Melinda
Szymanik has been a writer of children's fiction across a wide range of ages
for over fifteen years with many publications to her name. Her first novel was
completed during an NZSA mentorship and she is now herself a mentor for this
programme. Her picture book The Were-Nana (Scholastic, 2008),
illustrated by Sarah Anderson, won Children’s Choice at the 2009 NZ Post
Children’s Book Awards, and she also won Librarian's Choice at the 2014 LIANZA
Awards for her junior novel A Winter's Day in 1939 (Scholastic,
2013).
Recipient of the University of Otago, College of Education, Creative New
Zealand Children's Writer's Residency in 2014, Melinda was also granted a
University of Otago Wallace Residency at the Pah Homestead in 2015. She recently
completed a Diploma in Children's Literature from the University of Canterbury
(2015), following on from a Bachelor of Arts majoring in English Literature
awarded in 2004.
Melinda
has been on the NZSA's Youth Mentorship Selection Panel twice, convening the
panel in 2015. She blogs regularly on books and writing, runs writing workshops
for children and adults, and regularly visits schools as part of the NZ Book
Council's Writers in Schools Programme. Her latest picture book, Fuzzy
Doodle, illustrated by Donovan Bixley will be published by Scholastic
in June.
Interview questions:
Can you please tell us the positive, sad, and interesting things that occurred while you wrote the book.
1). Something positive was learning so much
more about my father’s childhood. I knew some of the major events but writing
the book helped me join the dots between them and I felt closer than ever to my
dad.
2). Something sad was knowing how bad
conditions were and how much he had had to endure.
3). Something interesting? That so many
Polish people were deported out of Poland by the USSR and became this
incredible diaspora that even reached New Zealand.
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