannah’s musings’ Category
Nearly there…
Hi guys, sorry I’ve been quiet for a little bit…
It’s nearly, nearly finished. Lovely Laura (as I may now permanently refer to her) is snowed under with proper, paying jobs at the moment, and is working very hard to get the last Forest illustration and cover finished. Soon as it’s done, it’ll be all systems go!
Be patient…
HH xxx
In a forest as deep and dark as the inside of your pocket…
… a strange and malevolent creature lives. Spreading fear and disorder, the Meddler terrorises the forest’s inhabitants – the noble woodcutter, a beautiful queen and a pack of howling wolves – but will he get his comeuppance?
This miniature gothic fairytale is the debut of writer Hannah Hutchins, evocatively illustrated by Laura Barrett.
All proceeds from the sale of this book go to Save the Children.
Soon people, soon. Just working on the cover now…
HH xx
Slowly slowly catchy monkey…
…what a weird phrase that is. Anyway, progress is gradually being made on The Forest – the majority of the artwork has been done and it’s about to enter the design stage, where the talented Mr Kay Ogundimu (www.workandkay.wordpress.com) will cast his designer eye over the whole thing, then it will be uploaded to lulu.com and away we go!
Slowly slowly…
HH xxx
Number Crunching
Morning,
Some numbers to consider…
It’s only 57 days until I turn 30
It’s only 95 days until The Forest is released (hopefully)
It’s only 107 days until Christmas
I love Christmas. I freakin’ love it. Last year was awful as all three children got the Pox (Chicken, not Small), so this year has a lot to make up for. I want sleighbells, nice snow (not difficult snow), gingerbread houses, rosy-cheeked children and happy little elves. I want mountains of presents and roaring log fires and jolly snowmen, twinkling lights and carol singers and mulled wine.
OK?
Good.
Let the countdown(s) begin…
HH xx
The Forest – out Dec 2011
Hello,
Saw some more proofs of The Forest illustrations recently…looking pretty marvellous, I have to say. With a bit of luck, a prevailing wind and everything going to plan, the finished article should be out in December, which is only four months away people! Start counting down with excitement!
HH
x
What’s next?
Afternoon all…
So, once The Forest is out and selling like the proverbial hot cakes, what am I going to do next? Well I’ll tell you…
The next plan will be to produce a collection of short stories, including the ones on here – Ink will be the title story, I think. Hopefully early next year (sooner if I can possibly manage it), look out for Ink to buy online. I say look out, but I will of course be blogging/facebooking/emailing/accosting you all in the lead up to it’s release, so you won’t actually be able to avoid it…
And after that, I hear you cry? Well, if it’s all going well, Human Geography will be the next publication. The big one. For me, anyway.
Love HH xxx
Paperback coming soon!
Hello again,
Well, work continues on the Fairytale Project, as it has become known. I feel I can now reveal to you all that it is going to be a beautifully illustrated paperback of The Forest, and that the very talented Laura Barrett (check her out at www.laurabarrett.co.uk) is beavering away on the artwork even as we speak… I am so delighted that she has come on board, and is giving her time and energy to this project – I truly think it’s going to be a beautiful book.
All the profits raised through sales (that’s where you come in) will be going to Save the Children. I won’t be pocketing a penny. This is all for the good, people. Here’s why:
Back in March I was watching Comic Relief, sort of in the background; you know how you do, pottering away at other things while the telly’s on. Then they showed a short film about a little girl called Esther, who couldn’t have been any more than five or six years old, and had cared for her mother until she died of AIDS. Esther was HIV positive, alone, and starving. Talking about her mother’s death didn’t reduce her to tears, but when the interviewer ask if she was hungry, she cried out ‘yes, I’m always hungry.’ And she sobbed and sobbed. And so did I.
So I got online and donated a bit of money, but it wasn’t enough. Not enough money, not enough action. Maybe it was because my own little Esther was tucked up asleep upstairs, and that she and her sister and brother will never (I deeply hope) have to face what Esther on the telly had, but something in me wasn’t satisfied with the donation I made. There’s not a lot of spare cash floating about our house, so I knew if I wanted to give more, do more, I’d have to come up with something else.
So I thought about it for a couple of days. What am I good at? How can I make some extra money, enough to feel like it’s going to help someone like Esther – or more than one Esther. And that’s when the fairytale project came up. I’d been trying to find a way to get my stuff published, so I could stop hanging around waiting for nervous publishers to get brave and take a risk on me. And this could be a way to do it, and help as many Esthers as possible.
So I got on the internet, started doing some research, approaching printers, illustrators, charities, friends of friends and total strangers, and this is how it turned out. Brilliantly, Laura agreed to be involved. Self publishing seems the most cost effective way, so when it’s all finished you’ll be able to buy the book online. Save the Children was my chosen charity because their current campaign is about no child being born to die, and instead being free to live their lives to the fullest potential, doing what they were born to do. Doing what they love. And that is what I’m doing, by writing these stories. I really hope when it comes down to it, you’ll support us, me and Laura and all the Esthers everywhere, and buy the book. It won’t work without you.
H xxx

