Showing posts with label Firefly. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Firefly. Show all posts

Monday, 10 February 2025

Happy Book Birthday, FIREFLY!

 

CAN'T BELIEVE IT'S BEEN 4 YEARS!

Firefly came out Feb 6/2021. In the following years, it won the Governor General Literary award, the Ruth and Sylvia Schwartz award, was named a Globe and Mail Top 100 book, an OLA Best Bet Book, and was nominated for over a dozen more literary awards.

Thank you to my wonderful publisher DCB Young Readers, for making this book happen.

Order online: Buy a Copy Locally or check your local library.

From 4 years ago: It's officially FIREFLY'S BOOK BIRTHDAY, and my little dog Samwise Gamgee, approves (he doesn't even mind Juggernaut the cat on the cover).  

And here's a heartfelt rant from this Canadian author: now more than ever, if you enjoyed a book, tell the world online! Reviews matter so much.

There's a book launch coming March 2 with Another Story Bookshop, stay tuned for more on that! 

For now, here's more on this blog about FIREFLY! Happy Birthday FIREFLY!

Tuesday, 31 December 2024

The Governor General Literary Awards at Rideau Hall, April 18, 2024!

Author photo courtesy Terry Fan

Here it is, the last day of 2024! What was my TOP POST of the year? Yep, my visit to Rideau Hall on April 18, to receive the incredible honour of the gift of a GG award for my book FIREFLY.

An amazing day for any writer, enjoy! And Happy New Year all:

"Well, it's happened! The 4-year wait for the Governor General Awards has ended, and all the literary laureates from 2020-2023 have been celebrated in a four-day visit to Ottawa this April!

I'm still processing, and when the official photos come out, I'll share them along with more thoughts about the experience. Sincere thanks to illustrator Terry Fan for the candid photo of me before the ceremony, in the sunroom at Rideau Hall! 

Thank you to the Governor General of Canada and to the Canada Council for the Arts for hosting us writers, from all over the country. It was an absolute blast to meet 60+ laureates (usually it's 14 or so), and to visit the archives, the National Gallery, the Canadian War Museum (a personal trip), and then Rideau Hall together on April 18th. 

Each of us took our turn in front of the crowd of 200+ attendees, listened as our book was cited by the GG committee, then met Her Excellency The Right Honourable Mary Simon, our Governor General. 

FIREFLY, leather-bound, on the right
When we shook hands, our Governor General whispered, "good morning!" then smiled and handed me my gift: a leather-bound copy of my winning middle-grade book, FIREFLY. Apparently we were photographed together, but all I remember honestly, is her sweet smile and her green eyes!

A wondrous day. Thank you to my publisher, Marc Cote (Cormorant Books), and my editor, Barry Jowett, who were both there to celebrate with me. I told them when I was standing in front of the crowd filled with joy (and more than a little emotion), I was 9-year-old Philippa and 60-year-old Philippa, and every Philippa in-between, who wrote and failed, then wrote some more.
The Pink Room, Rideau Hall, for lunch

A magical experience, I'm filled with gratitude. Thank you and congratulations to all the laureates, it was SO great to meet you and celebrate together!

Here is the complete list of Governor General laureates 2020-2023.

Official photos of me with the Governor General and other laureates 

For all posts about FIREFLY on this blog.



Thursday, 7 November 2024

Are the Kids Alright ... 10 books for I Read Canadian Day on 49th Shelf!


This is I Read Canadian week. Read a Canadian author to support the Canadian publishing world. Read a book, tell a friend, write a review, give a gift book. Anything and everything to celebrate Canadian authors, books, and publishing.

Here's my curated list from 2021, on the 49thShelf: Kids Coping With Crisis

These are 10 fantastic books by Canadian authors, which explore adult and parental mental health, homelessness, poverty and addiction through a kid's eyes. I was asked to curate and annotate this list by 49thShelf, as a celebration of my newest book, FIREFLY. Thank you to them!

The books are by Eric Walters, Rebecca Upjohn, Monica Kulling, Christina Kilbourne, Holly Dobbie, Natalie Hyde, Eden Robinson, Christopher Paul Curtis, E.L. Chen. All great authors you should get to know! Books links, annotations and more at the link: Philippa Dowding on the 49thShelf.

Happy I Read Canadian Day!

All posts about FIREFLY on this Blog

Thursday, 2 May 2024

Our amazing Governor General and Firefly

 

Author with Her Excellency The Right Honourable Mary Simon
















On April 18, 2024, I was honoured (so incredibly honoured), to meet the Governor General of Canada, Her Excellency The Right Honourable Mary Simon, at her home in Rideau Hall, Ottawa. I'm holding her gift to me, a leather-bound copy of my award-winning book, FIREFLY. As an author, you don't get many (or any other) days like this.

The Governor General award is our country's highest literary award, congratulations to all the nominees and winners. I celebrated with the 2020-2023 winners, all 63 of us, among them some of my favourite writers, including the amazing Fan Brothers, David Robertson, Eric Walters, Sarah Everett, Jen Ferguson, and many more. 

As always, thank you to Marc Cote, publisher of Cormorant Books, and my wonderful editor, Barry Jowett, from DCB Young Readers. Thanks also to my sister-in-law, whose costume shop is the setting for the story. I'm wearing her silk scarf, glad to have a little bit of her with me to celebrate in Rideau Hall. She'd be proud. 

Full GG Awards 2024 Photo Gallery. Many thanks to the GG awards for the use of their photos.
Official Photographer: MCpl Matthieu Racette, Rideau Hall © OSGG, 2024

All posts about FIREFLY and the Governor General Award.


The Governor General award winners, 2021. CONGRATS ALL!



Friday, 23 February 2024

FIREFLY is a SYRCA Snow Willow Nominee 2024!

 


I'm really honoured to say that FIREFLY has been selected as one of ten Saskatchewan Young Readers Choice Award Snow Willow nominees for 2024! Thank you, this is really wonderful and the first time one of my books has been nominated for the Snow Willow.

What does it mean? This wonderful list of Canadian books (find them all here) is curated by the SYRCA committee, and selected for students in grades 6-8.  For the next few months, the list and books will be available in schools and libraries across the province as a suggested read for kids in those grades. The books will get read, passed around, loved, absorbed, and the readers will vote on their favourite in spring of 2024. Congrats to my fellow nominees!

The Willow Awards are for young readers in grades 2-8, and over the years they have been very good to me, in fact my very first book, The Gargoyle in My Yard (2009) received the honour of a Diamond Willow nomination in 2010. 

I ran around the house like a mad thing when I got that email telling me the book had been nominated. It slowly sank in that not only did I get to PUBLISH a book, but that other  people would read it and if they loved it, it would be NOMINATED for AWARDS. Big revelation there.

It's been a wonderful career, I've been incredibly lucky. Thank you to the Willow Awards and all the other nominating committees and readers who have shortlisted or selected one of my books as a winner. It's always an amazing and humbling surprise.

Thank you as always to my publisher, DCB, and of course, thank you to my wonderful readers too! Keep reading, all. 

Thursday, 1 February 2024

What's it like to win the Governor General's literary award?

 

Reposting from November 2021, because in a few months I will go to Ottawa to receive my GG award, after a 4-year hiatus. I'll be talking about this experience in upcoming posts:

"A: On October 3rd this year, a woman in Golden, BC, woke up to a meteorite crashing through her roof and landing in bed beside her. I think that’s a perfect metaphor for winning the Governor General’s Literary Award: it’s somewhat miraculous, unforeseeable, and frankly leaves you a little shaken up.

I couldn’t be more honoured by this win for Firefly, a book very close to my heart..." 

--PD on the 49th Shelf, Dec/2021

A meteorite is right! In the interview I also talk about inspiration for FIREFLY, challenges creating the character, my litmus test for a great children's story, and what I'm reading right now.

Read the entire interview: 49th Shelf Q&A Interview with Philippa Dowding

I'm still getting used to the idea that FIREFLY won the GG award for Young People's Literature (text) this year. In the photo above, I'm pretty dazed at the news, celebrating at my publisher's office that morning, so much champagne!

But it's slowly sinking in and thank you (again) to the Canada Council. Part of the job of receiving this massive honour, I'm realizing, is to be gracious and inclusive, and to thank everyone who reaches out with congratulations, and to say yes to every invitation, but also eventually to just sit with it, to try to be worthy of it. It's so unexpected, this meteorite, that it will take time to get used to having it in the bed with me.

In the Globe and Mail, Nov/2021

There's also a terrific review on Storytime with Stephanie, thank you!

Here's the opening paragraph: "At the beginning of October, the Governor General’s Literary Award and the Forest of Reading Award nominees were announced in the same week. When a book appears on both of those lists, it’s certainly one to consider reading. Firefly by Philippa Dowding certainly lived up to its nominated status!"

It's really all about the story though, Firefly's story, not about me (thank goodness), and I couldn't be more pleased that because of the Governor General win, more kids will be reading about PTSD, homelessness, addiction and mental health. I hope that none of them live a life like Firefly's (please no!), but if they do or know someone who does, they'll also know they're not alone.

Shine bright, Firefly!

All posts on this blog about Firefly.



Tuesday, 25 April 2023

MASC Young Authors and Illustrators Festival was so fun ...


Photo of Author by Martin Lipman @ 2023











"I liked how we could share and ask questions about being a writer and previous books we'd written."  

"What I liked best about this workshop is everyone creative writing and at the end how we played a fun, silly game."

"The workshop is very nice and I liked how Mrs. Dowding interacted with everyone and took time to listen to everyone."

"I liked EVERYTHING!!!!!!!"    -- MASC Young Authors & Illustrators Participants, 2023

Photo by Martin Lipman @ 2023, 140 students!
In early April, 2023, I had the absolute pleasure of presenting a writer's workshop to 25 young writers, ages 8-12, as part of the MASC Young Authors & Illustrators festival! What a wonderful opportunity to meet other authors and fantastic young writers, and at the beautiful Canada Science and Technology Museum in Ottawa, too. 

Together, our writing group created interesting characters, vivid descriptions, through prompts, exercises and games including Caption This, Rocks Explode, and the 200-year-old parlor game (some say invented by Rimbaud), The Exquisite Corpse Loves a Blue Piano. 

I also introduced my Masterclass writing group to "Philippa's Top 5 Writing Tips," enjoy...

5. PLAY!

4. Keep it Simple, often the first word is the right one.  

3. What's the hidden story, describe what we can't see 

2. Show us your character's deepest fear and ...

... my number 1 writing tip: Show us, don't just tell us! Make me feel your hunger, don't just write, "I'm hungry!" I enlisted the help of Chat (GPT) here, and the students were intrigued. I was able to point out some of the differences between our writing and the AI's style, which made for an interesting comparison. We decided that in general, the AI relied on simile more than we did, and in one instance made a mistake: it asked us to "look" at a smell.


I also included my 10 Top Tips for the Writer's Life, like find your favorite pen (mine's a Pilot V5 Techpoint 0.5) and notebook (for me, a Moleskin 5 x 7 lined, 80 pages); find a sunny, quiet place to write; read your work out loud; know a bit about your ending before you start; give yourself a deadline; go meet other authors; start a writing group, and a lot more. 

It was an honor, and I was so pleased to be asked to be part of this year's event, only my second time in front of a large audience since the beginning of the pandemic. We were far too long apart. 

Thanks to MASC and to the young authors, I had a fabulous time!

Some of the writing on the boards, 
such great writing, ideas and collaboration!

Philippa's 5 Top Tips for Writers



Tuesday, 14 March 2023

The Time Twin, by Philippa Dowding


On November 17, 2021, my book FIREFLY won the Governor General award for Young People's Literature. A huge honour, that was a pretty special day! Little did I know that the honours would go on for a while. 

In fact, I was asked to contribute to the CBC Books page for GG winners that year, and to write a 750-word essay or short story on the theme of CONNECTION during the pandemic. I chose to write about my local park, a focal point for my busy downtown neighbourhood, especially during the first 18-months of COVID. This park is also the inspiration for the park that Firefly sleeps in across from her mother's house.

I was also asked to read the piece live on the CBC in December 2021. That was a pretty special day, too. My dad, an actor who had appeared on the CBC, would have been proud!

Thank you to the Governor General awards, to the CBC and CBC Books, and thank you, as always, to my publisher, DCB Young Readers. 

The CBC Books Connection site is now dismantled to make way for this year's GG winners, and the CBC radio piece is no more, BUT here is the full text of The Time Twin, I hope it inspires you to find your own connections in the smallest things:

"At the start of the pandemic, I began the habit of a daily walk around my small, downtown park. It’s much-loved and well-used—families, couples, kids on swings, people playing tennis, chess, baseball, walking the dog, or just hanging out—so many intimate stories are lived there.

One day during that first spring, I spied a jogger coming toward me on the sidewalk. An odd runner, an older athlete, a careener, slap-footed, he was wearing saggy leggings, a parka, and a tight, neon orange cap. Everything about him was endearing, and frankly he was hard to miss. I’d never noticed him before, but I saw him on my walk again the next day. And then the next. And the next.

Soon he was a fixture, sharing the park with me at all hours, often when no one else was there. Curious, since as a writer my daily routine is unpredictable.  I’d see him at 4:45 p.m, 8:50 a.m., 11:15 p.m., in snow, rain, sunshine, with blossoms or eventually with autumn leaves pattering from the trees.

Through a mysterious pattern of coincidence, we became oddly synchronous. I felt a small beat of joy whenever he appeared across the park. Peculiar, though, to have a time-twin whose schedule so closely mirrored the wonkiness of my own. Was he a writer, too? An accountant? A teacher?

Who was he? I was fascinated. But I have to admit that for the first little while I was also a bit weirded out at this connection. Then I began to wonder if I weirded him out, and if he was just as curious about me: Who is this ambling woman with the enormous coat and old boots? Is she muttering to herself? Why is she always here?

We developed an elegant little sidewalk dance.

Whenever we met, we’d nod or one of us would give a shy, low-hand wave or a little smile. On that first pass, he would usually step off the sidewalk and into the park to go around me. On the second circuit, it was my turn to step off the sidewalk and into the park. The third pass, it was his turn, and so on. We alternated, carefully equitable. We made space for each other, a small, welcoming act.  

My park double and I shadowed each other for months. Then one day in the winter of 2021 … he vanished.

It couldn’t last, I knew that. I fully expected our parallel lives to fall out of sync sometime and that would be the end of our quiet and wonderful gift, borne of swervy, exacting chance. I was oddly bereft for a while, the delicate web of my daily life slightly frayed. He left as easily and unexpectedly as he arrived.

One night months later, I was visiting a friend who lived in a newer part of the city, far from my local park. As I set off from her cozy house and headed into the darkness for home, someone darted past the end of her street. I caught a glimpse of a tight, neon orange cap and saggy leggings; a slap-footed runner, careening along!

It was him! It had to be! At least I think it was him? But so far from home? I ran to the end of the street to follow, but he was gone. I had a sudden stab of doubt then: what if my time-twin wasn’t real? What if I’d conjured my special jogger all along and was now imagining him everywhere?

But how wonderful if it was him!

Suddenly, I realized that either was fine, him or not him, it didn’t matter. The story was ours. 

I looked at the bright city skyline, and understood that our time-twins are all around us. We’re bound to one another, enchanted, we just need to keep watch, share the path, and when it’s our turn, step together into the magic of the park."

The Time Twin, by Philippa Dowding, first appeared on CBC Books website, December 2021. 

Copyrighted material held by the author.



Monday, 6 March 2023

What book did I hide from my family as a kid?

 

Thank you to the Winnipeg International Writer's Festival and the ThinAir Kids Festival for asking me to be part of their 2023 festival online! The festival is finished now, but they had a great site which featured Canadian writers and books, including FIREFLY. The festival also featured the Manitoba Young Reader's Choice Awards (MYRCA), and FIREFLY is part of that wonderful award, too. Thank you all!

The ThinAir Kids festival posted my book reading and book trailer for FIREFLY,  plus I answered their 5 "Getting to know you" questions, reprinted with permission below. What book did I hide from my family as a kid, is my desk neat or messy? Read on ...

1.    What book did you hide from your parents when you were a kid/teen, and why?

A: I don’t remember hiding a book, but I do remember hiding how I felt about one. When I was 14, I read and re-read my older brother’s copy of The Lord of the Rings, much to my mother’s dismay. For some reason the book unsettled her, maybe because after reading it my brother longed to leave home and live in Middle Earth. So when I read LOTR I longed more quietly than my brother, but understood (thanks to him) that we all yearn for Rivendell once we’ve been there.

2.    What is your favourite line from a book -- any book?

A: Well this is an impossible choice. So I’ll go back to my first book-love, and pick a line from Charlotte’s Web: “It is not often that someone comes along who is a true friend and a good writer.”

3.    Are you a clean desk person or a cluttered desk person?

A: My desk is relatively clean and tidy: right now it holds a few choice pens, a pencil, my glasses case, a few bookmarks, my cell phone top right corner, my laptop and monitor. My office though is a cluttered, busy place filled with boxes, guitars, sheet music, computers, paper, books, and art.

4.    What worry wakes you up at night?

A:  If I’m sleepless or discontented, it’s usually because I’m worried about what we’re doing to the planet. My children are adults now, but what will it be like for their children? For the young readers of my books? My newest book, Oculum Echo, is all about climate change and survival after environmental collapse. If you’re wondering if it helps to write about what scares me, the answer is yes: I get to structure the narrative and re-write the ending.

5.    What is one of your secret ambitions?

A: I’ve played guitar since I was 12 and have composed and recorded music ever since. I play casually with friends and sometimes at special events if someone asks, but my secret unfulfilled ambition is that I’ve always wanted to be in a band with maybe a violin, a piano, a bass player, and me. It’s just never happened. 

Wednesday, 22 February 2023

FIREFLY is a Rocky Mountain Book Award 2023 Nominee!

 


I'm so HONOURED that FIREFLY is a Rocky Mountain Book Awards (RMBA) nominee. What a great list of Canadian authors and books, too! Thank you to the nominating committee for adding Firefly to the Northern Lights list for older middle-grade readers, grades 6-8.

The winners will be decided this spring, 2023, by the young readers of Alberta! Good luck to all nominees, and stay tuned. Most of all, I hope the kids have found some books they love.

Here's the FIREFLY page on the RMBA site.

Here's a little more about the RMBA

📚 Connecting Grade 4-7 readers with exemplary Canadian literature ❤️ Encouraging a lifelong love of reading 🏆 Alberta Children's Choice Award

Please go and check out these books, all by talented Canadians. Introduce them to the young readers in your life and remember if you loved a book, please spread the word! Online reviews help books and readers find each other. Keep Reading Everyone!


Thursday, 2 February 2023

FIREFLY is featured at The Winnipeg International Writers Festival!


So honoured to announce that FIREFLY is selected as a featured book for the Thin Air Kids Festival 2023, partnered with the MYRCAward 2023! Thank you! 

Featuring terrific Canadian children's authors and books for grades 4-9, ThinAir Kids is part of the Winnipeg International Writer's Festival 2023. 

The Manitoba Young Readers Choice Award (MYRCA) is a reading award for books written for kids in grades 4-9, FIREFLY is in the Northern Lights Category. Together, they mean a month-long reading festival for kids!

Here's my festival page: Philippa Dowding, Thin Air Kids 2023
Go find which book I hid from my parents, see me reading from FIREFLY, watch the book trailer and more. There are events and freebies too! Plus of course book pages for all the featured authors, go explore!

ThinAir Kids and The Winnipeg International Writer's Festival run through February, 2023.

Friday, 27 January 2023

FIREFLY has a new translation in Macedonian!

 


Macedonian Cover of FIREFLY by Philippa Dowding


Here it is folks, my first foreign edition of any of my books: Firefly in Macedonian! I love the cover, thank you to publisher SF for creating a version for young Macedonian readers to enjoy. Thanks also to my wonderful Canadian publisher, DCB Young Readers, for making the deal.

It's a new world for me, I don't know much about foreign rights but I DO know that I love the differences between the Canadian version and the Macedonian version of the cover. I also love the fact that my name looks like "Puana Daylight." Now that's a name I can get behind! 

The Macedonian release date is a week away, I can't wait to see my copy!


Sunday, 4 December 2022

Enjoy The Time Twin, my short story on CBC Books

 



Thank you to CBC for permission to use their original Instagram image.

I'm reposting this from this week, last year (I think the post is going to disappear soon, so enjoy while you can). Does everyone have a time twin? During this period of pandemic and isolation, I've discovered that every connection is significant, even something as simple as meeting a jogger in the park. 

I'm so honoured to have my short story, The Time Twin, featured on the CBC Books site as part of the CONNECTIONS series by the 2021 Governor General literary award winners. 

Here is the series description: "CBC Books asked the winners to reflect further on the theme of connection in original works. The all-new literary series explores the not-so-obvious and complicated ways we engage and interact with each other and the world around us."

I set the Time Twin in my local park, the same setting for the park in FIREFLY. A park is a magical space, in fiction and in life. I hope you enjoy the TIME TWIN, and that you connect through your own chance encounter with a time twin.

Happy holidays all!

PD


Wednesday, 19 October 2022

Thunder Thighs, the setting for FIREFLY, is in the news!

 

My nephew/Thunder Thighs/Toronto Star, Oct 17/2022

“Everybody loves to be a cop,” Hanus said, noting military uniforms, which require a lot of accessories, are also popular. Army or Navy, take your pick."




So delighted to see my nephew and his costume shop, Thunder Thighs, highlighted in The Toronto Star (Oct 16/2022). Here's the full article: Need a lobster costume for an upcoming social event?

This shop is the setting for my Governor-General award-winning book, FIREFLY. It's a place I've loved for over 30 years, and a beautiful place to write about. My sister-in-law died in 2016, but the shop she created in the late 1970s has left an incredible legacy of amazing costumes, millions of them, that you can't find just anywhere. I hope you'll read the article, and realize that some places are just magical, and the perfect setting for a book! How lucky I've been to be part of it.

Way to go, and congrats to my amazing nephew and his staff:

“It’s taken me five years to figure out how to run this place, without any road map. It’s been a lot of work but it’s been fun and I have a good team and we are always busy,” Hanus said.


AND to top it off, my friend and writer Frieda Wishinsky has written a book, "How to Become an Accidental Entrepreneur", which also features Thunder Thighs and my sister-in-law, Lynda Kemp. Yay!





Wednesday, 22 June 2022

FIREFLY wins the Ruth and Sylvia Schwartz Children's Book Award 2022!

 

"The student jurors who selected Firefly were very enthusiastic about the book. 

“We wish we could meet these characters in real life!” they said. “We love how the staff at the magical costume shop became a family for Firefly, and how every character evolved and grew – even the cat! Firefly is so relatable, with very human flaws, and we want to see her again in another story.”

 -- Faywood School Jurors

I am incredibly honoured to announce that FIREFLY has won the Ruth & Sylvia Schwartz Children's Book Award this year. THANK YOU to the Ontario Arts Council, the Schwartz family, the student jurors, the staff and administrators at Faywood Arts-Based Curriculum School, and also thank you to all the readers who have supported this book along the way.

Of course, also a huge thank you to my amazing publisher, DCB Young Readers. Shine on everyone!

Here is the Ontario Arts Council announcement on Twitter 

Read the complete News Release: Ruth and Sylvia Schwartz Children's Book |Award Winners 2022

Tuesday, 7 June 2022

Student Art for FIREFLY is mind-blowing and beautiful





What's going on in the mind of FIREFLY? I'm just blown away and extremely honoured to share these thoughtful, smart and insightful illustrations created by a class of Ontario students. A wonderful teacher recently posted them on twitter, and gave me permission to post them here (anonymously, for privacy reasons). Thank you to her and to them!

Here is her explanation of the task the students were given:
"Every “section” represents a scene or moment from the story. Not pictured are their equally incredible justifications."


It's a rare thing to actually see into a reader's mind, and to see how a story affects them. To discover where certain scenes land with them, and what they feel or remember about the important parts of the dialogue, the description, the climax, the action, the main characters. 

It's an incredible gift for an author to receive such beautiful work from readers. As FIREFLY would say, I'm verklempt! I made the images as large as I could, please take your time to see all the thinking, the nuance, the interpretation of emotion and story. Enjoy:







If you have read the book, you'll be amazed too. I find it so moving that many students seemed to relate to Juggernaut the cat, and a few used the little poem about cats (spoken by Moss Cart), as a starting point for their inspiration: 

Stray cat, Stray Cat, where your kitty-katty home be at? 
Kitty wander, kitty roam, kitty-katty, here be home.




THANK YOU TO ALL OF THESE STUDENTS!
Firefly thanks them too!