Friday 25 January 2013

OTTIE AND THE BEA BOOK CLUB Meet to talk about VIKING BOY 23 January 2013

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We were very honoured to be joined this month by Tony Bradman, who came to talk to us about his thrilling novel VIKING BOY.

Rafferty got us off to a great start by declaring it was one of the best books he’s ever read, and then Mr Bradman gave us some great insights into how he came to write VIKING BOY.

He always writes with the same kind of pen (the one he has now was new this Christmas), and like us he did a lot of reading when he was at school. Also like many of us, he absolutely loved THE HOBBIT – the dragon Smaug, the dwarves, the fighting and the chainmail. It was only later on that he found out Tolkien had specialized in ancient languages while he was at university, and particularly in the Vikings: and that so many of those elements he loved in THE HOBBIT were inspired by the old Norse legends of trolls and warriors and flying beasts.

There’s a great list on his website of his favourite Viking tales, and top of the list is Henry Treece, who was quite a famous author when Mr Bradman was our age, with dark moody pictures by Charles Keeping (who lived near to here).

Tony had always loved these stories, and the old Norse legends and sagas, so he knew he wanted to write one of his own. It took a long time – more than a year – and a lot of research.

First, though, he needed a really good notebook. He keeps the notebooks for all his books in a big cupboard in his office, and he’d brought along the one for VIKING BOY to show us. It was big, and square, with an amazing picture of a metal minotaur head on the front. Tony bought it when he was on holiday in Greece, at a place called Mycenae (we enjoyed the local connection!).

Once he had the notebook, then he could start writing. It all begins with an outline of the story: who’s doing what, chapter by chapter (which makes it sound easier than it is – sometimes, something won’t work out and he’ll have to go back and change all the plans again).

And all the time, he was researching: he had a big long list of Viking names, and for about half of the book Gunnar was called Olaf – until it turned out there was already a book called Olaf the Viking …

Some of the research sounded really fun: Tony travelled to Norway and Denmark, and visited museums. There, he could see three old Viking ships that have been dug out of the ground and restored. He even rowed a replica ship himself, with a captain who looked just like a Viking; and dressed up in Viking cloaks and helmets.

We loved hearing about how to use a battleaxe (in a figure of eight, apparently) and how heavy a shield and armour would be: to hold them and fight, you would be exhausted after about ten minutes, which shows just how strong and fit the Vikings were.

Because of this detailed research, all the elements in VIKING BOY are based on the truth, even though the story itself is all from Tony Bradman’s imagination: the farm burning was inspired by NJAL’S SAGA, his all-time favourite Norse tale, and the Vikings really did carry their wealth as silver or gold rings around their arms. Tony told us they would loot and plunder, and when they did pay for things they’d hack bits of silver off the arm rings, instead of money.

After he had told us about writing the book, Tony asked if we had any questions: we had lots!

Maia:   It was really, really gory but I really liked it. Gauk was really mean. He reminded me of someone, but I can’t remember who.

TB:      Yes, my editor was worried about the violence in the book, but if you’re going to tell a story about the Viking age, you have to have it because they were violent.
            The important thing is that you see just how awful it is: people are really upset and frightened.
            And I liked Gauk, too. When I write a story, it’s important to have characters who are mysterious I think. And a surprise which keeps you interested!

Scarlett:           The really liked the bit about Valhalla. I wondered – is that what they believed?

TB:      Yes, they believed when warriors died in battle, Odin sent the Valkyries, all in black, riding winged wolves.
            And I thought: how cool is that?
            The reason Odin collected the warriors was because at the end of time (which they called Ragnorak), they thought there would be a big battle, and Odin would be attacked by the forces of evil, so he wanted all the best warriors on his side.
            Valhalla means Hall of the Fallen
            And Valkyrie means Collectors of the Fallen.

Who is your favourite character?

TB:      Gunnar. I put a lot of myself in him. I have a soft spot for Rurik as well: the funny thing about him is he just appeared. I was writing the scene where Gunnar is brought in front of Orm, and suddenly Rurik appeared as a character. I had to stop and rethink the story up to then, to fit him in, because he was such a good character: a sort of father figure for Gunnar.
            And I really enjoyed writing Thorkel and Viglaf, and their banter.

Grace:  Will you write another book? Will it be a series?

TB:      Well I’ve written lots of other books. I wanted to do another Viking one, but I have to convince my publishers: what do you all think?

We all agreed we’d like there to be a series!

Maia:   Where do you go if you don’t die with a sword in your hand?

TB:      I’d like to know! The Vikings did believe in an underworld run by a woman called Hel (which is where our word for hell comes from). And of course there are the Nornes, who are very similar to the three fates in Greek myths.

Mercedes:        I liked the story but there were some details that were a bit too gory.

TB:      My son likes real horror stories and movies, especially with zombies. I can’t watch them, because I get really scared and they stick in my mind. Some of those passages you didn’t like, I found quite difficult as well. I didn’t want to dwell on the violence.

Victor: I didn’t picture Rurik how he was in the pictures.

TB:      The illustrator is French, and draws graphic novels for a living. He was chosen by the publisher. I know what you mean though, sometimes the picture in your head is different. I think it’s a really striking image on the cover, but in my mind Gunnar has a lot more character than that.

Alice:   I think it should be a series. The shoutline made me think it actually was a series.

Rafferty:          We’re studying the Vikings at school, and my teacher is going to read the book to the class.

TB:      That’s brilliant. I’d be happy to come in and talk to your class, too.

Rafferty:          My friend thought it was too gruesome. But I thought it was epic!

Dylan: I liked the drowning scene.

Scarlett:           I thought the Valkyrie picture was really good. The way they draw the wolves is really detailed.

TB:      Yes, actually Brunhild is another favourite character. There’s a famous German composer called Wagner who wrote operas based on the Norse myths. And Brunhilde appears in those, usually as a large lady opera singer in a horned helmet with long blonde hair in plaits. And when I first started writing the Valkyrie scenes, that was what was in my mind – but it just wasn’t working. So I went back to the original myths and found the descriptions of the giant winged wolves and then it worked much better.

Scarlett:           Vikings didn’t have horned helmets.

TB:      No, that’s right – most were circular, more like a mask or a space helmet, smooth metal with eye holes. And they wore chainmail shirts, called Burnies, which were really heavy. They were tough people.

Maia:   In HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON, all the Vikings are big lumps of muscle – are they really like that?

TB:      Well no I think they were just normal people really, although evidence shows that they were bigger and taller than other people in Europe at the time so they did look quite imposing. They were outdoors a lot and trained hard. I tend to think of them as being like a rugby team: big, muscular, and thinking they’re immortal.

Maia:   I thought Skuli was handsome, but in this picture he’s not. I liked him as a character.

Giacomo:         Can names get really long?

TB:      yes. The Vikings used to do what they still do in Iceland today: your surname is the name of your father, with ‘sson’ or ‘dottir’ on the end, so in Iceland they can trace their ancestors back really far, almost all the way back to Viking times.

Maia:   Viking girls are never mentioned, I think you could do a story with Gunnar’s daughter …

TB:      you’re right, they aren’t mentioned so much. But you should read Kevin Crosley-Holland’s BRACELET OF BONES, that’s got a Viking girl as the main character. And Marie-Louise Jensen writes about Viking girls.

Isaac:   Would they have knives, or a sword?

TB:      A lot used spears or battleaxes. Ordinary people would be more likely to have just a rusty axe, like Hogni. Only the richer people had swords.

Then, sadly, the cow in Ottie and The Bea’s cuckoo clock mooed to let us know our time with Tony Bradman had come to an end. There was just time to go round the circle and tell our favourite bits from the book:



Grace:  The Valkyries

Maia:   When Gunnar was given his father’s sword

Alice:   The Valkyries

Jake:    The fight scene

Rafferty:          The eagle feather, and when Skuli gets killed

Giacomo:         When they’re tied to the posts and have to escape

Gareth:            When the wolf men burned the long house

Dylan: When Rurik kills Starkad

Isaac: The same as Gareth

Scarlett:           Gunnar’s time as a slave, and in Valhalla

Mercedes:        When he had to cross the rainbow

Victor: When Gunnar set fire to Orm’s hall

Thank you so much to Tony Bradman for coming to talk to us about VIKING BOY. We hope you do decide to write what happens next for Gunnar and his friends!

See you all next month, when we’ll be talking about FANTASTIC MR DAHL, Michael Rosen’s biography of Roald Dahl. It will be a good chance to discuss our favourite Roald Dahl stories too.