![]() ![]() ![]() Some of the best events we did were in Texas and California, where a lot of people either had made the journey north or knew someone who did. We also thought when we came to America on tour that we would be talking about a European problem of course, we found ourselves talking about the people coming up through Venezuela, through Mexico, into the U.S. The second thing is that after the success of Illegal - which is bittersweet because it’s a pity we have to write about that kind of thing - we actually thought.ĮC: Yeah, we thought by the time it came out that the European governments would have a handle on these folks forced to cross the Mediterranean, that the issue would be solved. We’ve all written enough books to know a good idea when we hear one. Nobody comes to the job with a big ego, thinking that he has to put his stamp on it. We have a good time working together because from the very beginning it is always about the project. The first and main thing is that the three of us - Andrew, Giovanni, and I - have been friends now for nearly ten years. ![]() Roger Sutton: What brought the two of you back for more?Įoin Colfer: A couple of things. Talks with Roger is a sponsored supplement to our free monthly e-newsletter, Notes from the Horn Book. To receive Notes, sign up here.Īfter interviewing Eoin Colfer about IllegalI’m happy to welcome him back, joined this time by co-author Andrew Donkin, to talk about their follow-up, Global, again illustrated by Giovanni Rigano. ![]()
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