Showing posts with label Dave Cousins. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dave Cousins. Show all posts

Thursday, 28 June 2012

Fortnight of Guests 2012: Dave Cousins


Today we have the amazing Dave Cousins, author of 15 Days Without a Head, with us today!  I loved 15 Days Without a Head (check out my review: here) and hope you all love the post just as much as I do!

The Book Addicted Boy!

Hello, my name’s Dave and I’m book addict!

There’s something about books as objects – the smell of them, the way they look lined up on a shelf. I carry one with me where ever I go, which is why many of mine are creased and battered, their pages crinkled from being read while walking home in the rain. For me that just adds to the appeal though, it gives each copy a history that can take me back to a moment in time.

Without books, I suspect my life would be full of holes. As a child there would have been nothing to dispel the disappointment of being sent to bed early. Growing up, they provided companionship and guidance through some of the more difficult periods of my life, not to mention an escape from family holidays as a reluctant teenager! Books have changed my opinions, widened my view of the world, and made me laugh and cry along the way.

So … I thought I’d share a few of my favourites – in autobiographical order!

Bears in the Night by Stan and Jan Berenstain
I was generally quite well behaved at school, but this book got me into trouble. I have vivid memories of being sent to stand in the corner of Burman Road Infants for fighting with another boy, over whose turn it was to read this. What made this book worth fighting over I’m not sure. Maybe it was the mixture of fear and excitement at the idea of sneaking out after dark to climb Spook Hill? There’s something about the deep blue and grey illustrations and the warm yellow glow of the bears’ lamp as they creep through the woods. We all loved the way you had to read the final part of the story really fast in reverse and would compete to see who could memorize the bears’ journey in the correct order.

Explorers on the Moon & Destination Moon by Hergé
Born a few months before Neil Armstrong set foot on the moon, I was obsessed with the idea of being an astronaut as a child and read these books until they fell apart. I spent months dressed as Tintin, dragging a toy Scottie dog around on a string and addressing my grandad as Captain Haddock!

The Three Investigators in The Secret of Terror Castle by Robert ArthurAnother book that I loved so much I wanted to live it. My friend Richard and I became The Two Investigators and spent hours in the park looking for mysteries. The closest we came was helping a woman retrieve her lost dog. She seemed pleased and accepted our ‘business card’ promising to contact us if she ever needed anything investigating.

The Machine-Gunners by Robert Westall
My favourite book of all time! Though on this occasion, I didn’t want to be Chas McGill the hero of the story, but the writer, Robert Westall. The majority of Westall’s work was published in the seventies and eighties, but his books are still as good today as ever. Great writing and storytelling is timeless, and Robert Westall was a master of the craft.

Thunder and Lightnings by Jan Mark
I read this when I had just started a new school in a new town. Being able to share some of my experience and anxieties with the main character in the book, made those first few weeks a little easier. It was the first time I realised that stories could provide companionship and sometimes help us through difficult times in our lives. This book made me want to write and continues to influence the kind of stories I try to tell.

Waving at Trains by Roger McGough.
By the time I started at secondary school, I had started writing – songs and comics mainly. Then I discovered poetry, first Wilfred Owen and then Roger McGough. I’m often in awe of poets and songwriters who can capture the essence of a moment in a few words. I love the sound of McGough’s poems, the rhythm of the lines and the way he plays with language. He can be laugh-out-loud funny and brutally dark in the same verse, and always makes me think.

Calvin and Hobbes by Bill Watterson
No list of books would be complete without mention of Calvin and Hobbes – they were a big part of my own kids’ relationship with books. It’s an over-used term, but Bill Watterson is actually a genius. Calvin and Hobbes is as near to perfection as it is possible to get. Funny, wise and heart-felt, Watterson’s strips are beautifully drawn stories featuring two of the best characters ever created. Reading a few pages of Calvin and Hobbes never fails to inspire, enlighten and put a smile on my face.

Creepers by Keith Gray
I originally borrowed Creepers from the library and attempted to photocopy it, because I didn’t want to give the book back. I thought it was the perfect story: simple, clever, surprising and cool. I realised this was how I wanted to write. I’ve read all of Keith Gray’s books and they’re all brilliant. To have his endorsement on the cover of my debut novel makes me grin every time I see it.

And now I spend my days writing my own books – to say it’s a dream come true would be an understatement! Glancing across my desk as I type this, I realize I should mention my collection of thesauruses and word books. I’m not ashamed to admit that I find great pleasure in leafing through the pages to find an elusive synonym or to check the correct usage. Some of you may feel that I should maybe get out more. You’re probably right, but I’m happy. After all, not every addiction is bad.

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Fifteen Days Without a Head
15 Days Without a Head by Dave Cousins, is out now in paperback, published by Oxford University Press.

www.davecousins.net

https://twitter.com/#!/DaveCousins9000   @DaveCousins9000

I couldn't agree more!  I think a book addiction is the best kind and not one that needs detoxing! ;)  
I hope you all liked this as much as I did!  And if you did, make sure you follow all the FoG events on Twitter at #FortnightOfGuests


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Dave Cousins completed his first novel in the back of a van, while touring with his band (who were almost famous!)
He went on to be a winner of the SCBWI Undiscovered Voices Anthology 2010 and his debut novel for teens, 15 Days Without a Head, was published by Oxford University Press in January 2012. 
Originally from Birmingham, Dave now lives in Hertfordshire with his wife and family, in a house full of books and records, and writes in a corner of the attic with an anarchic ginger cat for company.

Thursday, 5 January 2012

Fifteen Days Without a Head by Dave Cousins

Publisher: Oxford
Format: ARC
Published: 5th January 2012
Number of Pages: 288
Book: For Review*
Genre: Realistic-Fiction, Contemporary, Humorous, Action-Adventure, Mystery, Romance, Psychological Thriller-Suspense, YA
Recommended Age: 12+
Contains: Mild Violence and Swearing, Alcohol References
No Drug References
Author's Site: Dave Cousins

How far would you go to keep your family together?
The sensational debut novel from Dave Cousins, winner of SCBWI’s Undiscovered voices 2010
Meet LAURENCE, fifteen years old and six feet tall.  Very soon, he’ll dress up as his mum and impersonate a dead man on the radio.
Meet JAY, his six year old brother.  He looks like an angel but thinks he’s a dog.  He’ll sink his teeth into anyone who gets in the way.
Today is Tuesday – and the next fifteen days with change the boys’ lives forever…


                                                                   Review:
What would you do to keep your family together?  Fifteen-year-old Laurence Roach is prepared to do anything to keep his little brother Jay with him: See, his Mum has problems.  She drinks a lot and smokes and works two rubbish jobs to get enough money to feed them all.  But one day, she just doesn’t come home.  To start with, Laurence isn’t overly worried.  She’s disappeared before, gone off drinking ‘til her money runs out.  But after a while, he realises this is different.  And to keep Jay with him, Laurence has to pretend his Mum is still there.  And as I said before, Laurence will do anything to keep his family together.  Including dressing up as him mum.
The next fifteen days are going to change both Jay and Laurence’s lives forever…
I started this one as soon as I got it, but had to put it aside because of other review priorities.  It’s been niggling at me ever since them.  I only left it for a little while, and I almost went round the bend, desperate to know more about Laurence.  And after reading the whole book: not disappointed!  I loved every moment, loved Laurence and Mina and especially little Jay!  I was just sucked into the story, and I had to know what happened to the boys.  It was the most amazing debut!
Laurence Roach was someone I loved straight away.  He was funny, but I also knew instantly that he’d been through so much.  He was the most amazing big brother, always looking after Jay, always having to be strong for Jay…  And Laurence really was so, so strong.  He had to deal with too much, poor boy, so much responsibility.    Laurence tried so hard to keep everything together:  constantly looking out for his mum, getting up at 5am to get her ready for her job, even doing it for her.   His biggest fear was that his brother would be taken away and he wouldn’t be able to stop it.  Laurence Laurence Roach just felt so real to me.  I feel Mina described him perfectly: “stupid – but brave”. 
Jay Roach was sweet, and both too naïve and too old.  He had a thing for dogs: he pretended to be one – mainly to bug Laurence.  Strangers loved him because of his angelic looks.  And he was just really funny – even if he didn’t mean to be!  I mean, he turned into “Scooby Doo” – Scooby bites people, not Jay!  I loved the kid, and felt so sorry for him as well.
‘Mum’ – Margret Roach, drank and smoked.  Her kids hid until ‘Happy Hours’, when the drink would make her smile and be all hugs and kisses.  She was so depressed: without drink she stayed in bed or locked herself in the bathroom and cried.  Or she got mad.  All the way through, I was asking: Why did she leave?   By the end of the book, I had my answer.  And everything I thought about her changed.
Mina was in a brass band, sort of bossy and confident.  I liked her straight away!  She was just really funny, and really nice to Laurence, as well as being smart and logical.  Oh – and slightly mad!  Plus I totally felt the Mina-Laurence chemistry!  It was a really strong and sweet romance.
But probably my favourite thing about this story was the relationship between Laurence and Jay; I loved it.  You could tell how much they loved each other: it was really touching and real.  They stuck together through everything.  Laurence always looking after Jay, who was the Scooby to his Shaggy.  Although they were close, there was also just the right amount of exasperation and bickering.  Siblings just aren’t siblings without a little fighting, after all!  Most of all, I loved how the two of them and Mina pretend to be the Scooby Gang!
I love contemporary.  The whole real-life horrors and dramas have become addictive for me.  Fifteen Days Without a Head was an amazing contemporary.  I loved the problems, how real it felt to me.  I loved seeing how an ordinary teen, with extraordinary strength, handled everything, overcame it.  I fell in love with Laurence and Jay, their relationship.  And Dave’s writing was just infectious.  It was totally teenager, without feeling forced.  More importantly, it was Laurence Roach.  I could feel him as I read, but more than that, it was emotional.  I cried (out loud) at some bits, laughed my head off at others (mainly when Jay was involved).  I just fell in love with the voice, and was left wanting more.  Somehow, Dave managed to pull off a heavy subject with a light voice, something that is insanely hard to do, and I applaud him for it.  I can’t wait to see what he brings out next.  Maybe another Roach tale…
Fifteen Days Without a Head sucked me in with the characters, the plot, the writing.  The reality.  And the fact that Laurence was just so relatable.  It was a beautiful but horrible, a moving, emotional and funny story, with lovable and relatable characters and a believable plot, Fifteen Days Without a Head is a stunning book, one I won't be forgetting for a long time, and Dave is an author to look out for!  I loved this story!

Star Rating:
5 Out of 5





Read this book if you liked:
Anything by Keith Gray
Alex Rider by Anthony Horowitz
Holes or The Cardturner by Louis Sachar


Challenges It's Taking Part In:
Happy Reading
Megan
* This book was received from OUP in exchange for an honest review