It's my turn on the Sky Beneath the Stone blog tour today and I'm delighted to welcome Alex Mullarky with her piece on animal connections in the book.
Animal Connections in The Sky Beneath the Stone
One of the first things I knew about Ivy, the main character
of The Sky Beneath the Stone, was that she would have a Border Collie named
Grendel. I grew up in a house full of rescue dogs and when I was 13 I adopted
my own dog – Snap, a Border Collie who made a funny groaning noise whenever you
rubbed her behind the ears.
I spent most of my time outside with dogs and ponies when I
was growing up, but I didn’t really know much about wildlife. It was only after
I moved to the other side of the world and started noticing all the strange and
colourful creatures over there that I realised I hardly knew anything about
native wildlife back home in Cumbria and the UK.
Ivy, on the other hand, has grown up noticing everything
around her: she can identify a bird from its song or its silhouette in the sky.
She’s the kind of person who goes out with a torch after dark looking for
badgers. She has dog-eared, well-loved guidebooks to bird and animal species.
Maybe if I’d read a book about a girl like Ivy when I was that age, I would
have been inspired to learn more about nature.
But I definitely notice now! While I was living in Australia I
trained to become a veterinary nurse, and I spent all the time I wasn’t writing
looking after everything from cats to kangaroos, managing wounds, monitoring
anaesthetics, and caring for unwell patients. Meanwhile, writing this book was
a way of teaching myself all about my native species, so that eventually I
could know all the things Ivy knows.
In The Sky Beneath the Stone, birds and other animals
move freely between our world and Underfell. Even when I was living in my
dog-and-pony bubble as a kid, those animals were my gateway to the outside
world: hopping over rocks in the river with Snap, crunching over frosted grass
first thing in the morning to feed the horses. Bonds with animals, wild or
tame, connect us deeply to nature, and that is what The Sky Beneath the
Stone aims to celebrate.
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