If you like to read the David Fickling Books Blogs, the site address has moved to: http://dfb.randomhousechildrens.co.uk/blog/
Check it out! I will update the link on my home page soon . . .
Friday, 2 August 2013
Thursday, 27 June 2013
Ch-ch-ch-changes!
Tilda recently asked DFB authors the following question: From either your own work or a favourite book… Can you tell us a little about how introducing one unusual element or idea has transformed an everyday situation; creating a new story, character and/or world for you to explore? Or perhaps the way you as a writer/artist have approached a particular character, story or world has made it unusual, transformed it?
And here is my response:
And here is my response:
Ch-ch-ch-changes!
I wrapped
the tooth in some leaves and pushed it right to the bottom of my rucksack. I
couldn’t wait to show everyone at school. It was undeniable proof that I’d
wrestled a croc and lived to tell the tale!
But then,
as I looked around to get my bearings, I began to wonder if I’d ever be going
to school again. Because I could see immediately that EVERYTHING had changed!
The
waterfall had tumbled me down over three hundred metres of sheer cliff, and
there was no way I could climb back up. And I couldn’t see any paths leading
away from the lake either. It was surrounded by trees that grew in a tangle
right up to the water’s edge. Trees so tall and thick and vine-covered that
they looked suspiciously like a jungle. A dark, steamy jungle!
This is the
moment Charlie Small finds himself marooned in a new and dangerous world and
realises that things are not as they should be – although finding that giant
crocodile in his local stream might have given him a clue! I don’t know what
caused this transformation. Perhaps it was the storm in the night that had
flooded the wasteland behind his home, or the bolt of lightning that passed
right through his body and fizzed away down the stream, but something had taken
Charlie away from his home, his mum and dad and everything he knew. Charlie was
right, everything had
changed, and his amazing four hundred year adventure was about to begin.
Stories that
contain transformations, secret worlds and hidden places always appealed to me
as a child. I loved the idea that countries or worlds such as Narnia could
exist somewhere. Reading about Rupert Bear crawling along a tunnel inside a
hollow tree trunk to discover a world of imps or miniature dragons or crazy
professors, enthralled me, and these changes and new worlds are important in
the stories I write now.
Ride The Black
Horse, a very old picture book of mine, was all about a child’s fear of the
night and how that fear transformed him into a minion of a dark magician who
stole children from their rooms and locked them in his vast, gloomy castle.
Only by overcoming his fear could the child defeat the shape-shifting magician,
free the stolen children of the night and make his way back home.
As for
a character that transforms a story, in Charlie’s case it is undoubtedly the
introduction of the Steam-powered Rhinoceros. Not so much for its role in the
book, as the rhino makes a relatively brief appearance, but because I then had
to find a backstory for this mechanical wonder. This led to the creation of
Jakeman the inventor, who became the main reason that Charlie ended up in his
strange world in the first place. The introduction of Jakeman led to the
creation of a host of other inventions, especially the wonderful Mechanimals
that help Charlie in so many of his adventures. It’s amazing that the
introduction of a relatively minor character can have such a huge effect on a
series of stories, stories that are still continuing and developing in the
wonderful comic, The Phoenix.
Friday, 7 June 2013
I've been having some fun making a little slideshow trailer for the Charlie Small books. Why don't you take a look?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7xzpXeO6bto
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7xzpXeO6bto
Monday, 25 March 2013
Charlie Small Spotted at Fulbridge School!
Fulbridge School is a wonderful place –
welcoming, friendly and creative. The corridors have been expertly decorated
with different themes, lending a magical atmosphere to the school. One of the
best is the volcanic corridor, pictured below, painted by professional artist
Colin Slater. Just a mo! Is that Charlie Small himself, leaping over the
streams of molten lava?
Thursday, 7 March 2013
It’s A Tragedy!
I’m not sure I have ever dealt directly
with tragedy in my books. Many have been picture books, and although Baby Duck
may have thought it a tragedy when his teddy bear blew into the cold, grey,
scary pond and there was no one to help rescue it, I don’t know that it would
count as such to anybody else!
Overcoming small obstacles and dealing with new
and scary situations is important in picture books, though, and can help
children cope with new experiences by making them familiar or funny. My books
often deal with difficult situations and emotions through fantasy, but a
fantasy that is firmly rooted in the real world. So, in various picture books I
have been able to portray a cold-hearted boy made entirely of ice who was
created by the continual drip of a stalactite in a frozen cave, and who reacted
violently to any kindness.
![]() |
| Illustrated by Peter Bailey |
Shadowland told of a girl’s serious illness, which
was treated as a strange, haunting journey through her bedroom wall and across
an ocean to a rocky island; Ride The Black Horse was about the dark manifesting
itself as a magician who spirits children away to his vast castle, and it is
only Oliver who is able to overcome his fear of the dark and defeat the
magician.
![]() |
| From Shadowland |
But when it comes to, well not so much
tragedy but certainly disaster, Charlie Small has more than his fair share in
the strange and frightening world he finds himself in. Dangerous characters and
strange monstrous beasts people this world, and when he manages to contact home
using his mobile, his mum repeats the same thing every time.
One disaster occurs when Charlie encounters
the Puppet Master. Charlie thinks he hears his mother calling him, and he
follows the voice across hills and valleys to a petrified forest, where he
finds a cloaked figure hunched over a campfire:
![]() |
| The Puppet Master |
‘Mum?’ I
whispered.
‘Charlie,’
said the figure turning around. “We’ve been waiting for you.”
I stepped
back. Oh, I wished I had stayed in bed at the shop! I wished I’d stayed at
home. I wished I were a million miles from that clearing in the rotted forest,
for, as the sky turned opal white and a new day dawned, I could see a man’s
face; his grey skin and large hooked nose, his fat dry lips and empty black
eyes. Behind him I saw the legend painted on the side of his caravan:
Incredible,
wonderful, and solely for your delight,
THE PUPPET
MASTER!
A maestro
of marionette manipulation!
No! I turned to run, but somehow my feet seemed rooted to
the ground.
‘Don’t go, Charlie,’ smiled the Puppet Master. ‘I have
something for you.’ He dipped a mug into the pot that was bubbling over the
glowing embers of the fire, filling it with a liquid that steamed in the cold
morning air.
The smell was intoxicating. It floated in the air, a visible
blue mist that wrapped itself around my head, filling my nostrils. I knew I
shouldn’t, but I couldn’t help myself. I grabbed the mug from his hand and
drank the warm, syrupy liquid.
The sweet taste flooded through my body, making my fingers
tingle and the breath judder in my chest. The tingling in my fingers increased
to a dull throb, making them feel swollen and numb. I looked at my hands and
gasped in fear. Tiny crystals were forming on my fingers, multiplying and
joining together to form a new, outer skin.
The
tingling sensations travelled up my arms and across my chest, the new skin
forming like a crust as the sensation spread across my body. As the warmth of
the liquid cooled in my tummy and the tingling subsided, I could feel the new
skin start to harden. Now my face began to grow a second, solid skin. I tried to
call out, but my jaw was set as solid as stone.
I couldn’t
believe it! After all the old woman’s warnings I was becoming another of the
Puppet Master’s marionettes. I felt as if I had been coated in concrete, or
squeezed into a tight fitting shell, exactly the same shape as my body… and I
was no longer able to move!
![]() |
| Charlie becomes a puppet! |
That sounds like a disaster to me! Of course, with Charlie being Charlie, it doesn’t end there and with his usual mixture of ingenuity and bravery, humour and fun, he manages to overcome his plight, which is really about his being powerless and trapped in a world he has no knowledge of, far away from home and everything he knows.
Saturday, 9 February 2013
Wednesday, 6 February 2013
Alfie Small, The True Adventures Of A Brave Explorer!

As Custodian of The Charlie Small
Journals, imagine how delighted I was to discover that his young cousin,
Alfie, has been having adventures of his own. They are every bit as
exciting as Charlie’s, and they are ALL TRUE!My job was to sort through the notes and sketches Alfie had hurriedly made on his swash-buckling voyages and turn them into full-colour, easy to read books. I had a huge amount of fun doing it!
Alfie Small is a young explorer who discovers a special place at the bottom of the garden, behind the shed and through the long weeds, that leads him on incredible journeys of excitement and danger. Two of his escapades have just been published, and more are coming in the summer!
In the first book, Pirates And Dragons, Alfie is rescued from the ocean’s depths by a friendly Sea Serpent; he fights a despicable old pirate in hand-to-hand combat and becomes captain of a band of unruly brigands. Here is Captain Bonedust, the terrifying old pirate Alfie encounters on a desert island:
The second book, Ug And The Dinosaurs,
sees Alfie attacked by a terrible T. Rex, befriended by a stone-age girl
and captured by a tribe of pea-brained ogres.But, however dangerous or incredible the adventure, Alfie always manages to get back home in time for his tea! Here, Alfie’s hot air balloon is swept inside the grinning mouth of an ogre-shaped cloud that propels him into another, crazy world:
I hope Alfie Small is pleased with how I’ve turned his sketches into full, bone-crunching colour illustrations and, with the help of reading consultant Prue Goodwin, his notes into terrifically exciting stories that are dead easy reads for all young adventurers!
So, keep your eyes peeled for these adventure-filled stories and, if you like the sound of them, why not visit the website of his older cousin Charlie (www.charliesmall.co.uk), who is an eight-year-old boy who has lived for four hundred years. Don’t believe it? I can assure you, everything in his and Alfie’s journals is true!
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