Alice, nine,
Cardiff
Darren why did
you decide to
write spooky
stories?
Darren:
When I was a
child I loved
scaring myself.
I watched loads
of horror movies
and horror, and
read lots of
horror books. It
is fun to be
scared like when
you go on a
roller coaster
ride.
Sean, 10,
Harrow
Is there
anything in
particular that
inspired you to
become a horror
novelist?
Darren:
The writer that
had the biggest
influence on me
was Stephen
King. I read
Salem's Lot when
I was about 11
or 12 which is
all about
vampires taking
over a town and
that kicked off
loads of ideas.
Harry,
eight, South
Northamptonshire
Why did you
choose scary
stories instead
of mystery
stories or
something like
what Enid Blyton
writes?
Darren:
I read loads of
Enid Blyton
books when I was
younger, and
there are
mysteries in my
books. The
current one,
Trials of Death,
is like a big
mystery story. I
add a few gory
gruesome pieces
just to spice it
up.
Hazel, 10,
Binfield
Do you like
horror movies
where there are
loads of guts
and gore and if
yes, did these
help in
inspiring you
with the books?
Darren:
I am not that
interested in
guts and gore to
be honest. I
prefer something
which creates
suspense like
the Sixth Sense,
which was one of
the best horror
movies I have
seen recently, I
am not that
interested in
blood or loads
of murders. I
think it is
important to
create an
horrific
atmosphere, it
is much more
important than
visual effects.
Alex, 10,
London
What gives you
your ideas for
all your stories
and how do you
turn them into
something good?
Darren:
When you are a
writer you have
got ideas going
through your
head all the
time. Writing
books is a lot
like a jigsaw
puzzle. At the
start you have
got loads and
loads of ideas
in your head and
you pick out
some and get rid
of others. It is
just a case of
putting ideas
together and
working out ways
to connect them
and create a
story. It is a
long process,
sometimes ideas
come quickly and
you start books
the next day.
Other times you
can be thinking
about a book for
months or even
years and it can
take that long
for all the
ideas to fall
into place and
for the book to
take shape.
Ruth, 11,
Coventry
Is it easy
writing stories
like the ones
that you write?
Darren:
Any story is
difficult to
write because
you have got to
come up with all
the characters,
the dialogue and
describe the
setting. I think
horror comes to
me more
naturally than
other styles of
writing. If I
was to write a
romantic novel I
wouldn't know
where to begin,
but with horror
I know what is
scary about the
world because I
loved horror
when I was
young. I was
always thinking
about horrific
things.
Sarah, 13,
Sheffield, and
Roisin, Scotland
Are you planning
to write any
more Darren Shan
books in the
future?
Darren:
The saga of
Darren Shan will
run to about 20
books in total,
so there are
more on the way.
Lizo
And can you give
us any hints
about what might
happen?
Darren:
I don't want to
give too much
away but I will
say that most of
the series
centres around
the war between
the vampires and
the vampaneze.
It is called the
War of the Scar.
Joe, 13,
Halesbury, and
Jack, nine,
Tunbridge
When is the next
Darren Shan book
is going to be
out?
Darren:
We are bringing
them out every
four months for
the next few
books. Book six
is out at the
start of
February and is
called the
Vampire Prince.
Lizo
Is book six
going to answer
the big
cliffhanger in
book five?
Darren:
Yes. Books four,
five and six is
one big story
split up into
three parts. I
loved
cliffhangers
when I was
younger, I used
to watch those
old Flash Gordon
serials and
stuff like that,
where you know
each one would
end in a big,
big cliffhanger.
I loved that and
I read lots of
comics as well
and there are
lots of
cliffhangers in
comics, so I
wrote book five
with a huge
cliffhanger and
book six wraps
up the Vampire
Mountains
storyline.
Debbie,
10, Swansea
Where did you
first get the
idea of the
freak show?
Darren:
I wondered how a
vampire would
travel around,
and I came up
with the idea of
a circus. A
vampire could
sleep by day
protected by the
circus helpers,
go out at night
and feed and
then move on
with the circus.
But rather than
making an
ordinary circus
I thought it
would be more
logical for a
vampire to mix
with other
creatures of
magic so I came
up with the idea
of a Cirque de
Freak. And the
Cirque de Freak
is actually
based on real
life freak shows
of long ago. I
just took the
stereotypes of
the performance
and gave them
all a magical
twist. Long ago
most freak shows
had a bearded
lady and in my
show there is
also a bearded
lady, but she is
not just a woman
with a beard,
she is a woman
who can grow a
beard and then
suck the hairs
back into her
face. All the
freaks rather
than being
people you would
laugh at they
are people you
actually admire.
Jenny, 15,
West Midlands
Do you believe
in vampires or
half vampires?
Darren:
I do believe the
Vampires as
described in my
books could be
real. I don't
believe in
creatures who
come back from
the dead and
kill people and
are affected by
crosses and holy
water, I don't
believe they
exist, but I
think vampires
are just like
humans who live
for a very long
time, who are
very tough and
who just need
blood to
survive.
Alan, 12,
Broughton
Why do you like
vampires?
Darren:
I always loved
horror, but I
had a special
fascination for
vampires. When I
lived in London
aged five or six
I had a big
poster of
Dracula on my
bedroom wall. I
am not sure what
the fascination
is, it is just
something really
spooky about
these people who
only come out at
night and have
to drink blood
to survive.
Lizo
Why do you think
there is such
fascination with
vampires all
over the world?
Darren:
Most monsters
are like
Frankenstein.
They are created
in a laboratory
or they are
ghouls and some
form of magic
creates them.
With vampires it
is something
that you could
imagine
happening. They
are fantastical
creatures but
you could
imagine yourself
being turned
into a vampire
and then facing
the dilemma of
having to drink
blood to
survive. The
most fascinating
part about
vampires is the
actual need to
drink blood.
Most horror
books they don't
actually dwell
on that, it is
just that
vampires are
evil and they
never actually
enjoy drinking
blood. What I
think is
interesting
about vampires,
is that if you
have to drink
blood to survive
you would you be
able to do it?
You know you
weren't evil,
that you were
just the same as
you are now, but
with this need
for blood. If
you had to do
it, would you be
able to? I think
everybody likes
imagining dark,
dark things,
dark stories and
vampires, I
don't know if it
is just
something hooked
into the
imagination of
people and they
are not letting
go.
Lizo
Do you think
vampires have
always got a bit
of a bad press
over the years?
Darren:
Definitely. I am
trying to write
about vampires
as realistically
as possible.
Rather than make
evil monsters,
they are just
creatures. They
are like humans
only different,
they need to
drink blood to
survive, but
don't have to
kill the living.
I am trying to
write
realistically
about how people
like these would
live if they did
exist.
Naseema,
West Ham
Are you really
into spiders?
Darren:
I was actually
always rather
nervous of
spiders, which
is why I decided
to use one
inside the
Freak. If you
are scared of
something
yourself it is
quite easy to
write a horror
story about it.
But at the
launch party of
Cirque de Freak
we had live
tarantulas that
I had to hold.
Since I held the
live tarantula I
have been
perfectly OK
with spiders.
Rosie,
nine, Uckfield
What has got you
so interested in
handling bugs
and other
creatures like
that?
Darren:
I never used to.
It was something
I made up for
the books. But
since then I
have become more
interested in
spiders, they
are actually
very
interesting. I
know spiders
look creepy and
nasty but they
are actually
very nice
creatures, they
are very
fragile.
Lizo
Do we get to
find out more
about Madam
Octa's origins
in the books?
Darren:
We don't find
out about her
origins, but
there are more
spiders in the
Vampire Mountain
books and Madam
Octa has a big
role to play in
book six.
Mark, 10,
Croydon
What is the most
disgusting
animal that you
have ever had to
hold?
Darren:
Well I haven't
held that many
animals. I have
held a tarantula
that I was quite
nervous about at
first, but I was
OK after a
while. I am
nervous about
holding a snake,
I have got a
slight phobia
about snakes. I
am not very fond
of them, I might
be a bit
squeamish if I
had to hold a
snake, but so
far I haven't
been asked.
Rhiannon,
12, London
Do you have any
pets of your own
and if so what
are they?
Darren:
I'm afraid I am
a very boring
pet, I have got
a cat at the
moment. I used
to have dogs but
no rats and
spiders.
Rachel, 11
I think you are
a great author
Darren and I
would like to
know if you
could recommend
a spooky pet so
I can scare my
friends to bits.
Darren:
I think a rat is
a good pet
because a lot of
people are
afraid of rats.
But rats are
actually very
intelligent
creatures and
are perfectly
safe. If you
have got a pet
rat, not a wild
rat, you won't
get diseases off
it. I think I
would recommend
a rat, a nice
white rat with
big red eyes.
Brionny,
12
Do the stories
you write ever
make you scared
on dark nights
when you are all
alone?
Darren:
Not really no.
It is very hard
to scare
yourself when
you are writing
a story because
you know
everything that
is going to
happen. One of
the great things
about horror is
you don't know
what is going to
happen. You know
a writer or a
film is able to
spook you by
throwing
something
unexpected at
you. But of
course when you
write the book
yourself you
know everything
in advance. I
turn to Stephen
King and Clive
Barker to scare
myself.
Dan, 10,
Sheffield
What is the most
spooky thing
that has ever
happened to you?
Darren:
Nothing very
spooky has
happened to me.
The scariest
thing that ever
happened to me
was when I was
on a really old
roller coaster
in Ireland and
as I set off I
was sitting by
myself in the
back seat, the
safety bar
snapped open and
it wouldn't stay
closed. I had to
spend the whole
ride just
gripping on to
the bar in
front. It was
quite spooky,
but the lucky
thing about it
was that I had
been talking to
somebody a few
years before and
I knew that the
force of gravity
actually keeps
you in your
seat. So I knew
as long as I
stayed sitting
down I would be
safe but it was
still quite
scary.
Helena,
14, Sussex
Have you based
any of the
characters in
the books on
real live people
who you know?
Darren:
Small bits of
people do creep
in, what I tend
to do is take
bits of people
and mix them up.
But one
character who is
based on a live
person is Evra
Von the snake
boy, now Evra
has a really
long tongue
which he can
stick up his
nose and wriggle
around and I
have a young
cousin who can
actually do
that, that is
where Evra in
fact came from.
Lizo
Lots of people
want to know is
there any news
on the Cirque de
Freak films at
the moment?
Darren:
Well the last
time I heard
what they are
planning to do
is take the
first three
books and
combine them so
take bits out of
each book and
mix them up into
one big story
line so you
would have Sam
Gresque, you can
have a Merlock
you could have a
Mr Tiny, there
would loads
going on in it.
Now there is no
sign of a script
yet, we are
still working on
that. There is
no guarantee
there will be a
movie but they
did renew the
rights this
year, when they
first bought
they had it for
18 months and
now they have
bought for
another 18
months so they
are still
working on it.
But there is no
definite news
yet.
Lizo
But hopefully in
the next few
years we will be
able to go and
actually see it
at the cinema.
Darren:
They do seem
genuine, they do
want to make
one, so keep
your fingers
crossed and
hoping.
John
There are so
many books in
the Darren Shan
saga, how do you
manage to keep
track of
everything that
you want to
happen?
Darren:
It is quite
tricky, what I
do is I have the
overall story
line in the back
of my head but I
don't plot it
out book by book
until I actually
come to each new
book. So for
instance, I
don't write the
plot of books
seven or eight
until I finish
book six.
It is quite
difficult, what
I have to keep
doing is go back
over my notes
because I keep
plot notes for
each book and so
I keep flicking
through the
notes, sometimes
I read bits of
the earlier
books, just
re-familiarise
myself with
characters and
the plot line.
It is quite
tricky but it is
also a lot of
fun.
So I have
been writing, I
wrote the first
part of Circus
Freak four years
ago. So for four
years now I have
had all these
story lines
bouncing around
inside my head
and you know it
is going to go
on for at least
another six,
seven, eight
years, so I am
going to be
working at it
for about that
amount of time.
So everything is
bouncing around
and I have got
loads and loads
of ideas but it
is tricky but it
is also a lot of
fun.
Rachel
Is Steve Leopard
ever going to
come back and if
so what might
happen?
Darren:
That's a
question I get
asked most
often, and yes
the answer is he
does return in
book eight. He
is grown up when
he returns, he
is pushing 30
and I am not
going to tell
you whether he
is good or bad,
you are going to
have to wait
until book eight
to find out
Lizo
The other one
that seems to
fascinate many
many people is
Mr Tiny. Do we
ever find out
more about him
he seems a very
eerie, eerie
character?
Darren:
Very spooky and
mysterious
character. We do
learn more about
him as the
series
progresses. He
keeps cropping
up in the books
and whenever he
crops up it is
usually a sign
that something
bad is going to
happen.
Mark, 11,
Cardiff
Are you jealous
of JK Rowling's
success?
Darren:
No. I have read
the first three
Harry Potter
books and I love
them and I think
it has been good
for writers
generally
speaking. The
success of the
Harry Potter
books has raised
the children's
literature,
there are more
and more people
are buying
children's books
now and they are
taking it more
seriously.
But even
apart from all
that I think
writers tend not
to be jealous of
other writers.
Because every
writer starts
out as a reader,
I started out as
a reader of
books, I loved
reading books
which is why I
got into writing
them and so I
always love to
find a really,
really good
author, you know
I love reading
the Harry Potter
books. You know
I don't sit
there thinking
'Oh she is
selling more
copies than me',
I sit there
thinking 'When
is the next one
out so I can
read it?'
Lizo:
And is she a fan
of your books?
Darren:
Apparently yes.
She did read
Circus de Freak
when it before
it came out and
she said it was
a compelling
book. So yes she
wrote me a fan
letter which is
great, I have
got a fan letter
from JK Rowling,
one of my prized
possessions.
Roysin,
14, Scotland
Are you planning
on writing books
about any other
characters?
Darren:
I have written a
couple of other
books over the
last couple of
years. The
trouble with
bringing them
out is because
the Darren Shan
books have come
out so fast
there isn't
really time at
the moment to
bring another
book out under
the name of
Darren Shan. But
also because I
write the saga
of Darren Shan -
a true story -
that also makes
it tricky to
bring out any
other books
under the Darren
Shan name. So
what I might
have to do is
use a pseudonym,
a different
name, to bring
out other books
under. I am
definitely
writing other
books and will
hopefully be
publishing them
over the next
few years, but I
might have to
use a different
name for them.
Lizo
And they also
want to know did
you always want
to be a writer
when you were
young?
Darren:
Yeah, even when
I was five, six
years old I
always knew I
wanted to write.
I loved to do
stories, I loved
writing stories
at school and
reading
mysteries out in
class. I used to
daydream about
being other
stuff, you know
about being a
footballer or a
singer or I
thought about
being a vet at
one stage
because I have
always liked
animals but a
writer was what
I always wanted
to be.
Lizo:
Now I am sure we
will have lots
of people logged
on who also want
to be writers
when they are
older. What kind
of advice would
you give them?
Darren:
The main advice
I can give a
writer is the
only thing you
have to do is
write. Now it
sounds very,
very simple but
it is that
simple. All
writing is is
writing, you
start out as a
writer when you
are very young.
If you stick
with it you
learn more as
you go along,
every time you
write a story
you learn from
it and the more
you write the
better you get.
It takes a lot
of time and a
lot of hard work
but that is all
that is
involved. If you
are determined
to be a writer
and you don't
give up, you
will succeed.
Amy,
Birmingham
Is it true that
garlic can keep
vampires away?
Darren:
Not my vampires.
Garlic just
gives them bad
breath.
Lizo
So what are your
vampires scared
of, running
water?
Darren:
No there is a
legend that if a
vampires dies in
running water
its soul will
remain trapped.
That is where
the legend of
not being able
to cross running
water comes
from. They are
not actually
afraid of much
except sunlight,
sunlight will
kill them. So
that is the only
real thing that
they are afraid
of, crosses
don't hurt them,
holy water
doesn't hurt
them but yes
sunlight will
sizzle them to
the bone.
Lizo
Now the vampires
you write about,
they have very
noble traditions
don't they? Was
that very
important to
you? You know
things about the
way that they
die and what
happens to them
when they get
older?
Darren:
Absolutely,
especially as
the books go on
you begin to get
the sense that
the books four
to six - the
Vampire Mountain
trilogy -
because I wanted
to do these as
believably as
possible, and
the way they
exist is they
are like Samarai
warriors or
Celtic Warriors
from long ago.
They live apart
from mankind,
but we live by
very strict
laws, they have
set their own
rules, they are
not bound by the
laws of man so
it was important
to me that they
had their own
laws.
And a lot of
what I am doing
on this series
is trying to
imagine how
these people
would live, if
you were
somebody who
could live for
five or six
hundred years
and were much
more powerful
than humans, how
would you set
laws to govern
your life? And
that is
something that
recurs about the
series as we go
into a lot of
vampire history,
vampire culture,
the laws they
live by and also
what happens
when those laws
break down,
which is what
happens in books
seven to nine
with the start
of the War of
the Scars.
Lizo
Lots of children
want to know do
you have titles
for all the
books yet?
Darren:
I have titles
for the first 10
because I have
written the
first 10 books.
And actually on
my website I
have revealed
the titles of
books seven,
eight and nine
but that is far
ahead as I have
revealed so far.
Tom
As the books are
incredibly
popular here in
the UK, where
else around the
world are they
popular?
Darren:
In Japan it is
selling a huge
amount. I think
it is really,
really good and
successful over
there at the
moment. The
first two have
just been
released and I
have been
getting loads of
e-mails from
Japan. In
America Circus
Freak made the
top 10 in the
children's list,
it is also doing
very well in
Germany I think.
It has been
released in lots
of other
countries as
well that I
haven't heard
back from most
of them yet.
Writers are
often the last
to hear about
whether a book
is doing well or
bad in a
specific
country. But I
know definitely
in Germany,
Japan and
America it is
doing very well
and here in
Ireland of
course, Trials
of Death is
currently number
two in the Irish
charts.
Rosie
Are you looking
forward to your
trip to America?
Darren:
Yes, it is going
to be very busy.
I have got two
weeks there and
I will be doing
an event every
single day but
yes it is the
first time I
have gone to
America and
hopefully it is
going to be
interesting to
see what the
America readers
are like because
I have met lots
of readers here
in England and
Ireland and in
Scotland. I have
done a lot of
travelling over
the last couple
of years so it
will be
interesting to
see if the
readers over
there are
different and
what they like
about the books,
how they respond
to the books.
Georgina
What is the best
part of being a
writer?
Darren:
For me the
actual best part
is meeting the
readers because
when you write
you write by
yourself, you
know it can be
quite lonely
being a writer.
But when your
books are
successful and
you get to go
around to meet
people who have
read the books
and who have
enjoyed the
books I get a
real buzz out of
having them ask
questions.
Having them get
so interested in
the characters,
that has
definitely been
the highlight
when I get to go
around and meet
people who have
read the book.
Lizo
Do you ever get
asked really odd
questions?
Darren:
The strangest
question I have
been asked was
actually last
week. I was in a
library and one
boy asked me are
you a big fan of
Rolf Harris?
This just came
out of the blue
because I write
horror books so
I was trying to
imagine, what
does Rolf Harris
have to do with
horror books? I
was a bit
confused for a
few seconds
until I realised
he actually
meant Thomas
Harris, who
writes the
Hannibal Lecter
books.
Lizo
There is a
difference.
Darren:
A slight
difference yes.