To London this week for the ceremonial dishing out of the coveted Carnegie Medal. (That's me in the back row, wearing what I'm starting to think might be the last neck-tie in captivity.) While it was nice to be nominated, I never imagined that Fever Crumb would get it, which was lucky, because she didn't. The winner was Neil Gaiman's all-conquering The Graveyard Book, to the surprise of absolutely nobody, since it's an excellent book which has already won the Newberry Medal, the Booktrust Teenage Prize, the Mrs Joyful Prize for Raffia-Work, etc. etc. I've not encountered Mr Gaiman's work before, although I know he's terribly famous and prolific (I completely stopped reading sci-fi and fantasy for about fifteen years starting in 1984, so the writers who came to prominence during that time tend to have slipped under my radar). Anyway, I didn't expect to like The Graveyard Book - ghosts and vampires being Not My Cup of Tea - but it soon won me over; it's a charming story which manages to be both sweet and macabre, and you probably don't me to tell you to dash out and buy it.
It was also good to see Freya Blackwood pick up the Kate Greenaway Prize for her beautiful illustrations to Harry and Hopper.
I've been using the down-time between drafts of the new book to start making some changes to this blog.
Back when I first set up my own website I included a section called 'Reeve Recommends', which I intended to fill with reviews and articles about favourite books and films and things, particularly the ones which I remembered from my childhood and teens. The idea was, I think, that people who'd enjoyed my books might like to know about some of my influences (apart from the obvious ones) and that younger readers who might not have come across these things could be given a nudge in the right direction. But it's so much easier to update a blog than a website that I've hardly ever added to it, and most of the reviews that I do post have ended up here.
That is (as they used to say on Tomorrow's World) until now. As well as updating this blog Ian at Graphic Alchemy has been designing a sort of sister-blog for it, which I hope to have up and running from the middle of next week. It's called The Solitary Bee, and it's looking decidedly snazzy. Henceforth all my book reviews, film-related burblings and random rants and ramblings will relocate there, leaving this blog to deal with my own books and occasional little meanderings about life here at Bonehill.
Unlike this blog, which is a strictly take-it-or-leave-it affair, the Bee will welcome and indeed encourage comments, and if it proves popular I may invite other people to contribute material too, though I'm not sure yet how that will work.
Meanwhile, things seem to be going well on the new facebook page, so thank you to everyone who's left comments and questions there. I'll post a link to The Solitary Bee there and everywhere else I can think of as soon as it's ready for viewing.

Up in the north of Fever Crumb's world, beyond the Fuel Country, where the nomad empires roam with their herds of mammoth and reindeer and their ramshackle rolling castles, the last month of summer is known as the Scrivener's Moon. That's the season Wavey Godshawk chooses to undertake an expedition to a mysterious old-tech site which is supposed to be connected with the Scriven race, and it's also the title of my next book, which will hopefully be published in spring 2011.

Sometimes you can judge a book by its cover. I picked up Paolo Bacigalupi's novel Ship Breaker purely because of its striking dust-jacket, on which the title appears to have been scratched into a rusty boiler by a patient maniac, and I'm happy to report that the book more than lives up to it.

If you noodle around on the internet for long enough when you ought to be writing novels you can discover all sorts of things, and recently I turned up an article about a film so obscure that I've always assumed I was the only person who remembered it.
To London this week to record a short video piece for Booked Up, the scheme which aims to get a free book into the hands of all Year Seven children. This year the list of books they can choose from will include Fever Crumb, so I had to do a quick 30-second spiel about it for their website, and also read an extract. Talking to cameras isn't something I enjoy or feel that I'm much good at, but the reading was fun. I'm reading The Lord of the Rings to Sam at the moment and a chapter of Tolkein per night seems to exercise the reading-aloud muscles wonderfully. I'll post a link to the videos when they are available, as long as they're not too embarrassing.

I've been pleased to see the number of 'followers' of this blog slowly growing over the six months that I've been writing it, and now (unless we've lost anybody while I've been typing this) it's finally passed the 50 mark. Thank you all for signing up; you're much appreciated and I hope you find something of interest here from time to time.
While I was probing the dark mysteries of facebook's privacy settings the other day - prompted by the discovery that everything I posted there seemed to be being re-posted to something called an 'interest page' - I sort of inadvertently set up a 'fan page' for myself. I'm not sure how much use it will be, and I don't want it to compete with the splendidly-titled 'Mortal Engines Is A Work Of Genius' page (see the link in the sidebar) but since it's there I suppose I should see if it's any use. At the moment it consists of a picture of me looking a bit glum, but if you'd like to leave any comments or queries I'll do my best to respond.
