{"id":5168,"date":"2022-02-25T22:27:23","date_gmt":"2022-02-25T21:27:23","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/svjmedia.nl\/internationaljournalism\/?p=5168"},"modified":"2022-02-25T22:27:23","modified_gmt":"2022-02-25T21:27:23","slug":"the-magykal-world-of-angie-sage","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/svjmedia.nl\/internationaljournalism\/5168\/the-magykal-world-of-angie-sage\/","title":{"rendered":"The magykal world of Angie Sage"},"content":{"rendered":"
\u201cI think I got a phone call at midnight from Katherine, my publisher and editor, saying you\u2019re number one on The New York Times children\u2019s hardback section,\u201d Angie Sage, author of the book series Septimus Heap, recalls.<\/p>\n
Septimus Heap is a seven-part children\u2019s fantasy book series written by British author Angie Sage. The story is set in the far future in an imagined Northern Europe with wizards, castles, dragons, alchemy and much more. The first book Magyk was published in 2005 and the last one Fyre in 2013. Looking back at that time Angie remembers it being hectic, with a contract to publish one book a year and touring around the US, but she is mostly grateful.<\/p>\n
\u201cI remember once being in a school library and kids came in. They were arguing about what Jenna would do. They were arguing about characters I\u2019ve written like they were their friends and I just thought \u2018Wow. This is unreal.\u2019\u201d<\/p>\n[aesop_quote type=”block” background=”#ffffff” text=”#b358c6″ align=”left” size=”2″ quote=”"I wanted it to be something girls could read and see themselves in in a good light."” parallax=”off” direction=”left” revealfx=”off”]\n
Powerful women <\/strong><\/p>\n Growing up Angie recalls not having many girl heroes in literature to look up to.<\/p>\n \u201cThere were one or two. But they were always very girly and sort of fighting against constraints of being a girl. I don’t recall reading any female heroes who were completely free just to be there.\u201d<\/p>\n For the world of Septimus Heap Angie made the deliberate choice to include many women in power. The most prominent one being Marcia Overstrand, the extraordinary wizard. For people who have not read the books you could probably describe her as the wizard boss.<\/p>\n \u201cI felt a bit bad that my title character was a boy. But there you are. I like the name and I thought it sounded good. I was determined to make up the balance. I think it’s probably a fairly evenly balanced book, but we just notice it because of that.\u201d<\/p>\n \u201cI wanted it to be something girls could read and see themselves in in a good light. Not always having to do this double thing that I always had to do of putting yourself into the shoes of a boy.\u201d<\/p>\n