Deborah Hopkinson is the author of How I Became a Spy, a new middle grade novel for kids. It takes place in London during World War II. Hopkinson's many other books include D-Day and Titanic. She lives near Portland, Oregon.
Q: How did you come up with the idea for How I Became
a Spy, and for your character Bertie?
A: One of my favorite genres to read is spy thrillers,
and in How I Became a Spy I wanted to challenge myself to write one for middle
grade readers. I came across a historical photograph of a young boy who served
as an air raid messenger, and he became the model for Bertie. Of course,
writing a mystery or spy thriller for younger readers means creating a plot
that doesn’t rely on car chases or lots of corpses, and that proved to be lots
of fun – and definitely a challenge.
Q: What kind of research did you do for this novel,
especially on cryptography?
A: I first became interested in the Special Operations
Executive, a London-based WWII organization that trained secret agents, while
writing Courage & Defiance, a nonfiction book about the Danish resistance.
I was especially intrigued by how many women served as spies. I also relied on
books on cryptography, and the account of Leo Marks, who was an SOE code maker
and helped uncover the breach of security that resulted in the deaths of secret
agents after their radio network was compromised.
Also, in 2018, I published D-Day: The World War II
Invasion that Changed History (Scholastic Focus), a nonfiction work on the
battle and the planning that led up to it. I was able to rely on a lot of the
research I did for that book. Several important real-life figures, including
Dwight D. Eisenhower (and his dog Telek) appear in both books.
Q: Why did you choose 1944 London as the setting for
the novel?
A: How I Became a Spy takes place in the months
leading up to D-Day, the invasion of Normandy, on June 6, 1944. Since most of
the planning took place in London and other parts of England, I wanted to put
my characters right into the heart of the action. The winter of 1944 also saw
the renewal of German bombing raids on London, which adds urgency to the need
to decipher the secret notebook. With the 75th anniversary of D-Day taking
place in 2019, it seems like an apt time to remember and commemorate this
seminal event of the 20th century.
Q: What do you hope kids take away from the story?
A: I believe the books we read as children can help
introduce us to genres that we may enjoy for a lifetime. Of course, while I
hope kids will like reading a mystery about espionage, it would be great if
this story might lead them to want to learn more about World War II and the
lives of ordinary people during this conflict.
Q: What are you working on now?
A: Next year, I will publish a nonfiction work, We Had
to Be Brave: Escaping the Nazis on the Kindertransport, and as I wrap that up I
am also working on one final book on World War II on resistance and rescue.
Q: Anything else we should know?
A: Students often ask if I put people I know into my
books. I don’t. But both my dogs (Rue and Brooklyn) have major roles in How I
Became a Spy. The book also includes some practice ciphers for readers to
solve.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb. Here's a previous Q&A with Deborah Hopkinson.
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