Scottish Daily Mail

How my son’s TOY PIGGY inspired me

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JUST in time for Christmas, there’s a new heartwarmi­ng page-turner from one of the world’s greatest storytelle­rs.

The Christmas Pig by J. K. Rowling tells the story of Jack, a boy who has lost his most treasured toy, Dur Pig (DP for short), a small toy pig made of the same material as a soft towel, with shiny black plastic eyes; the toy pig Jack has loved since he was very young.

But Christmas Eve is a night for miracles and lost causes, a night when all things can come to life — even toys. So, it’s when Jack is given a replacemen­t pig — Christmas Pig, or CP for short — that the adventure really begins.

The Christmas Pig takes Jack on a journey through the magical Land of the Lost, as we reveal in this exclusive extract alongside some of the dazzling illustrati­ons from the book, drawn by the hugely popular artist Jim Field.

The Christmas Pig will publish tomorrow. But first, author

A VERY PERSONAL TALE: EXCLUSIVE AUTHOR Q&A

Can you tell us a bit about the inspiratio­n behind the story? What inspired you to write The Christmas Pig?

ALTHOUGH the story is invented, the initial inspiratio­n came from a real toy, or rather, pair of toys.

My son David’s favourite, can’tgo-to-bed-without-him toy when he was little was a pig just like the one in the story, made of soft towelling material and filled with belly beans (although the real life toy isn’t called Dur Pig. that’s my invention).

David was prone to hiding this pig in all kinds of places, so bedtime was sometimes put off while we tried to track the pig down. At one point I got so worried that David was going to lose his pig for good that I bought a duplicate just in case.

one day, while poking around in a cupboard, three-year-old David found the replacemen­t pig by accident, declared him to be his original pig’s brother and kept him, too, so they’re both still with us.

the story was inspired by my dread of David losing his beloved pig for good, and gradually I became interested in what it would mean to be a replacemen­t toy, knowing that you couldn’t ever be quite what the original was, with all its many associatio­ns and memories. Slowly, the land of the lost started to take shape.

Did you have a treasured toy growing up?

MY EQUIVALENT of Dur Pig was a large, blue-eyed, pink and white teddy bear, which was bought for me by my grandparen­ts. I ended up calling him henry, after one of the trains on thomas the tank engine. he’s still with me, bald in places due to my habit of picking at his fur when I was very small.

Where did you write the story?

In My writing room in the garden, but I remember mapping out the land of the lost while our family was on holiday. My children were playing on the beach and I was huddled beneath a sunshade, drawing maps and thinking through the logistics of the world.

How different was it plotting out the Harry Potter series? Is there any magic in The Christmas Pig?

I’M A great planner and I knew exactly what was going to happen, and where, and how, before I started writing the Christmas Pig. the Christmas Pig is a magical story, but in a very different way to harry Potter. you’re entering a world that runs according to its own peculiar magical laws, and there is magic around Christmas eve, but there are no wands and wizards.

If you had to describe the character Jack in

three words, what would those three words be? And what three words would they be for the Christmas Pig?

JACK is brave, loving and a little lost, though he finds himself through his adventure with the Christmas Pig, and I’d describe CP in exactly the same way.

Do you lose things? What’s the worst thing you have ever lost?

I LOSE things constantly. It’s one of the things that irritates me most about myself. the worst thing I ever lost was my mother’s engagement ring; it still makes me sad to think about it.

Why do you think beloved toys and items are so important for children (and adults)?

PSYCHOLOGI­STS call these treasured toys ‘transition­al objects’, which can soothe children and act as a comforting stand-in for a parent when needed. that’s quite a clinical way of looking at it, though.

I see them as invested with a certain kind of magic. they may come to us formed, but we remake them in our own image, investing them with characteri­stics of our own and idealised personalit­ies.

We look after them and they look after us. that special bond is what I set out to explore in the Christmas Pig.

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 ?? ?? J.K. Rowling reveals how this festive tale was inspired by the day her own son David, then three, found, by accident, a replacemen­t to his favourite pig toy while he was ‘poking around’ in a cupboard. . .
J.K. Rowling reveals how this festive tale was inspired by the day her own son David, then three, found, by accident, a replacemen­t to his favourite pig toy while he was ‘poking around’ in a cupboard. . .

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