Interview with author Ruth Amanda

  1. Please introduce yourself so that the readers will get to know you better.

Hello, my name is Ruth Amanda. I am a writer, illustrator, and adventurer who never quite grew up! I see stories everywhere…careful! You may end up in one! I have three grown up sons, two grown step-sons, and a granddaughter. I live with a very patient Dave, several geckos, random snails and bugs, and a couple of stray cats who wander in and out of our lives of their own choice who we call Oscar and Squeak. The best parts about being an author/illustrator are that I get to play all day and call it “research”, and that I can do my job anywhere which means I can work at the beach if I want!

  1. What is your inspiration behind your book “Geckos in the Garden”?

Well, I was out one afternoon with my iPhone, crawling under the shrubberies (as one does…) trying to get a good picture of one of the many geckos that run around near our home. A young family on their way up to the community pool was going by, and one of their two small boys asked me what I was doing. I explained that I was trying to take a picture of a gecko and pointed it out. He plopped down beside me to look at the gecko and his brother joined us soon after. As kids do, they asked oodles of questions which I did my best to answer until their parents got a little impatient about getting them up to the pool and took them away. I continued hunting for, and photographing, geckos for the rest of the afternoon. I knew there was a story somewhere there but I didn’t know what it was exactly. The next morning, eating cereal out on the patio, I saw a flicker out of the corner of my eye and turned to look. A gecko under the railing on the patio was watching me. It was probably watching some nearby bugs hunting for its breakfast, but forgive my poetic license! The first verse of what would become “Geckos in the Garden” sprang into my head. “In the morning, after breakfast/in the garden, in the sun,/I can see my little neighbour./It’s a tiny gecko. One!” The rest, as they say, is history.

  1. When did you realize you want to be an author?

I have wanted to be a writer since I was a kid. I entered writing contests. I poured my heart into school essays and short stories. (Admittedly a lot of those involved unicorns and horses, but I like to think I’ve broadened my horizons since then!) My parents encouraged it, but not as a career choice, so I veered into administrative jobs and bookkeeping, as well as parenting. I spent hours goofing around with my kids rewriting the words to “That’s Amore” to something much sillier, inventing different endings to their favourite books, and drawing and colouring on the walls. After many ups and downs in my life, I rediscovered in my late forties that writing and art were things that made me happy and that I wanted to explore further. My very patient husband, Dave, who came into my life in 2018, has encouraged this and provides me with all sorts of support, editing, word ideas, and eye rolling.

  1. Please tell us something about your book “Geckos in the Garden”?

What to say? It is an interactive adventure told in rhyme, in which readers are invited to hunt for the geckos in the illustrations. I am both the author and the illustrator, and a recent Kirkus Review said “The illustrations are the most impressive part of the book—bright, brilliant paintings with creatures cleverly hidden…” I was extremely flattered!

  1. For which age group is your book “Geckos in the Garden” suitable for?

This book is meant to encourage imagination, nature, and a love of books. Counting is incidental to it. The audience is really meant to be 3-7 year olds. Our three year old granddaughter loved it, and spent a lot of time hunting for and counting the geckos in the illustrations.

  1. What is your favorite Quote?

I have many, but quite possibly “Be yourself; everyone else is already taken.” (~Oscar Wilde). I am also partial to this quote from Albert Einstein: “Creativity is intelligence having fun.”

  1. What do you like the most about your country?

Loaded question, I have TWO countries.

I am a proud Canadian and I love it for the space, the wildlife, and the adventure. I have lived in places from Ontario to British Columbia, visited the Maritimes and Quebec on numerous occasions, and have been fortunate enough to visit two of its Territories and to have lived in one of those! My time living in the far North in Nunavut, just below the Arctic Circle, is precious to me for helping me find myself again and for the wonderful ways it broadened my horizons. There are a couple of stories in the works based on the Arctic…

My other country is Barbados, where I currently live. This tiny island in the southern Caribbean has a huge heart! I love the people, the food, and learning all about my latest home. I am particularly fond of the geckos (actually Barbados Green Lizards) and watching the monkeys! We go adventuring whenever possible and love to explore the many facets of this island.

  1. What suggestion do you want to give to parents of little readers regarding a reading habit?

I believe reading should be an every day thing, but it needs to be engaging for your child. If your child is reluctant to read, choose books that are on topics they are interested in such as dinosaurs, bugs, ponies or outer space. Reading is not just a life skill, it’s also a way to transport yourself to other places and times. It’s a way to put yourself into a character you admire. I was a girl who loved horses, so my parents brought me book after book on horses. Factual books, fiction books, and books on training horses were all made accessible to me. When I moved on to other interests, my parents helped me find books that led me down new pathways of excitement. With my own sons, we read everything! Though two of them were very focussed on fictional adventures, one son loved “how to books” and engine manuals. Reading is reading—let them read what interests them!

  1. What does literary success look like to you?

Literary success, for me, is the smiles and giggles my books evoke in their readers. It’s inspiring a child to explore their environments and see the world in that magical way that we forget as adults. It is my granddaughter insisting, “Again!” when we get to the last page.

  1. Lastly, who is your inspiration in life and why?

I would say my mother was my biggest inspiration. No matter what life threw at her, she overcame it and pushed through. She followed her principles even when some of us thought she was wrong to do so. She raised us all with a very firm hand but encouraged our interests and creativity. She never gave up regardless of whether the issue was her health, her relationships or her children. She passed away in 2021 and my greatest sadness is that she did not get to see me publish my first book, or provide feedback on the stories and art I am creating. Even when the feedback was not what I wanted to hear, I always valued it. Her voice is still the one in my head.

Buy Geckos in the Garden on Amazon

Leave a comment

Design a site like this with WordPress.com
Get started