What do you hope children (and adults) will take away from this book?
TL: Of course, the message is about bullying and standing up for your friends, but I’m not a fan of books with heavy-handed messages (I think kids sniff these out and instinctively reject them), so I hope kids enjoy it as a fun adventure story involving unlikely characters, as much as anything else.
BF: I hope that children will recognize the power of friendship. How one small act or one small word can, and does, make an enormous difference, and could even help to make a lifelong friend. I hope that this book will remind children and adults alike to treasure the friends that they have and to remember that friends can be made in many ways, at any age, in every place.
Do you identify more with Stick or Stone? Or dare I say it, Pinecone?
TL: I probably identify with Stone, because he’s quieter and maybe not quite as bright as Stick. But I also don’t dismiss Pinecone; even though he’s a bully, we brought him back at the very end to apologize for being a jerk, because even people who make mistakes (that would be all of us), can be redeemed and forgiven.
BF: Oh, I think I have a little bit of all three in me. Stick’s pretty much a rule follower, which I definitely was as a child. Stone is sweet and fun, and basically goes with the flow, but rises to the occasion when necessary–something I strive to do. And of course, who hasn’t been prickly now and again?