Russian dolls
Michelle Harrison Michelle Harrison

Frequently Asked Questions

Please read these before getting in touch:

I’m a teacher keen to inspire my students to read. Can you send a message or material for my class/library display?

Thank you for being so committed to getting children reading! I’m happy to send a message on a postcard if you get in touch via the contact page. I’ve also got a printable download on what reading means to me which would be perfect for your display. You can find it here. There are also posters available for download here and here.

I wrote a fan letter to you but haven’t received a reply. Will you get back to me?

Yes, I promise I will. If you’ve sent a letter to me at my publisher they can take a while to reach me. If you’ve emailed me I normally reply within a week or two. Please make sure you add a return address to letters and check your email address is correct on the contact page, or I won’t be able to reply!

Do you visit schools?

I’ve given many talks and creative writing workshops in schools and festivals all over the UK. I talk about my life as a writer including my inspirations and path to getting published, with readings from my work and Q&A sessions. My workshops are usually focused on creating a thrilling story opening or outline by asking pupils to brainstorm their own magical object. Like the vast majority of authors that visit schools I charge for my time, as it involves planning, travel and time away from my writing.

Some general information about school visits:

  • I do not have a DBS. One-off visitors to schools are not required to have them. In any case I ask that at least one member of staff is present at all times during my presentations/workshops with pupils.
  • If a tube strike occurs on the day of a central London school event, the event will have to be postponed.
  • The more preparation that’s put in prior to my visit, the bigger the impact it will have on your students. I have visited many schools over the past 15 years, and those which have organised the day well and enthused the children will inevitably benefit more than schools which sadly see an author visit as a box ticking exercise.

If you are a teacher or librarian and would like to invite me to your school or would like some more information, please contact Authors Aloud, who manage my school events.

If you are a festival organiser, please email me using the form on the contact page and I will connect you with my publisher/s.

What’s the order of the ’13 Treasures’ series?

  • The 13 Treasures
  • The 13 Curses
  • The 13 Secrets

One Wish is a prequel that can be read independently of the trilogy.

Will there be another book in the ’13 Treasures’ series?

I’d never say never, but for now I want to focus on other ideas.

What are you working on now?

I’m currently editing a second book about my time-twisting twins, Merry and Spike, which is due out in the UK in 2026. Expect a trip to sunny Crete, a thrilling Medusa legend and a museum of cursed objects. I’ll announce the title soon.

I have a great idea for a book. Can I send it to you?

I get many, many emails and letters from readers who want to share their ideas with me. Some of these ideas are brilliant and I’ve been hugely impressed with them, as well as the generosity of the person sharing it. I feel lucky to have fans like you! HOWEVER . . . I really can’t use these ideas, even if they’ve come from ideas/characters I created. Firstly for legal reasons (see more about this below, on me reading unpublished work). Secondly, for moral reasons. I’m a writer because I love coming up with ideas and figuring out plot twists. I would feel very uncomfortable (and wouldn’t be a very good writer) if I used someone else’s ideas. What I would love is if you took these ideas and used them to create stories of your own. Ideas are special and unique to you – use them well.

Do you mind if I write fan fiction stories using your characters/settings?

No, I don’t mind as long as it’s for your own entertainment and not for profit. Please note that I cannot read any fan fiction, however.

Can you recommend any books that are similar to your stories?

Yes! All of the following are among my favourite books.

If you enjoyed the ‘Pinch of Magic Adventures’, try:

The Aveline Jones books by Phil Hickes:-

  • Book 1: The Haunting of Aveline Jones
  • Book 2: The Bewitching of Aveline Jones
  • The Vanishing Trick by Jenni Spangler
  • Sisters of the Lost Marsh by Lucy Strange

For fans of 13 Treasures and One Wish I highly recommend:

  • The Merrybegot by Julie Hearn
  • The Crowfield Curse by Pat Walsh
  • Poison by Chris Wooding

If you enjoyed Unrest then try:

  • Leaving Poppy by Kate Cann
  • The Everafter by Amy Huntley
  • Ghost of a Chance by Rhiannon Lassiter
  • Dark Matter by Michelle Paver
  •  The Haunting by Alex Bell

If you enjoyed The Other Alice:

•  Inkheart by Cornelia Funke

•  Bad Blood by Rhiannon Lassiter

Other favourite books for children:

The Shark Caller by Zillah Bethell

The ‘Picklewitch and Jack’ series by Claire Barker

The ‘Squishy McFluff’ series by Pip Jones and Ella Okstad

Malory Towers/St. Clere’s series by Enid Blyton

The House With Chicken Legs by Sophie Anderson

The Secret Garden and A Little Princess by Frances Hodgson Burnett

The Snow Sister by Emma Carroll

A Monster Calls by Patrick Ness and Siobhan Dowd

The Last Bear by Hannah Gold

A Kind of Spark by Elle McNicoll

The Skylarks’ War by Hilary McKay

The Goldfish Boy and The Rollercoaster Boy by Lisa Thompson

For young adults:

The ‘Noughts and Crosses’ series by Malorie Blackman

Birdy by Jess Valance

The Long Weekend by Savita Kalhan

Frozen Charlotte by Alex Bell

For adults:

We Need to Talk About Kevin by Lionel Shriver

Rebecca by Daphne Du Maurier

Into the Darkest Corner by Elizabeth Haynes

Dark Places by Gillian Flynn

A Year at the Star and Sixpence by Holly Hepburn

Wideacre by Philippa Gregory

The Undomestic Goddess by Sophie Kinsella

Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine by Gail Honeyman

The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society by Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows

The Night She Disappeared  and The Family Upstairs by Lisa Jewell

The Thursday Murder Club series by Richard Osman

Verity by Colleen Hoover

Where the Crawdads Sing by Delia Owens

My Evil Mother by Margaret Atwood

Behind Her Eyes by Sarah Pinborough

Kala by Colin Walsh

The Midnight Feast by Lucy Foley

When did you decide you wanted to be a writer and why?

I’ve always loved stories, and I soon found that it was as much fun telling them as well as reading them. I started writing short stories when I was about fourteen, and by the time I left school I knew I wanted to be an author and illustrator.

Where do you get your ideas from?

Everywhere. A Pinch of Magic is loosely based on an Essex legend I stumbled across. It’s said there will always be six witches in the village of Canewdon, and whenever one of them dies a stone falls out of the church walls. I adapted this into the curse in A Pinch of Magic: every time a Widdershins girl dies, a stone falls from Crowstone Tower. (And Crowstone Road is the name of a street not far from where I live!)

In 13 Treasures I based the character of Tanya on my niece, who, according to a fortune-teller, would grow up to be psychic. I became interested in fairies after studying them in art at college, which gave me the idea of a girl who has the ability to see fairies.

Hangman’s Wood and the ‘catacombs’ are real; a small area of woodland near to where I grew up.

The Thirteen Treasures is a legend I came across. The list of objects and their powers changes from one reference to the next. I decided to make up my own list of treasures, using the legend as a starting point.

Many of the ideas come from common fairy lore such as changelings and the deterrents Tanya uses to keep fairies at bay, though I’ve added a few twists of my own.

Do you believe in fairies?

My books are fiction. To me, fairies exist in stories, art and my imagination – although sometimes I might like to pretend that the little scuffling sound under a floorboard might be a fairy, just for fun. That’s not to say you shouldn’t believe in them, if you want to. People believe in many things they can’t see: God, the Devil, ghosts. How ‘real’ something is to you often depends on how much belief you choose to put into it.

Where do you go or what do you do when you’re looking for inspiration?

I get inspiration from many things: newspaper stories, pictures, old places and objects – museums are good – or things people do and say. Sometimes, being bored is the best inspiration to write a story. I had many of my best ideas when I worked in jobs that didn’t require much thought, therefore my mind was constantly wandering.

What did you do before you were an author?

I’ve worked as a barmaid, an art gallery attendant, and a children’s bookseller for Waterstones. In one summer break from university I worked in a bakery, surrounded by sticky buns and cream cakes, which was torture as I love anything sugary. My most recent job was in the editorial team of a children’s publisher, where I worked for three and a half years. I now write full time.

What were you like at school?

I got on with most people, and worked hard in lessons I enjoyed such as English and Art. I always hated Maths, and was terrible at it. I never put much effort in until the final year (I wish I had now, perhaps I wouldn’t need an accountant – oops). Instead I had fun making up rude songs about teachers. Geography isn’t a strong point, either, as I dropped it to do an extra hour of art each week.

What was your favourite childhood book?

I loved Enid Blyton’s Famous Five stories. They were the books that made me into a reader. But my favourite book was probably The Witches by Roald Dahl.

What’s the best thing about being an author?

I love most things about being an author: getting paid to daydream and make things up, inventing worlds and characters that exist in my head, and especially hearing from my readers.

What’s the worst thing about being an author?

Paperwork that takes you away from writing (such as expenses and tax). Also, having a good idea, but having to change or abandon it because another author wrote something similar already.

Have you met any other authors?

Yes, I’ve met Malorie Blackman, Emma Carroll, Cathy Cassidy, Sam Copeland, Abi Elphinstone, Phil Earle, Hannah Gold, William Hussey, Anna James, Jennifer Killick, Elle McNicoll, Lisa Thompson, S.F. Said, Nick Sharratt, and Jacqueline Wilson to name just a few.

Do you illustrate your books?

The chapter illustrations and maps inside the UK and the majority of the foreign editions of the books are mine. There are a few exceptions, the US editions being one.

Will you read my story/poem/manuscript and give me your opinion?

I’m really sorry, but no. I get so many requests to read people’s work that if I read them all I’d have no time to write my own books. There are also risks to me legally if someone decides that something I might write in future bears similarity to something they sent me to read, so it is safer for me not to read any unpublished work. The ONLY exception is of course if you are a writer who is having a book published (not self published) and would like me to consider endorsing your book with a quote, in which case please approach my agent. **Due to the current number of requests I am accepting very few at the moment, so please do not be offended if your request is turned down.**

Any other work or ideas that are sent to me will be deleted, unread.