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Welcome to one of the stops on the Dundurn Press blog tour for Canadian author Philippa Dowding’s Everton Miles is Stranger Than Me!

philippa_dowdingI am delighted to present a detailed interview I had the wonderful chance to do with Philippa, as well as a review of Everton Miles is Stranger Than Me, Philippa’s latest middle grade read!

Welcome to Fab Book Reviews, Philippa! I am so delighted to have you here! Let’s dig right into the questions I have for you…

Q: When you first started creating Gwendolyn’s world and the concept of the Night Flyers for The Strange Gift of Gwendolyn Golden, were you already thinking ahead to the possibility of a follow-up story involving Everton Miles? 

A: The truth is, I really thought that The Strange Gift of Gwendolyn Golden would be a perfect stand-alone book. At the end of the story, I left Gwendolyn sitting on a swing pondering her future, and it was a wonderful ambiguity that I liked. To fly or not to fly? Who knows what we will become when we are fourteen? But once the book was nominated for an OLA Red Maple award in 2015 (thank you!), I met with a lot of readers who really wanted to know what happened next. I started to think about that, and on re-reading the first book, the boy Everton Miles from the Midsummer Party jumped out at me. He was my way into the sequel.

Q. I was absolutely fascinated by the characters of Abilith, the Rogue Flyer and Celestine, the Spirit Flyer. How do you go about creating such unearthly, intangible characters? What kind of research goes into building a character such as a fallen angel or a spirit?

A: Thank you! I’m glad you liked them!

The forces for good are immortal Spirit Flyers, Celestine and her older brothers and sisters, who watch over Gwendolyn and the other human Night Flyers. They’re benevolent overlords, a bit haughty, smart, useful in their way and well-meaning enough, but endearingly clueless most of the time. They were quite fun to write! I’m a lifelong Star Trek fan, so think early Vulcans from Enterprise, with a touch of Karellen from Childhood’s End (without the menace).

The antagonist, the tragic, fallen anti-hero, Abilith the Rogue, has much darker influences. To breathe life into him and his netherworld, I re-read Milton’s Paradise Lost, Dante’s Inferno, and Neil Gaiman’s The Graveyard Book for his Silas character, and Bod’s trip to the underworld. I went back to Mary Shelley, and H. P. Lovecraft’s At the Mountains of Madness for his bleak, alien landscape. I revisited the final chapters of Captain Ahab’s tale, as he tried too late to reconnect with his mutinous crew.

What made these characters and stories so beguiling? Personally, I think a great antagonist needs a touch of humanity, a quirk or flaw that we can recognize in ourselves. Although Abilith’s actions over time are monstrous and eventually he becomes a bitter, cruel, sociopathic outcast, his descent began with a single mistake: he fell in love with the wrong creature. Tragic!

Q. Everton Miles is Stranger Than Me is quite a bit darker than the first book of Night Flyers: even more fantastical, heartbreaking, with terrifying elements in the last quarter of the novel. I find most of the best children’s literature has those darker, deeper, elements! What works or characters or worlds were you inspired by while working on Everton Miles? Were these inspirations any different from your work on The Strange Gift of Gwendolyn Golden?

A: The short answer is, while I didn’t have a direct road map of inspiration for the series, I think everything an author reads influences them, and I’ve always loved fantasy.

As a child, I had terrific neighbours, a family of creative geniuses, next door. I highly recommend it! They gave me classic children’s books to read for my birthday. I’ll never forget finishing the first book in the Narnia series when I was about nine, The Magician’s Nephew, and thinking, what IS this? But I couldn’t put the series down. Then they handed me The Hobbit (which is still one of my favourite books of all time), then The Lord of the Rings trilogy, then books by Carlos Castaneda, Philip K. Dick and on and on. After that early love of books, I went on to study English at university, and read everything I could.

I learned early in life that I loved fantasy. So if I had to say what books have inspired me, and what you might find hints of in Everton Miles is Stranger than Me, they’d be an eclectic mix of Milton’s Paradise Lost, E.B. White, C.S. Lewis, Neil Gaiman, Tolkien, a little J.K. Rowling, Philip Pullman, Ian McEwan, plus an unconscious literary stew of other writers.

Q: Given the ages of Gwendolyn and Everton, did you ever consider aiming this series for a teen audience? How might that have- if at all- changed your approach to the story or characters? 

A: Oh, that’s an interesting question. I hadn’t really thought of that, but I did deliberately try to avoid writing really romantic stuff, which seems to be a largish proponent of teen writing. I didn’t want Everton and Gwendolyn’s to necessarily be a love story because there was so much else to cover, although there is a deep friendship and connection there that could one day develop into a romance, which is hinted at.

Also, although Gwendolyn is indeed a little older and wiser than she is in the first book, I couldn’t age her too much. I can tell you, though, that in the first draft of this book, Everton came to life a bit darker than his final self. He smoked, he carried a hip flask, he swore a little. All that had to go in the second draft considering the audience, which was a bit of a shame. I liked that bad boy!

Q: Let’s talk about the genre of magic realism. It is a genre that I often hear about, or read books being described as such but seems a hard genre to define. How would you best describe it in just a few sentences? Beyond Gabriel Garcia Marquez- whose work is widely considered the epitome of magic realism- which authors or works do you think have best captured the magic realism genre in children’s or teen lit?

A: It’s maybe a bit of a literary chameleon. Based purely on my own reading (okay, and a graduate paper on it forever ago), here’s my definition of magic realism: a sub-genre of fantasy, in which one magical element exists in an otherwise completely realistic world, and which does not require further explanation. The magical element simply exists, unquestioned by the characters, and readers must engage in a “willing suspension of disbelief” to read the story.

So to me, magic realism isn’t high fantasy set in a different time and place like Lord of the Rings/Game of Thrones etc, and it’s not an entire fantasy universe like Harry Potter. Magic realism has a realistic, here-and-now setting, with a single magical element that goes unexplained and accepted by the characters and the reader. It’s also the single most important element that moves the story forward.

Examples?

Folk tales are great at this. Think Jack and the Beanstalk. How on earth did three beans turn into an enormous beanstalk with a giant at the top of it? And why didn’t Jack think twice about that?

If you look at classical literature, I’d say Sir Gawain and the Green Knight has all the elements of magic realism. Big green guy bursts into Camelot on Christmas Eve, gets his head chopped off, then picks it up, and calmly sends Gawain on a quest to find him. Since when did severed heads send knights out on quests? And why didn’t anyone think to ask that?

Moving into more recent children’s literature, I’d say one of the most perfect examples of magic realism might be E.B. White’s Stuart Little. Sure he was adopted, but no one questions the fact that he’s a mouse. Or even Natalie Babbitt’s, Tuck Everlasting, where the fountain of youth exists in a ho-hum little every day town.

I recently read Rocks Fall, Everyone Dies by Lindsay Ribar. I’d say that’s a teen magic realism title: boy discovers his family has a magical connection to a dangerous, overhanging cliff and no one questions it.

That’s a start, but there are probably a lot more excellent examples.

Now for some slightly shorter questions…

Q: What were some of your most beloved stories or characters growing up?

A: I loved the Narnia series, The Hobbit, all of Lord of the Rings. But my first book love was Charlotte’s Web. When I first read the book at age eight, I finished it, put it in my lap and looked down at the illustration of Wilbur and Fern. I was so transported and moved, that I knew then and there that I wanted to write stories, too.

Q: What have been some of your favourite reads of the year- anything from adult fiction, to YA, to children’s!

A: My reading is always a year or two (or 10) behind everyone else! Here are the five books that made the biggest impression on me this year:

A Tale for the Time Being, Ruth Ozeki
The Rest of Us Just Live Here, Patrick Ness
The Blackthorn Key, Kevin Sands
The Chrysalids, John Wyndham
The Gargoyle, Andrew Davidson

Q: And I have to ask, will we ever get to visit with Gwendolyn or Everton again?

A: I’ve been toying with a few ideas! My publisher, Dundurn Press, would be happy to have another book in the series, and I’d be happy to write one. So nothing on the screen yet, but stay tuned!

Thanks Michelle, great questions and this was a lot of fun!

Thank you so much for your time, Philippa! This was fantastic and enlightening. I loved hearing all of your answers!

…Read on for my thoughts on the book…

 

evertonmiles28195841Everton Miles is Stranger Than Me: The Night Flyer’s Handbook by Philippa Dowding
Source: ARC courtesy of Dundurn Press. Thank you!
Publication: October 2016 by Dundurn Press
Book Description:

The sequel to The Strange Gift of Gwendolyn Golden, shortlisted for the OLA Red Maple Award.

I wander around like any normal, paranoid, self-absorbed teenager. Do we all think we’re being chased by deadly entities, I wonder? Probably, but how many of us actually are?

Gwendolyn Golden, Night Flyer, floats over the cornfields all summer. What draws her to the same spot, night after night? All she knows is that change is coming: she’s starting high school plus there’s a strange new boy in town.

He’s Everton Miles and he’s a Night Flyer, too.

Soon the mismatched teenagers face dangers they never imagined, including a fallen Spirit Flyer, kidnap, and the eternal darkness of The Shade. How will Gwendolyn handle her new life and grade nine? With help from The Night Flyer’s Handbook and her strange new friend, it might not be that hard.

 

For readers unfamiliar with the Night Flyers middle grade titles, the series begins with The Strange Gift of Gwendolyn Golden, where we first get an introduction to Gwen, her family and circle of friends, her background and how she discovers that she is Night Flyer. I won’t get into all the details of the first title here (no spoilers!), but I will say that while not compulsory, I would recommend reading Gwendolyn Golden prior to Everton Miles- not only will you get a chance to read something beautiful and unique, but you’ll also get an even deeper look into Gwen’s personal life, her fantastical world and her initial forays into flying.

When we meet Gwen in Everton Miles is Stranger Than Me, she is flying…gliding through the early morning sky of her town the day before starting grade nine. Gwen can indeed fly, which sounds a marvelous gift and skill, but her being a Night Flyer comes with many caveats and…major, possibly fatal, risks. As a Night Flyer, Gwen has to abide by the rules in her official Handbook; heed to her assigned Mentor and Watcher who look out for her safety and interests; as well as remain vigilant about mortal dangers that can hurt Night Flyers…like the Shade which claims Flyers into its endless dark. While Gwen is flying that early morning, she sees something that gives her immediate pause: a dark figure with wings and golden eyes that seems to whisper her name…

Trying to push the disquieting image of the dark winged creature from her mind, Gwen attempts to focus on her new school year, and a new slightly peculiar friendship with a fellow teen Night Flyer named Everton Miles. As much as Gwen tries to avoid and forget that strange shadowy figure though, she and Everton both become inescapably locked in a battle with a monstrous force that threatens everything they have known and loved about the world of Night Flyers. I mentioned in the interview with Philippa that things take some harrowing turns in this novel- there are indeed moments of tragedy, hopelessness, darkness and epic duels between fallen angels and heavenly spirits. This is buoyed, however, with some wonderful happy surprises, intriguing character revelations, and by the characters of Gwen and Everton who are, themselves, indomitable. Philippa has written and created a tremendously imagined world here: everything- from the notes in the Flyer’s Handbook (which readers get to pore over!), to her creation of the fallen angel named Rogue, the history of the Night Flyers, to the unnerving descriptions of the Shade- is carefully, beautifully drawn and truly comes alive.

Overall, Everton Miles is Stranger Than Me a sequel that meets and exceeds its already terrific first novel; it is a strongly written, wonderfully imagined children’s fantasy title. Any readers who enjoy the work of authors such as Kate DiCamillo, Michelle Cuevas, J.K. Rowling, Ellen Potter, Neil Gaiman, or Karen Foxlee might be especially drawn to Philippa Dowding’s world of Night Flyers.

I received a copy of this title courtesy of Dundurn Press in exchange for an honest review and for the purposes of this blog post. All opinions and comments are my own.

3 responses to “Blog Tour: Everton Miles is Stranger Than Me by Philippa Dowding”

  1. Thank you for sharing your blog with the Night Flyers, Michelle! Your interview questions were so fun to answer and your review is very insightful. I’m really honoured. Philippa

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    1. Thank you so much, Philippa!!! Your comment means a lot to me- truly. I was so delighted to participate in the tour and have the opportunity to interview you!…and share my thoughts on your books!! 🙂

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