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Interview: Keren David

A change of identity for mum turned author

April 8, 2010 10:03
090410 keren

By

Simon Round,

Simon Round

3 min read

Two years ago, Keren David was a mother of two young children, just returned from a spell living in Holland and looking for something meaningful to do. A friend suggested a course on writing for children.

Now, David has had her first book, When I was Joe, published, her second is written and will come out at the end of the year and she is working on her third. Yet the whole process happened almost by accident. "A friend of mine told me about the course at City University. Somehow, writing for children seemed doable. Because my children were quite young I'd read a lot to them. I'd always quite fancied writing a book."

At the end of the course, David was given a 1,500-word writing exercise. She had seen a news item about a boy who had gone into a witness protection scheme and thought she would base her character on that. "The next week at the course we had a plot-planning exercise. We had to get into pairs and weave the characters together. I was paired up with the course tutor. I had my witness boy, she had a disabled athlete girl and we weaved it into a plot, which people on the course were very nice about it. So I decided to have a go at writing it."

The idea might have come to nothing but she heard about a second workshop course for those who had completed the City University sessions, and she enrolled. David, a former staff journalist at the JC and still a regular contributor, decided to use the three months of the course to finish writing the book, which is aimed at children of 12 and above.