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Philip writes in a shed in his
garden. He always writes three pages a day making sure that he has
written at least a couple of lines on a new page, so that he never
has to start with a blank piece of paper. He finds tipping his
chair, tapping his desk with a ruler and tying up his fingers with
little bits of string useful for concentration!
Philip's father was in the RAF and so he went to eight
different schools all over the world before he was 11. In those
days, most long-distance travel was by sea, so Philip spent a lot
of his childhood on big ships, and he was even given the protection
of the seas. Much of his secondary education was in Wales, a
country renowned for its love of story-telling, which may have had
an influence on Philip's later career.
Philip always loved telling stories, and when he was
at school he entertained his friends by reading ghost stories to
them - or by making up his own. He started to write his first novel
the day after he finished his final exams at Oxford. He thought it
would be quite easy but found it was much harder than he had
expected.
Philip's first job was as a teacher. He retold the
Greek myths and legends to his pupils and also wrote plays for
them. Later he adapted some of his plays into books, as in the case
of Spring-Heeled Jack, Count Karlstein and The Ruby in the
Smoke.
Philip is now the author of over a dozen books,
including the prize-winning and best-selling His Dark Materials
trilogy that begins with Northern Lights. The third book in the
trilogy, The Amber Spyglass, won the Whitbread Book of the Year
2001 - the first children's book to win Book of the Year in the
history of the award!
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