Times Colonist

B.C. children’s author builds Magnificen­t career

Ashley Spires says her head is spinning as books spark film and TV series

- CASSANDRA SZKLARSKI

There’s something oddly prescient in the fact that children’s author Ashley Spires named her 2014 book The Most Magnificen­t Thing. The girl-focused hit has led to even more magnificen­t things for Spires of late — an award-winning short film based on The Most Magnificen­t Thing, the launch of a YTV series about an adventurou­s cat named Binky and the first book in a new series about a science-loving fairy.

Then there are those plans for a Magnificen­t sequel, but that’s not slated to appear until 2022 — Spires says she’s simply too busy with other projects until then.

“It’s so exciting and my head is spinning,” Spires says of a whirlwind of activity that has her criss-crossing the country for various gigs.

On the phone from her home in Delta, Spires traces a winding career path that began with a childhood love of animation and morphed into a love of books. She detoured into a string of day jobs before settling into a writing career and now edges into an appreciati­on of the creative possibilit­ies of film and television.

A 22-minute adaptation of The Most Magnificen­t Thing airs Friday on YTV. Narrated by Whoopi Goldberg and featuring the voice talents of child actress Lilly Bartlam, known only as Girl, and The Newsroom co-star Alison Pill as Mom, it follows the book’s premise of a creative youngster stymied by efforts to build something great.

“This allows us to see the girl a little bit more, it definitely allows us to see the dog and his antics more,” 41-yearold Spires says of the format.

“And getting to meet Mom as well and getting to expand on the world of women who create and where the inspiratio­n comes from.”

The film has spent the better part of a year touring nearly 60 film festivals around the world, collecting 19 awards along the way.

Spires says the original story was borne from the frustratio­ns and selfdoubt she battled while trying to pull together another book project in 2013.

“I did all the things the girl did — I tried to change it here and change it there and come at it from different angles and nothing was working and I fell apart and I cried and honestly wanted to quit,” recalls Spires, who studied photograph­y at Vancouver’s Emily Carr University of Art and Design and then illustrati­on at Sheridan College in Toronto.

“And then I realized that the feelings that I was experienci­ng were things that I had seen in many of the children that I go and speak to in schools when they’re trying to do something just right and it doesn’t turn out.

“The next day, I got on the phone with my editor and pitched that idea to her in place of the other one I was trying to work on.”

The “labour of love” has sold more than 500,000 copies around the world, has been printed in 19 languages and teachers are building curriculum­s around it, Spires says. “It blows my mind.”

Her new book, Fairy Science, centres on a fairy who doesn’t believe in magic and similarly champions the value of welcoming more girls in the fields of science, technology, engineerin­g and mathematic­s.

The skeptical Esther prefers facts and evidence to wands and potions, and when a tree in their forest starts wilting, she is dismayed by fairy attempts to revive it with talismans and spells.

“She’s endlessly frustrated with the silliness of everyone around her,” Spires says.

“It’s a way to get little girls interested in science and also give them some value to their own voices.”

Spires’ Binky Adventure series of graphic novels debuted as a Treehouse series on Sept. 7, exactly 10 years after the first book launched. If it goes to a second season, Spires says she’ll be writing some episodes, in addition to keeping a close eye as consultant.

This, too, is an intensely personal project — the human characters are based on her sister and nephew, and Binky on their cat.

The dog is inspired by Spires’ dog Gordon, a Pomeranian-Sheltie cross, while the character Gracie is based on Spires’ cat Gracie, who died a few years ago after fighting cancer for almost a year.

“In the books and the TV show she gets to live forever — a promise I made to her at the time of her passing,” Spires says.

There are more cats (Spires has five), and more books — two of Spires’ asthmatic cats inspired a comics series on her social media that will soon be turned into a graphic novel series, and she’s begun work on a sequel to The Most Magnificen­t Thing.

Like a lot of magnificen­t things, it took a while to determine the right approach.

“I just needed to find the right story,” she says.

“I think I might have it.”

 ?? NELVANA ?? Short film The Most Magnificen­t Thing, based on Ashley Spires’ book, airs Friday on YTV.
NELVANA Short film The Most Magnificen­t Thing, based on Ashley Spires’ book, airs Friday on YTV.
 ?? Delta-based Ashley Spires says she just needed to find the right story. ??
Delta-based Ashley Spires says she just needed to find the right story.

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