Gulf Today, Staff Reporter
Six may be a little too early for most to get used to fame but not for British Bella-Jay Dark, who published her first book at the age of five last year to become the Guinness World Record holder for being the youngest female author.
Talking at the Sharjah Children’s Reading Festival (SCRF 2023) on Tuesday on her first trip out of the UK, she not only won hearts but also her way with words while posing in front of cameras and interacting with her young and old fans at ease.
“Everyone wants to sit next to me in class now after my teacher hung a newspaper article about me on the noticeboard. So that’s one thing that’s definitely changed since I became an author, but I am not stopping here. I just want to keep writing and writing,” said Bella-Jay, who is now working on a third book after publishing her second Snowy’s Birthday Party earlier this year, also based on her own cats Ginger and her mum Minnie, like her first book The Lost Cat. “I am glad some of my friends have started writing after seeing me. That motivates me to write more and more,” she added when asked how she was handling her newfound celebrity status. “My sister doesn’t really care (about my celebrity status) but that’s fine.”
It was the young writer’s first time on a airplane as well on her way to Sharjah as she flew in this week out of her home in the seaside town of Weymouth in Dorset with her dad Myles, mum Chelsie and nine-year-old sister Lacie to be at the 12-day festival being held at the Sharjah Expo Centre until May 14. “It was the most exciting thing for me, and I love this place so much that I want to come back again with my new book,” said the maths and reading enthusiast who is now looking to become the youngest female author to publish a ‘series of books’ after selling more than 2,000 copies of her debut book for her first official world record.
According to Bella-Jay’s dad Myles Dark, her second book now needs to sell 1,000 copies to surpass the official current record for the youngest author of a book series. One that’s currently held by Laiba Abdul Basit who was 10 years and 164 days old when she published a series of novels called Order of the Galaxy. “We have sold around 600 so far and would love to grab that record before she turns seven this July,” said the father of two who works as a builder. “We went to a book fair one day and someone there said they wanted to publish her book and it all began from there.”