I had the
pleasure of meeting Odette at the GMRD Book Fair this past April.
Always with
a warm smile, it was a pleasure to meet her.
She has kindly
accepted my invitation to be our guest this week.
Odette has
chosen to feature the latest installment of her middle grade adventure series, Follow
the Goose Butt to... This time, it is Prince Edward Island. Odette
is co-author and illustrator for the series.
Odette Barr is a retired teacher who enjoys many
hobbies and interests. She has drawn, painted and created art as long as she
can remember. Although Odette has always enjoyed writing (mainly nature-themed
nonfiction), she only discovered her love of writing children’s fiction in
2014. Odette is a former interpretive naturalist with the Canadian Wildlife
Service and Parks Canada—she takes great delight in wandering through natural
habitats and is constantly awestruck by the wonders of the natural world. Much
of her writing is inspired by nature.
Odette is co-author and illustrator for the Camelia
Airheart children’s adventure series: Follow the Goose Butt to Prince
Edward Island (Acorn Press, Fall 2023), Follow the Goose Butt to Nova
Scotia (Chocolate River, 2018) and Follow the Goose Butt, Camelia Airheart! (Chocolate
River, 2016). She and her co-authors also wrote a picture book, Take Off to
Tantramar (Chocolate River, 2017), which was the winner of that year’s Alice
Kitts Memorial Award for Excellence in Children’s Writing at the NB Book
Awards. Odette placed second in the 2019 Pottersfield Prize for Creative
Nonfiction, resulting in the publication of her memoir, Teaching at the Top of
the World (Pottersfield, 2020), which documents a decade of teaching Inuit
students in the territory of Nunavut.
Odette and her partner, YoAnne, share their idyllic
lives with a 5-yr-old standard poodle, in a cedar log home on the
Northumberland Strait shore.
Working Title: Camelia
is never at the head of the flock. She has a faulty GPS—goose positioning system—and
she is easily distracted. This means she gets lost...a lot! Therefore,
Camelia’s beak is always supposed to be as close as possible to the back end of
the goose in front of her. The title for each of the middle grade chapter books
reflects this reality : Follow the Goose Butt, Camelia Airheart!; Follow
the Goose Butt to Nova Scotia; and Follow the Goose Butt to Prince
Edward Island.
Synopsis: Follow
the Goose Butt to Prince Edward Island is the
third book in the Camelia Airheart adventure series. In the first book
of the series, we follow the loveable young Canada goose throughout her New Brunswick adventures after she loses
track of her flock one spring on the way home to Branta Bog. In book two, Camelia
travels throughout Nova Scotia with her Aunt Tillie, a reporter for the CGBC
(Canada Goose Broadcasting Corporation), and finds herself in all sorts of
predicaments after losing sight of her aunt on more than one occasion! In Follow
the Goose Butt to Prince Edward Island, Camelia’s adventures continue as she
ends up circumnavigating the coastline of the pastoral island. While
attending a Gathering of the Geese in Cape Jourimain, New Brunswick, Camelia
flies over the Confederation Bridge to help Billy the blue jay find his way
back to the red island. Despite being easily distracted, having difficulties
with directions and much trouble with landings, Camelia manages to explore the
Island’s coastline and she meets many new friends throughout her travels.
Whether it is golfing with Gilbert the great blue heron, discovering sands that
sing with Josie the jellyfish, or causing chaos at Green Gables, Camelia has an
exciting time and learns many important life lessons along the way. Most
importantly, she discovers that her goose positioning system may not be as
faulty as she has always believed!
The Story Behind
the Story: Odette
writes the Camelia Airheart stories with co-authors, Colleen Landry and Beth
Weatherbee. The character of Camelia Airheart came about in June of 2014 while
Odette, Colleen and Beth travelled together at the end of the school year to a “Born
to Read” information session in Saint John. All three were full-time NB
teachers at the time. All three women were interested in writing for young
people, and Odette was also interested in doing illustration work for
children’s books. As they brainstormed story ideas in the car they came up with
an iconic Canadian animal (the Canada goose) that loved to fly and discover new
places, yet had no sense of direction and was easily distracted. Ironically,
the three teachers got hopelessly lost in Saint John trying to find the library
in Market Square. Eventually they got to where they needed to be. Odette,
Colleen and Beth had such fun dreaming up Camelia they decided to write the
story together.
Read
an Excerpt below.
Visit Odette’s FB page HERE.
A couple questions
before you go, Odette:
Scribbler: Can you tell
us about the perfect setting you have, or desire, for your writing? Music or
quiet? Coffee or tequila? Neat or notes
everywhere?
Odette: I am fortunate
to have an idyllic setting in which to write. I live in a beautiful log home on
the edge of the Northumberland Strait near Cap-Pelé, New Brunswick. My desk and
laptop are situated on the second-floor loft overlooking the great room and several
large windows that face the sea. I draw my energy and serenity from
nature. The forest and bird-life I see from my back windows, the swaying trees
viewed in the side windows, and the rolling waves (or drifting ice cakes...season-dependent!)
out front help ground me when I need to look away from the page for a mental
break.
When writing Camelia
Airheart stories with my co-authors, we take turns meeting at each other’s
place to do the writing. We generally create our stories via 3-hour sessions of
a nonstop cacophony of chatter, singing and theatrical performances that almost
always involves food and (ahem!) wine.
Conversely, when writing
my own stories, I require absolute quiet. I love music but I also love
to sing and if I know the lyrics (which I almost always do...) I cannot help
but sing along! I have tried listening to instrumental and classical music at
times but I end up turning it off eventually. My writing desk is always neat to
begin with but a collection of notes on bits of scrap paper and post-its appear
soon thereafter. Any mug of coffee I set on my desk gets ignored—once I start
writing I am focused for at least 3 hours. I force myself up after that to
stretch my legs. It’s a good thing my body tells me I have to head back down
the stairs and take a long “movement” break!
Scribbler:
What’s
next for Odette Barr, the Author?
Odette: I have a few
projects started but the one that I am most keen on at the moment is a young
adult novel. It is a coming-of-age story that follows a feisty young Scottish
immigrant to Canada through her early years, aged 7 through 19. Morag McEwin is
fiercely proud of her Scottish roots and considers her parents’ decision to emigrate
to Canada as a temporary one. She thinks of the first few years in this new
country as a prolonged vacation and documents her Canadian experiences of ‘fitting
in’ through the writing of a story journal. Morag intends to delight her
friends and extended family with these stories when she returns to her highland
home in the Hillfoots. Morag possesses a strong sense of self. She knows who
she is and what she wants...or, at the very least, what she doesn’t want! She
comes to the realization that she likes girls a lot more than boys, for one
thing! And, much to her surprise, she develops a strong affection for her new
Canadian home. In fact, she doesn’t recall when she stopped dreaming of
returning to Scotland. The novel ends as Morag finishes her first year at university.
She is happy and hopeful and ready to embrace whatever it is that life presents
to her.
Excerpt: Follow
the Goose Butt to Prince Edward Island:
“...Camelia
waddled towards Green Gables. No one really paid attention to the Canada goose
on the grass. No one really paid attention to the goose walking through the
gate. However, when the goose butted ahead of everyone in line and sauntered
through the front door, people really paid attention. And they really, really paid attention when the goose
beelined for the parlour, shouting, “Anne! I’m your kindred spirit…where are
you?” Of course, all they heard was honk, honk, honk, honk, honk!
Half flying,
half jumping around, Camelia wreaked havoc from one room to the next. She
toppled the fern from the piano in the parlour. She skidded across the dining
room table, sending all the china teacups to the floor with a crash. She
clipped the kitchen lamp with her wings, leaving it swaying wildly in her wake.
She knocked several bottles of raspberry cordial off the pantry shelf.
Everyone was
aghast. People yelled, babies cried, and some pushed and shoved their way out
of the house. It was bedlam! Someone grabbed the broom from behind the
fireplace and attempted to shoo the Canada goose away. Books tumbled from
shelves, pictures flew off walls, and chairs landed where they fell. Last but
not least, a straw hat with braids was swept from its owner and…guess what? It
landed directly on Camelia’s head. Of course, tourists were busy snapping
pictures of this strange event. Nothing like this had ever happened at Green
Gables!
Camelia
headed for the stairs. She flew up to the second floor and found herself in the
bedroom of Anne Shirley herself...”
Thank you for being our guest this week, Odette. Wishing you continued success with your stories.
And a BIG thank you to our visitors and readers.
Feel free to
leave a comment below.
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