Author THE GIRL IN BETWEEN and THE WORDS THAT FLY BETWEEN US.

Joined October 2017
14 Photos and videos
sarah carroll retweeted
The Case for Childhood Boredom. A strange thing has quietly disappeared from childhood. Boredom. For most of human history, boredom was unavoidable. Childhood unfolded in long, uneven stretches of time that nobody bothered to organize. Summer afternoons drifted by without a schedule, car rides lasted hours with nothing but the passing landscape, and children spent entire days outside with only a loose instruction to be home before dinner. And something curious tended to happen in those empty spaces. Children invented things. A stick became a sword, and then a fishing rod, and then, without warning, a wand capable of defeating imaginary monsters. A patch of grass became a battlefield. A cardboard box became a spaceship. Entire worlds emerged out of nothing more than idle time and a restless mind. Neuroscientists now understand that the brain behaves differently in those moments. When external stimulation fades, a network deep in the brain called the default mode network begins to activate. It is the circuitry associated with imagination, memory integration, and abstract thinking. When the mind has nowhere specific to go, it begins to wander, and while it wanders it starts connecting dots that rarely meet during structured activity. Creativity often lives in that wandering. Modern childhood, however, has undergone a quiet redesign. Empty time has been steadily replaced with organized activity. Sports leagues, tutoring sessions, music lessons, enrichment programs. Even the small gaps between activities tend to be filled with screens engineered with extraordinary precision to eliminate boredom the moment it begins to appear. Parents worry when boredom surfaces. A child announcing “there’s nothing to do” can feel like a problem waiting to be solved, a signal that the environment lacks sufficient stimulation. But boredom is simply the brain beginning a different mode of operation. The mind starts generating its own stimulation instead of consuming someone else’s. Look closely at the childhoods of unusually creative people and a pattern emerges. Steve Jobs spent long stretches wandering the neighborhoods of Silicon Valley, exploring electronics shops and experimenting in garages. Albert Einstein famously described hours of quiet daydreaming as a child, staring out windows and imagining physical problems in his head. J.K. Rowling began inventing elaborate stories long before she had any audience for them. Each of them had something that has become surprisingly rare. Psychological whitespace. Modern childhood often resembles a corporate calendar. Every hour accounted for. Every activity supervised. Every quiet moment quickly filled by a glowing rectangle designed by teams of behavioral scientists whose job is to make sure attention never drifts into silence. And yet many of the qualities parents hope their children will develop—creativity, resilience, independence—tend to emerge from precisely the conditions we have learned to eliminate. Unstructured time confronts a child with a deceptively simple problem. What should I do next? That question trains the brain in powerful ways. It forces the mind to generate ideas, to tolerate the mild discomfort of inactivity, and eventually to invent something interesting enough to fill the gap. Children who rarely encounter boredom often struggle to resolve it on their own. They wait. They look outward for stimulation rather than inward for possibility. Childhood boredom, in that sense, becomes a kind of workshop. It is the place where imagination practices building things from nothing, where the mind experiments freely without instruction, and where curiosity slowly learns how to entertain itself. Left alone long enough, the mind begins to wander. And wandering minds have a peculiar habit of discovering entirely new worlds.
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Replying to @SarahCrossan
@SarahCrossan and @chennessybooks do you guys or your followers have recs for books (short novels with pics) for 6 to 8 Yr olds pleeeeeease.
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(To be read to my kids, not by them, so can be novel lenght)
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Finally, I can read it! Was annoyed last week when I went to read it and it wasn't published yet. Congrats Sarah! (PS no one should be this prolific... us mere mortals cannot keep up)
Hard day at the office #HeyZoey 🚀
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Are there any book festivals or events in May/June/July/August that I can attend online? Would appreciate a link here please! (There seems to be loads in Sept & Oct.) Also, if there's anything on around Dublin this summer, pls let me know. Thanks.
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sarah carroll retweeted
This week's #BookOfTheWeek links to #NationalConversationWeek and is @SarahCAuthor powerful book The Words that Fly Between Us, a story about finding the strength and words to face your fears. Find it in the library #SuASEngage
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Wow! Another nomination Aoife, congrats!
A privilege to see #TheRedBirdSings on the shortlist for the McKitterick Prize. Huge congrats to all the shortlisted authors 🔥, and big thanks to the judges, @Soc_of_Authors, @ViragoBooks & @Nelle_Andrew.
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I read Under The Hawthorn Tree as a girl and it has stayed with me to this day. @SarahCrossan Where the Heart Should Be isn't just a masterfully constructed and gripping read full of humanity but it is as vital now as a novel about the Great Hunger was in my youth.
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The age-old question: is what I've written insightful literary prose, or in fact, pretentious rubbish? Hmmmm. Select all. Delete.
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#AntiBullyingWeek Great to see this 👍
Check out our display including brilliant titles from @TamsinWrites @BlogLibby @WestcottWriter @Kimslater01 @BooksandChokers @SarahCAuthor @stewfoster1 plus our fantastic #bookoftheweek by @JSW_writer❤️📚#AntiBullyingWeek #MakeANoise
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sarah carroll retweeted
Check out our display including brilliant titles from @TamsinWrites @BlogLibby @WestcottWriter @Kimslater01 @BooksandChokers @SarahCAuthor @stewfoster1 plus our fantastic #bookoftheweek by @JSW_writer❤️📚#AntiBullyingWeek #MakeANoise
Join us for #AntiBullyingWeek and #OddSocksDay from 13th-17th November 2022🧦 Too often we are silent when we see bullying take place. So this year, let's #MakeANoise about bullying and what we can all do to put a stop to it 📢 Find out more:
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"Imagining what might happen if one's circumstances were different was the only sure route to madness." Amor Towles, A Gentleman in Moscow
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Whoop!! So we'll deserved! Congrats 👏 👏 👏
There have been many excellent Irish debuts this year. And I hugely appreciate this nomination for #TheRedBirdSings as @AnPostIBAS NEWCOMER OF THE YEAR! Please do vote for the Irish books that brought you 🔥 this year 👇!
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I have entered my 4th year of #LongCovid. Sigh. While symptoms have varied in severity, I have kids and they've caught and passed on Covid to me at least 3 times, so I always relapse. Right now I'm as bad as ever. Chronic fatigue, brain fog, PEM, anxiety, weird head sensations.
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So that's why I've no new books out. I'm working on one, in theory, but not right now. Head's too fuzzy.
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Can't work, exercise, socialise. My main focus is to conserve the energy I have so I can interact with my kids, and to try not stress as it makes it worse. Oh, and without medication I'm woken up to 20/30 times a night.
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sarah carroll retweeted
Kudos to the window of my local bookshop @ravenbooks for promoting Irish authors and bringing bigger issues to us all. @Sheela_no_gig @sarahgbooks
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sarah carroll retweeted
🐠We’ve had over 200 submissions so far and only halfway through the week… incredible and bravo to everyone who has entered and all who are still considering! Can’t wait to get reading! 🐟
The Guppy Open Submission window is open! If you have a wonderful middle grade novel and are unpublished and unagented, why not send in to this competition which has seen these amazing winners! Open from now till Friday at 5pm GMT guppybooks.co.uk/news-and-ev…
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sarah carroll retweeted
Thrilled to see #TheRedBirdSings included in this roundup of best books for your holliers! Claire Kilroy's #SoldierSoldier blew me away. And @sarahgbooks #Service is burning a hole in my shelf 🔥. Summer's looking good 😎🏖️!! tinyurl.com/2rpd4392

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sarah carroll retweeted
Breast cancer is in the news again with Amy Dowden's diagnosis. So perhaps a good time to ask: Can we stop it with the fighting/battle metaphors? It isn't a case of the strongest people getting over cancer and the weaker ones dying. It just isn't. #breastcancer #survivor
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sarah carroll retweeted
Honest author moment: I’ve been promoting Children of the Sun relentlessly over the last few weeks with interviews, articles and reviews. It publishes in two days and despite all the incredible reviews, Waterstones will not be stocking it in their stores.
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