Terry takes off is the second in the Tales from Volcano Valley series and I already knew the characters and setting, so writing it felt a bit like being back among old friends.
While the story does feature Cosmo, the hero of the first book, this second book is about Terry the pterodactyl, who is a far less confident character. Although I don't share Terry's fear of heights and flying (I've been lucky enough to go parascending a couple of times, and loved it), I do know how it feels to be afraid to do something that you know you should be able to do. And I know that the embarrassment you may feel about this fear can be just as bad or worse - than the fear itself. However, like Terry, I've also found that if you confront your fears, the experience is usually a lot less terrible than you had had imagined.
One of the comments I've had from several junior dinosaur experts (including my own son) about the first Volcano Valley book was that some of the species of dinosaurs in the story are from different time periods and therefore would not have been alive at the same time. For instance Cosmo, the compsognathus, is from the Jurassic period, while Terry, the pterodactyl, is from the Cretaceous, which was some 75 million years later. I was aware of this when I was choosing the characters (no HONESTLY I was!) but had decided that since my dinosaurs can talk to each other and play ball games (errors which the same experts rarely pick me up on) - I was not going to worry too much about authenticity. If you want to know which periods the dinosaurs in the stories come from, you can find out by going to the Meet the Volcano Valley Dinosaurs page.
Something else that may not look very authentic is the colourful patterning that Peter Rutherford, the books' illustrator, has given the dinosaurs. But the truth is that while dinosaur experts may be able to tell what shape and size a dinosaur was from examining their fossils, they have absolutely no way of telling what colour they were (as I'm sure Peter was aware). I love the striking colouring of Terry and Corey in particular and, for all anybody knows, this may have been how pterodactyls and corythosaurs really looked!