In fact, the character of Solomon Macaroni was conceived when I was somewhere around eight or nine or ten years old (the target age group of his story!). I remember drawing him in one of my school books, including some of his friends like Fred, the spider. I really don’t know why but I never forgot about Solomon and for years I’ve thought about writing about him. When I finally did come to write his story, I wanted to capture the fun and magic I loved as child. I wanted the story to be filled with things that would have made eight-year-old me smile or laugh or set my imagination on fire. I also wanted it to be a story that would be fun for an adult to read out loud, because, in addition to loving writing, I loved reading as a child and having a teacher read a story out loud was one of the best parts of any school day. I wish I could go back in time to see the look on my eight-year-old self’s face when I told her that this character she’d just drawn would one day star in his very own book.
Growing up, I was always encouraged by the people around me. My teachers both at primary school and high school would leave praise on my work (even though, looking back, my poem about the demise of the Spice Girls was extremely cheesy and consisted of questionable meter). My friends would ask to read my stories. My parents never discouraged my passion for writing even though it meant being hidden away in my room for hours on end, and they happily stored boxes of my old notebooks containing those handwritten stories in their garage for years. All this encouragement was – and is – undoubtedly invaluable.
The
point of this hopefully not too longwinded post is to say that if there is a
child in your life who loves writing (whether that be your own child, a friend
or relative’s child, or a student you teach), the best thing you can do is
encourage that child to keep writing. Who knows what stories, ideas or
characters might one day make it into the pages of a published book, or where
else their creative writing skills and imaginations might take them.