Showing posts with label Phil Earle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Phil Earle. Show all posts

Sunday, 28 April 2013

Heroic Blog Tour: Phil Earle Quick Fire Round


I am insanely excited to have the amazing Phil Earle here today.  I absolutely love Phil's books - I don't know if you've read them, but they are insanely, addictively, ridiculously good.  But we are here for just one of his awesome books today and that is Heroic.  Heroic is absolutely amazing and I can't wait for you all to read it!!  I hope you enjoy the Quick Fire!



Hi Phil!  Thank you so much for coming today – I’m a huge fan! :)
Hiya, thanks for inviting me…

Describe Heroic in one sentence.
It’s S.E. Hinton’s ‘The Outsiders’ meets the film ‘The Hurt Locker’.

Which of the characters you’ve created is your favourite?
In HEROIC, it’s Wiggy, a fast-talking, chain-smoking wide boy. He was inspired by a very good pal of mine.

Book or film?
Film, though I’ll probably get shot down for saying it. Once a reluctant reader, always a reluctant reader…

Real life worlds or fictional ones?
Real life, definitely. There’s amazing drama in everyday lives…

Phil reading his debut, Being BillySad books or funny ones?
Can I have both? Or a mixture of? Good writers can do both with ease.

Pen&paper or computer?
Computer, always. Laptop, on the X68 bus.

Your fave book of 2012?
‘The Fault in Our Stars’, predictable I know, sorry!

2013 book you’re most looking forward to?
I think I’ve already read it, ‘Every Day’ by David Levithan. It’s an absolute corker.

Favourite all-time book?
Depends what day of the week you ask me…today it’s probably ‘Skellig’, tomorrow ‘The Book Thief’, the next day…I’m sure you get the drift.

Thank you so much again, Phil!
Pleasure, hope you enjoy HEROIC…

---
Previous Stop On The Heroic Blog Tour: I Want To Read That
Next Stop On The Heroic Blog Tour: Fluttering Butterflies


I did enjoy it, Phil, don't worry!  And I know everyone else will too!   
Find out more about Phil and his books on his site: Phil Earle or follow him on Twitter: @philearle.  :)
Oh, and check out the trailer.  It rocks!

Monday, 25 June 2012

Fortnight of Guests 2012: Phil Earle



We have Phil Earle, the author of one of my fave 2012 Contemps, Saving Daisy, here today!  (You can see my review of Saving Daisy: here!)  He has an awesome post lined up for us, one I love!   So without further ado, here is his ace post... :D


Kings of Teen

A fanfare is heard each year, for a fantastic book prize called ‘The Queen of Teen’, a chance to celebrate the best writing for teenagers.
It’s an award with great kudos, the ceremony is lavish, and it’s an accolade many authors want to win, yet this year marks a sea change for the award, as for the first time, a man (shock!) has infiltrated the ranks of the brilliant Cathy Cassidy, Cathy Hopkins and Sarah Webb. James Dawson’s inclusion has created a lot of comment, particularly on blogs across the country, and good on him I say.
The whole thing got me thinking though, about how competitive a prize for male YA writers would be, when there are so many inspirational authors out there, many of whom inspired me to open my laptop and get typing.
Here’s what my dream shortlist would look like:

    Ostrich Boys (Definitions)
  1.  Keith Gray.
A couple of years ago, “Ostrich Boys’ graced just about every shortlist out there, and little wonder. An incredible road-trip about friendship and loss, it confirmed for me everything that’s great about the author.I fell in love with Keith’s writing when working as a bookseller: ‘Warehouse’ was quite unlike anything else I’d read before, as it was so packed full of truth. ‘Malarkey’ and ‘The Fearful’ merely confirmed what I already knew: that more teens would be reading if they knew about Keith and how bloody good he is.
      
  1.  Kevin Brooks.
‘Martyn Pig’ was a game-changer for me. A book that broke all the rules, that took you into the darkest of places and never once flinched.
The books that followed never backed down either, ‘Lucas’, ‘Road of the Dead’, ‘Killing God’, ‘Naked’: all of them uncompromising, but always entertaining.
Kevin can do high concept too. ‘iBoy’ is genius. A kid gets hit in the head with an iphone and absorbs all of its powers. Brilliant. Why didn’t I think of that?


Skellig
  1. David Almond
I wish more than anything that I could write like David. His novels are never long, rarely over 250 pages each, yet he says more than I ever could in a dozen books. ‘Skellig’ and ‘The Fire Eaters’ both destroyed me, whilst ‘The True Tale of the Monster Billy Dean’ proved that he can enthral adults just as well as teens. If you ever get the chance to hear him speak, drop everything and go. He’s as mesmerising in the flesh as he is on the page.

Junk
  1.  Melvin Burgess
‘Junk’, ‘Doing it’, ‘Bloodtide’ and now ‘Kill all Enemies’ – a legacy any writer would be proud of. People often accuse Melvin of being controversial for the sake of it, but to me he means every word he says. There’s real fire and passion in the stories he tells, and that’s why I always return when his new book comes out.

    Swim the Fly (Swim the Fly, #1)
  1. Don Calame
‘Swim the Fly’ and ‘Beat the Band’ are lewd, crude and hilarious, yet there’s more than just a feeling of ‘American Pie’ to Don’s books. What I love about them is that they are HUGE of heart. The biggest compliment I can pay them is that I wish they’d been around when I was a teen. I would have thought they were the business.


Finally, what I love most about YA at the moment, is the sheer number of writers who deliver brilliant debuts, and I couldn’t finish this post without mentioning a couple of them, namely Dave Cousins and John Lucas. With ’15 Days Without a Head’ and ‘Turf’, they have announced themselves as the new generation of YA.
 They are not afraid to write from the heart, or talk about subjects others would shy away from.
That’s what makes them special, and I can’t wait to see what they come up with next…

---

Thank you SO much for taking part, Phil!  I've seen some books I'll have to read!!  :D
Everyone, if you liked this post, make sure you follow all the FoG events on Twitter at #FortnightOfGuests


---

Phil was born in Hull in 1974, and he studied English and Drama at Hull University. He worked for a year as a carer in a children’s home, then after training as a drama therapist, he worked in a therapeutic community in London, which cared for multiply abused adolescents. Then, changing tack completely, he chose a marginally more sedate life as a children’s bookseller. It was here that he developed an obsession for kid’s literature, in particular, young adult fiction.
After three years at Ottakar’s, he became a sales rep, and then a key account manager for Transworld/Random House, and is now sales director at Simon and Schuster Children’s Books.
Phil lives in South East London with his wife and three young children.



Wednesday, 18 January 2012

Saving Daisy by Phil Earle

Publisher: Puffin
Format: Paperback
Published: 5th January 2012
Number of Pages: 352
Book: For Review*
Genre: Contemporary, Realistic-Fiction, Psychological-Thriller, Mental Health, YA
Recommended Age: 14+
Contains: Strong Smoking, Swearing, Drinking, Mild Drug Reference, Self-Harming, Violence, Death
Author's Site: Phil Earle

“For as long as I could remember it was always about the three of us.
Me.
Dad.
And Mum’s shadow.”

Daisy’s mum is gone.
Her Dad refuses to talk about it.
As far as Daisy’s concerned, it’s all her fault.
As her life starts to spiral out of control, panic leads to tragedy and Daisy’s left alone.

But sometimes the kindness of a stranger can turn things around.
A stranger who desperately wants to save Daisy –
if she’ll only let herself be saved…


                                                                   Review:
I cried, I laughed, I loved, I grieved.  Saving Daisy was an emotional roller-coaster – one I adored and was sad to leave.  Or, more precisely, I was heartbroken to leave Daisy: I really, really loved her and Ade too.
Daisy never knew her Mum.  Her Dad won’t – can’t – talk about her.  In Daisy’s eyes, it was her fault.
As the fear, the misplaced guilt over her Mum’s death gets stronger and stronger; her ways of coping become violent, extreme.  But the one person she decides to trust does something they shouldn’t have, and once more Daisy tells herself she’s to blame.  Her life spirals out of control, and before she knows it, Daisy is all alone.
She doesn’t want help, doesn’t think she deserves it.  She’s bad luck in her eyes: everyone she lets in gets hurt or hurts her.  But can the kindness of a single stranger, one who is desperate to help, be enough to bring her back from brink.  Will Daisy Houghton even let herself be saved?
I love contemp books, especially ones that made me think, feel and (although I don’t know why I like it so much) cry.  Saving Daisy made me do all three of these things and more.  I loved every moment, wrapped up in Daisy’s world, her fears.  I was so completely addicted from start to finish, unable to put the book down, desperate to know what happened to Daisy…  By the end I desperately wanted to read the whole book all over again, and I need Being Billy.
Daisy Houghton was a wonderful girl: snarkily funny, film-addicted, clever…  She was also drowning in her fear and guilt.  I loved her from the word go, constantly telling her “It’s not your fault Daisy!”  She was so scared, betrayed by the ones she let it, always on the edge of everything.   To begin with I thought her guilt was ridiculous, but in her mind, she really thought she was responsible.  I felt so bad for her because I loved her so much.  She was just so strong, so stubborn and she had to grow up so fast.  I loved it when we got to see the sweet, grieving side of Daisy, rather than the guilt-ridden, self-blaming one.  She was so real to me: it felt like I was the only one she trusted…
Ade, Daisy’s key-worker, was lovely!  The moment she walked in, she made Daisy feel better, like she was “being saved”, and made me smile.  She really looked out for Daisy, was really smart, laidback, instructive without being bossy…  She was just so strong, and really understood Daisy and I loved her so much! 
Bellfield, the place Daisy was sent to “find the answer” was amazing: You had so many different characters… The overly friendly, sweet Susie, who didn’t really understand personal space.  The argumentative, snarky, slightly violent Patrick.  The constantly texting, perhaps-perhaps-not delusional, laidback Jimmy, who couldn’t quite tell the difference between fantasy and reality.  The moody, short-tempered, irrational, unpredictable Naomi.  The various careers: young, laid-back Floss; efficient, friendly, respected-by-all Bex; the lovely, kind, patient Ade.  All the different personalities made for a chaotic, volatile, never-dull place.  My favourite was by far Jimmy (Ade not included): I loved Jimmy-style therapy: watching washing machines – “sweet”!  You definitely have the “X-Factor” Jimmy!
The writing was amazing.  It was raw, emotional, powerful, addictive.  It was teenager, but the voice of a teenager who knows too much.  It was Daisy.  100%.  I adored the descriptions, brilliant but not too heavy.  I just loved the edginess, everything.  I just loved Earle’s writing.  Enough said!
I thought the plot would be straight forward from the blurb.  Boy was I wrong!  There were twists I never saw coming, plot turns I never would have thought of, character changes that surprised me.  I loved every turn, every unpredictable development.  I was completely hooked from start to finish.
What struck me straight away about Saving Daisy were the emotions.  Instantly, I was tangled in Daisy’s head, not exactly sure where my emotions stopped and hers began.  It felt like I was drowning in Daisy’s feelings, in my own.  It was overwhelming, in the very best way.  I was so wrapped up in the book, in Daisy: invested.  It was a roller coaster of emotions, the main ones pain, sadness, grief, love and sympathy.  I was almost constantly on the verge of tears, so the little bright spots, the small breakthroughs, the parts that made me smile, were even more potent.  But in some probably twisted way, I loved crying, the constant battling emotions.  Crying meant I adored this book and its characters and truly cared about what happened to them.  Because I did.
A heartbroken, guilt-ridden, scarred heroine, afraid to trust or love, a caring, always smiling care worker, with a secret of her own, and the hardest journey of all: facing your fears, you guilt and realising it wasn’t your fault, putting yourself back together…  Saving Daisy was an emotional, powerful read that left my head spinning.  I won’t forget you Daisy.  Not in a long time.

Star Rating:
5 Out of 5



Read this book if you liked:
Being Billy by Phil Earle


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