“Once
the world has been created, the fantasy author still has to bring the story's
characters to life and unfold a gripping plot. That's why good fantasy is such
a hard act to bring off.” – Tony Bradman
Born
in a suburb of London in January of 1954, Bradman gravitated to reading
fantasies while still in primary school; started writing when he was in college
(at Queens’ College, Cambridge where he earned his Master of Arts degree); and
became a fulltime writer of children’s lit. and fantasy books in the 1980s. Today, he is the author of more than 50 books
for children, led by his wildly popular Dilly the Dinosaur series
(which has sold over 2 million copies worldwide), and of numerous fantasy books
and books of poetry. He also is a popular
speaker on writing and reads to school groups on a regular basis.
Bradman,
who was elected to the Royal Society of Literature in 2024, said books like the
Thomas the Tank Engine series and then The Hobbit got him hooked
into reading and gave him the impetus to one day become a successful writer.
“I
loved words and language, but the key thing for me then – as it is now – was
story,” Bradman said. “I love the feeling of being drawn into
a story, the delicious sense of tension that comes from wanting to know what is
going to happen next and almost being afraid to find out. That happens when you
read the best stories – and as I found out, it can happen when you write a
story of your own, too.”
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