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09 November 2009 @ 04:45 pm

I think that possibly I will only write about things that happen at the grocery store from now on because it's kind of more interesting than the things that happen at my house.

My house is like a bat cave:
 You can guess which one I get to be.

Seriously. There is no light in there. It's so bad that sometimes I step out into the driveway and realize that not only do my socks don't match, but my shoes don't match! 

Yes, I do turn on the lights.
No, they don't help.

I think pretty soon I'm going to end up looking like this: 

This might actually be an improvement. He's kind of cute.

But this transformation probably won't go over well on the book tour because instead of talking about my books and characters and how cool it would be if NEED was turned into a movie, I'll just be all, "SCREECHING_BAT NOISE_ SCREECH!"

This may be an improvement too actually.

Anyway, the ATM/CREDIT machine broke today in the grocery store FAST/EXPRESS lane, which made it not so fast/express.

The guy behind me was:
1. Cute
2. Impatient to get to lunch
3. Buying toothpaste.

And the woman in front of me was:
1. Cute
2. Patient
3. Buying $10 worth of things.

I was merely buying this:


Yes, it is that kind of day.
So, I said to the cashier clerk man who JUST had to go through a similar 20 minute ordeal with the machine where everyone in the entire grocery store had to come fix it, "I'll buy her stuff and my Mr. Bubble Bubblebath for sensitive skin and his toothpaste."

Everyone looked at me.

And I said, "I have cash!"



Which I did! Amen! And the cute lady who I love hugged me and the cute man was all, "Thank you, you didn't have to do that." He looked at me like I was this super angel person, which I am not, but it was nice to have someone think that.

And I have decided now that cash is a very good thing.
So is bubble bath.
Bats don't like bubble baths, right? So, I am still human, right?
Just checking.
 
 
09 November 2009 @ 12:38 pm
The New York Times Best Illustrated Books list is out, along with my review of The Lion & the Mouse. What a great book--I wish they had given me twice the space. When I sat down with it and my two young neighbors, the two year old boy announced, looking uncertainly at the cover, "lions are scary." His more intrepid four-year-old sister took over the narration from there ("Look out for the bird!") until the end, whereupon the two-year-old said, "lions are NOT scary." Now it's his favorite book, so we gave him a copy for his birthday, along with a little plastic lion he can carry around in his hand. What's your talisman?
 
 
09 November 2009 @ 09:49 am
[info]sixwordstories
Whether you're in the mood for a creative challenge or you're short on time or attention span, this semi-addictive community is perfect for those who find flash fiction way long. Once you get the hang of it, you won't be able to stop. The prince turned into a frog. The girl ran home to mother. Tough to write. Easy to read. It's a double threesome of fun.
 
 
09 November 2009 @ 09:46 am
[info]dailyfoodie
Delicious, ambitious, and occasionally nutritious dishes make for an eclectic, all-you-can-eat feast. Whether you're searching for recipes for your next dinner party or you're jonesing for a late-night brownie fix, your cravings are sure to be well sated. A warm and inclusive community that welcomes all orientations, from carnivores to vegans, from gourmands to junk-food junkies. Guaranteed bias-free, food-positive, and pan-epicurian.
 
 
09 November 2009 @ 03:10 pm

2009 World Fantasy Award for Life Achievement for Jane Yolen! CONGRATS! http://ow.ly/zSTs

Posted in News
 
 
09 November 2009 @ 11:03 am

I went to Chicago last week -- I had a school visit and then a book signing at Anderson's Bookshop with the lovely and amazing Wendy Mass.  On the plane from Laguardia to O'Hare, I sat next to a woman who sneezed for basically two hours straight.  I've always been impressed with my best friend's tendency to sneeze in threes, but this woman's sneezing was epic.  She blew her nose and still kept sneezing.  So then all I was thinking about was swine flu, and the regular flu, and all the other airborne diseases out there, as I was trapped on the plane with the sneezed-in air circulating around me.  I turned my face toward the window.  Oh, how I wished I could open it.  I wished for some sort of bubble around me to keep out the germs.  I wanted to slather myself in Purell, but I didn't want to offend the sneezer.  What's the etiquette for situations like that? 

When we landed, I practically burst out of the plane and went to visit my friend Melissa and her one-year-old daughter.  Later that night, I met up with Wendy and we had dinner – we ordered about six different meals between us, just so we could taste everything (reminiscent of trips to Kate Mantilini in LA with Arielle).  The next morning I headed to Jefferson Junior High in Naperville.  The first thing I saw when I arrived was a sparkly sign hanging on the front door that said WELCOME COURTNEY SHEINMEL.  I pulled out my camera to take a picture.  The librarian was waiting for me in the lobby.  She said she knew I must be Courtney Sheinmel; after all, who else would be standing there taking pictures?  There was another sign in the parking lot that said RESERVED PARKING FOR COURTNEY SHEINMEL, which really made me feel like a rock star.


I met with a few different eighth grade classes.  The kids really blew me away with their questions.  One class made bookmarks inspired by the book, with words like “hope,” “friendship,” and “family” on them. I wanted to take the bookmarks home with me, and a couple of the kids did give me theirs, but most of them wanted to keep them – which is more meaningful, because I felt like the book meant something to them.  A few of the teachers asked me about Elizabeth Glaser, and I love when she is remembered.  The whole day was incredibly rewarding.  That night, Wendy and I had a book reading/signing at Anderson’s Bookshop.  I read the passage from Chapter 5 that I always read – I think I’m getting better at reading without rushing through.  A bunch of people came out to see us (well, to see Wendy), and everyone at the bookstore was so lovely and welcoming.  They let us each pick out a book to take home, and I took a copy of JELLICOE ROAD, which a number of people have said I will love, so I’m excited to read it.  It was one of those perfect, exciting, exhausting days.    

We flew home on Friday – the flight was packed but uneventful, and no one sneezed on me.  I’ve been proactively loading up on Airborne, and so far I still feel healthy (hope I’m not jinxing myself!) – I leave for California on Wednesday.

 
 
09 November 2009 @ 08:43 am

I had the most wonderfully amazing, once in a lifetime experience Sat. I had my reading/signing at the Southwick’s Zoo in Mendon, MA. When we arrived, there was a cage next to my signing table. The lovely folks at the zoo had arranged to have an African Crested porcupine pup come play for the day. I got to hold it while I read my book. The kids got to pet him. He was born over the summer, and is still bottle fed. He spent much of the time sucking on my finger. His tongue felt like a cat’s (sand papery). I spend some time talking about the porcupine page in my book, so it was fun to tell the kids my facts while having the real thing in my arms. Yes, he did have quills. They harden about an hour after birth. We also got to see him get nervous. He shook his quills. The “tail” ones are hollow and rattle together like a rattle snake. My oldest son came with me, so he got to witness it all. He was a great help because really, how can you hold a porcupine AND a book to read? LOL Profuse thanks to the great folks at Southwick’s Zoo for a great day.

 
 
Current Mood: excited
 
 
09 November 2009 @ 01:05 pm

Picture Book of the Day: The Best of Pro Baseball by Matt Doeden http://ow.ly/zTe5 #nfmon #kidlit #6traits

Posted in News
 
 
09 November 2009 @ 08:07 am
I know it’s been a banner year for pine cones, since I’ve been stumbling over them in the woods, and I know there’s some scientific explanation about the cycles in which they grow, but I can’t tell you what that is. Yesterday Tamra Wight [info]tamra_wight mentioned on Facebook that scientists say it’s impossible to be sad while looking at the sky.

Add a tree, and you can be ecstatic. Here’s what I saw looking up through a pine and an oak. Thanks, Tami! And there look like more blue skies today.




And a little later in the afternoon.

 
 
09 November 2009 @ 07:51 am
This weekend my husband had a conference to go to in Boston, so E and I decided to tag along for the free hotel and the promise of fun in the city. Our good friends Sue and Pete invited us to spend a night with them in Cambridge, too, so there was a lot to look forward to.

On Friday, E and I dropped Peter at his conference and headed to the Museum of Science, which is one of E's favorite spots. What he didn't know, was that there was a special exhibit there. An exhibit he didn't even know existed.

When we got to the parking garage, there was a flat-screen tv outside that was advertising exhibits and the Harry Potter image flashed by. E said, "That's weird. They just showed a picture from Harry Potter." And I said, "Yeah, weird." ;-)

Then we parked the car and figured out how to get into the museum. As we were walking down the long corridor from the garage to the museum entrance, a little girl dressed in Hogwarts robes skipped by us. E looked at me and said, "Um, that was random."

"Totally," I said.

Then we got to the ticket lines and he saw the big Harry Potter screen again. And he read out loud "Harry Potter Exhibit" and he caught his breath because just then, he turned and saw this:



And he pretty much didn't stop grinning for the rest of the day. The exhibit was so cool. I think you've got to be a true lover of the books and movies to really, really love it. And since E and I both are, we did. When he sat in Hagrid's chair, he rubbed the armrests over and over saying, "I just can't believe I'm sitting in HAGRID's CHAIR!"

It was a very quiet day at the museum and we were able to spend as much time as we wanted at the exhibit. Tons of people passed us, rushing through. But I think were were in there for almost three hours. It was fantastic.

The next day, we headed to our friends' house. The last time we stayed with them, I got a call from my agent to let me know I'd sold my third book. This time, I got great news again!

1. Jumping Off Swings was nominated for BBYA! This was the last month to get on the list and I was pretty sure all hope was lost. So that was a BIG and wonderful surprise!

2. My new editor had e-mailed to tell me her edits for PEARL are coming my way!

I told Sue and Pete we really need to visit more often. ;-)

Sue and Pete live near Fresh Pond in Cambridge, which has a wonderful walking path around it. And apparently it is THE place to go if you have a dog. We love going for walks there with their two dogs, Allie and Katama. It's like doggie social hour:



It's so much fun to see all the shapes and sizes. And all the dogs are so friendly! :-)

We had such a lovely weekend. Full of happy surprises, laughter, and conversation with friends. It made me realize how precious these moments are. And how it would be great to fill our lives with more of them. I'm going to try really hard to do that.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~

Monday Morning Warm-Up:

Describe a dog you remember from your childhood. Either yours, a relative's or a friend's. What's your fondest or most powerful memory of that dog?
 
 
09 November 2009 @ 04:51 am
Just the Right Size: Why Big Animals Are Big and Little Animals Are Little by Nicola Davies, illustrated by Neal Layton. Grades 3-6. Candlewick, July 2009. Copy from my local library.

How come blue whales are huge and mice are tiny? Why can't humans lift 850 times their own weight like the rhinoceros beetle? Why don't giant monsters like King Kong actually exist? And why will humans never be able to walk on water or fly?

Just the Right Size answers all these questions and more in a very accessible way.

It all comes down to geometry, really. If a big object is two times the size of a smaller object, its volume and weight will be eight times the smaller object's. That's why large flying insects (like dragonflies) need much bigger wings than small flying insects (like gnats). And it also explains why big animals like whales eventually stopped getting bigger. The bigger an animal gets, the more food and air it needs. So if blue whales were twice as big as they currently are, there wouldn't be room inside their bodies for the huge lungs and digestive systems they would need.

The book takes a complicated question and explains it in a simple (but not patronizing) way. Plus, it's funny! And it has funny, cartoony illustrations! What more could you ask for?

Here's just one example of the humorous tone of the book:

"Once upon a time there was a giant who was just like a normal human, only ten times bigger all over: ten times taller, wider, and deeper, making him one thousand times heavier. The giant took his first giant step, and with a giant crashing sound, both his legs snapped. The end." (pg 24)

I just want to run out and hand this to every kid at my library. I think it's one of those books that kids might not know they're interested in until they actually start reading it, so it might need a little booktalking. But that should be easy since it's so funny and interesting. I'd venture to say that adults could learn something from Just the Right Size, too. I know I did!

Pair it with If You Hopped Like a Frog by David Schwartz for more great examples of relative strength and size.

Read more reviews at 100 Scope Notes and Carol's Corner.

Happy Nonfiction Monday! I've got the roundup... right here! (Scroll up.)
 
 
09 November 2009 @ 06:51 am
Learn about Alan Cumyn.

So far, what's the most fun you've ever had working on a book? Why?

I have to say that working on this latest book, Dear Sylvia (Groundwood, 2008)(excerpt), was the most fun.

I often struggle to find the right voice for a particular project, and when I do a sequel (or, in this case, the third of a trilogy) I'm highly conscious of having to be as or more original than the original(s).

The Secret Life of Owen Skye (Groundwood, 2002) I wrote for my girls when they were young, and the natural voice for those linked stories was a hybrid adult/kid third-person narration--they are told in the spirit of a father exaggerating slightly about a loved but distant past.

After Sylvia (Groundwood, 2004) uses the same voice, but it is more of a classic novel in form and story arc.

In Dear Sylvia, Owen is writing letters to his true love, Sylvia Tull, who has moved way, and it felt awkward to be describing the letters in the old narrative voice.

Once I let Owen's direct voice take over, in the letters, the book began to write itself.

Like me at that age, Owen is no boy-genius writer. His spelling is especially idiosyncratic--trooley atroshus--so much so that my agent balked when she tried to read the first draft.

Oh, how I remember the pain and sweat of early boyhood attempts to read and write! Owen's letters get more elaborate as he progresses as a writer, but throughout it's the same fierce, funny, achingly honest heart that was so joyful to tap into.

How have you come to thrive in such a competitive, unpredictable industry?

It comes back to first principles for me, which revolve around love of story. I grew up immersed in stories, I've always turned to stories when trying to figure out this bewildering life, and I expect I will always write or make stories no matter whether I get paid to do it or not.

I've been an athlete longer than I've been a writer--though never a professional--and I know about competition in sports. The rules are defined and agreed upon, score is often scrupulously kept, there is usually a winner and a loser, but afterward you go out for a beer and talk about other things.

In this sense art is not competitive--it carries the same or greater call to excellence, but it's much freer. Any attempt to make it competitive--by giving awards, by counting and comparing sales or advance dollars--is artificial and probably hurts the art.

Who's the better artist, Shakespeare or Mozart? Who cares? Enjoy, ponder, grapple with their works. The question is absurd.

So I "thrive" by not defeating myself. I don't rely on sales entirely for my income. I apply for grants, I teach, I live simply. My kids' education is not wagered on me getting a big advance.

I don't pre-sell a book--I write it for the love of writing it, because it's the book I really want to read that hasn't been created yet. I try to be true to the characters and the problems they're faced with.

When and if the book gets published I do my best to share it with the world, but with the understanding that a large part of reviews, awards, sales, fame will be beyond my control.

Usually soon enough some other story is pulling me back to my desk. I need to write it down so I'll know what happens...

In the video below, Alan reads from Deer/Dear Sylvia. Note: "Featuring Kimba Gifford as Owen Skye. Directed by Jasmine Murray-Bergquist."



Cynsational Notes

The Craft, Career & Cheer series features conversations with children's-YA book creators about positive aspects of their creative and professional lives.
 
 
09 November 2009 @ 06:21 am
counter create hit 
I worked hard on my copyedits this weekend, but I also drove down to Massachusetts on Saturday to see my parents and my daughter.  It's nice to see that my mom and dad are settling so well into their new home. My daughter is recovered from the flu, but still tired. 

Driving down the Maine Turnpike, I was mulling over a few things in TOUCH BLUE when a truck passed me.

North_Hampton_10.jpg picture by cynthialord2005

I decided to take it as a good omen. :-) 

It reminded me of a December day a couple years ago when I came down to the Scholastic Book Fairs warehouse in Maine and signed RULES during a day of their warehouse sale.  Lots of people who work there came over to meet me, including one of the truck drivers. 

"So, if I see a truck on the road, it's you?" I asked.

He glanced wryly at his boss beside him then grinned at me. "Um, well, if the truck's going the speed limit, that'll be me. If it's speeding, it's one of the other guys."

North_Hampton_8.jpg picture by cynthialord2005
HOT ROD HAMSTER will be in that truck next Spring!

Julia and I were planning to visit the Emily Dickinson House in Amherst, MA, but they're having renovations. So we decided we'd visit that museum another time, and we went to Northampton, MA. I'd never been to that town before, but it's a cool, artsy place.

North_Hampton_6.jpg picture by cynthialord2005   North_Hampton_2.jpg picture by cynthialord2005  
North_Hampton_5.jpg picture by cynthialord2005  Not many towns have such an impressive town hall.

And where else could you see goats in coats, ascending penguins, or buy an octopus lamp or an umbrella raining cats and dogs?

North_Hampton_1.jpg picture by cynthialord2005   North_Hampton_3.jpg picture by cynthialord2005
North_Hampton_4.jpg picture by cynthialord2005   North_Hampton_11.jpg picture by cynthialord2005  I bought the umbrella!

And L. K. Madigan. . . looky, looky what I found in the bookstore!!!

North_Hampton_7.jpg picture by cynthialord2005

The New England Children's Booksellers Advisory Council is part of the New England Independent Booksellers Association (NEIBA). You're a favorite of theirs!  Congratulations!

So I got a lot of work done on my copyedits this weekend, but I also had a nice visit with my daughter and parents. 

Emily_Dickinson_Amherst.jpg picture by cynthialord2005 Next time, Em.
Emily Dickinson's House

 
 
Current Mood: cheerful
 
 
09 November 2009 @ 05:24 am

Gulp. Maybe I shouldn't have done the math!

Last week, I wrote 10,176 words in
my NaNoWriMo challenge, and I finished one (very bad) first draft of an early chapter book. Over the weekend, I didn't do any actual writing, though I did do a bare-bones plot outline (two or three phrases for each chapter) for my next chapter book.
     

It's both exhilarating and exhausting so far. Don't know if I'll make it to 50,000, especially since I'll be out of town for a solid week. And I have a maximum of 1-1/2 hours per day all month to work on NaNoWriMo writing. But I'm giving it my best shot. Hope your challenge is going well!
Tags:
 
 
Current Mood: drained
 
 
09 November 2009 @ 12:03 am
If you've read my blog for any length of time you've probably learned a few things about me.

1. I love writing poetry and books for kids, my dog, my native plant garden, Santa Cruz, and chocolate.

2. A little over a year ago I was laid off from my day job and have spent the last year adjusting and enjoying being a full-time writer.

3. I'm filled with all kinds of doubts and insecurities about who I am, what kind of a writer I'm supposed to be, and if I am ever good enough whatever task is waiting right in front of me. (In other words, I worry a lot about things I should quit worrying about.)

But probably the single thing that tells you the most about me is that I have never known my father. His name, yes, but that's all. I've never met him or anyone in his family. The only pictures I've ever seen were of him as a gawky young man in a white suit at their wedding. He was gone before I was born.

As I kid I used to bug my mom all the time for information about him but she never really said much. No one in the family talked about him and when they did, they never painted the prettiest picture. But here's the thing, I didn't want them to tell me whether the picture was any good or not. I wanted to see for myself. Still families do what they can to protect what they feel needs protecting and by the time I was in the 4th grade and someone asked me if I was Tommy Webb's daughter I said no, without hesitation. I had been trained well.

When you have a hole like that in your life it's like a scab you can't let heal. And people who don't have the same kind of hole often find it difficult to understand why just can't leave it all alone and move on. I can't explain the why. I can only claim the hole. It's grown smaller over the years but it's still there.

Last week I wrote about the distance we need between real life and our stories before we can write about them. In the past I've written about feeling safe enough to write the truth of your story. I believe we should always strive to write with emotional honesty, even when (or especially when) that seems like an impossible task.

That's where Flyboy comes in. Every question I've ever had about my father, about my worth as a person, about how I felt something missing when there was no reason to feel that way because my life was just fine the way it was....all of that has been pouring into Flyboy for, well, over 25 years now.

Characters and plot, I've got them. But to take that emotional plunge into the ice water of my past...I just couldn't make myself do it. I give myself a lot of sleep suggestions about my books, hoping my subconscious will take me where I need to go.

Four years ago I had a dream about my father. In my dream I went to answer the front door and there was a man there, kind of old, his short beard was gray but he had some black hair on his head. He wore a suit that had seen better days. He handed me a box, a white box, like one you might get clothes in or a little bigger. It was tied with string, not a ribbon. I asked him what was in the box. He shook his head. I asked him again to please tell me what was in the box. Nothing. I don't know why I didn't just open it myself but I didn't. Then he walked away. I asked him to wait. He kept walking. Then I asked him who he was. He turned around and said, "I am your father." And then I woke up without opening the box.

Last week for some random reason I decided to check for my father on Classmates.com. I knew where he had gone to high school so I kept hoping that he might show up there. It was a far-fetched hope since people in his generation aren't as into the Internet as I am. Once I had gone there and found nothing I went through my normal little routine, putting in his name, the town he went to school in and the state where he was born. I'd never gotten anything back with that combo before but it was a familiar search I had done many, many times.

This time was different. This time an obituary popped up. I read it and burst into tears then almost as quickly I chastised myself for crying over someone who had never wanted me.

I've pieced together a story from my mom over the years. My father Tommy Webb was born in Arkansas and went to high school in Vallejo, California. His family eventually moved to Concord, to Bonifacio Street, into the little duplex across the street from where my mom lived. He worked at a service station in Walnut Creek, back when they had guys who pumped the gas for you. My grandmother's name was Tina. She was pregnant with my uncle Robert at the same time my mom was pregnant with me. I had an aunt Kitty who was two years older than I am. There was another aunt Janette. That's about it. Except for the not so pretty stories that I'll keep to myself because, as my mom told me today. He could have changed. Turned his life around. People do it all the time.

My father died in Missouri. In January. This year.

In January I was still recovering from being laid off, trying to piece my new life together, trying to figure out how to create a life that nourished my creative soul. I was whole but with rough edges that still needed smoothing. I think if I had found him then it would have been too much. Much too much. Sometimes distance is a good thing. Even if it means we never get the chance to say goodbye.

His obituary mentions my aunts and my uncle. Where they live. It also says he has two sons and a daughter. My half-siblings. And lots of grandchildren. Aunts and Uncles. Bothers and Sisters. Nieces and Nephews. Family or not. It all depends on your point of view. The kind of picture you want to paint.

The obituary does not, of course, mention me.

I keep thinking about that dream I had. How odd to think that my father, who never paid a dime of child support, might give me a gift I've always wanted. Answers to questions that have haunted me for years.

The Internet makes things easy sometimes. Really it took no more than a few hours of searching to locate most of the family. They're not active online. No websites or blogs or Facebook profiles. But mailing addresses. Phone numbers. I have some of them now.

It's a chance. A chance to see at least part of the picture for myself.
Tags: ,
 
 
09 November 2009 @ 11:53 am
I am happy to host this week's Nonfiction Monday round-up! Please leave a comment with a link to your post and I'll compile and post throughout the day. I'm excited to see what nonfiction everyone's been reading this week!

ETA (11:05AM): Wow! We're getting a lot of great posts this week. I'm finding great books to add to my TBR list... keep 'em coming!

BookMoot's starting us off today with a review of Winter's Tail: How One Little Dolphin Learned to Swim Again by Juliana Hatkoff, Isabella Hatkoff, and Craig Hatkoff.

Sarah at In Need of Chocolate posts about The Usborne Encyclopedia of World History, a book she'll be using for her homeschooling.

Liz at A Chair, A Fireplace, & a Tea Cozy is getting all Novembery on us with a review of Mayflower 1620: A New Look at a Pilgrim Voyage by Plimoth Plantation with Peter Arenstraw, John Kemp and Catherine O'Neill Grace; photographs by Sisse Brimberg and Cotton Coulson.

Betsy at A Fuse #8 Production has a review of I and I, Bob Marley by Tony Medina.

Head over to Playing By the Book and check out their cool family tree project as well as a review of My First Family Tree Book by Catherine Bruzzone, illustrated by Caroline Church.

Oh, yeah. And I posted about Just the Right Size: Why Big Animals Are Big and Little Animals Are Little by Nicola Davies, illustrated by Neal Layton. Which happens to be one of my favorite nonfiction books of the year, so don't miss it!

Charlotte's got a review of Children's Book of Art by DK over at Charlotte's Library.

Shirley of SimplyScience Blog goes under the sea with A Coral Reef Food Chain: A Who-Eats-What Adventure in the Caribbean Sea by Rebecca Hogue Wojahn & Donald Wojahn.

Over at Wild About Nature, check out a review of Pumpkin Circle by George Levenson, photographs by Schmuel Thaler.

Lori Calabrese chimes in with a review of Louis Sockalexis: Native American Baseball Pioneer by Bill Wise.

Roberta of Wrapped in Foil examines the mysteries of Mold, Mushrooms, and Other Fungi by Steve Parker.

Carol Hinz of Lerner Publishing Group shares a fascinating post about what a nonfiction book editor does. Potential authors and those interested in process take note!

Robin at thebooknosher has posted a review of A Really Short History of Nearly Everything by Bill Bryson.

Elnice at Ellz Readz talks about The Great Grammar Book by Marsha Sramek.

Wendie over at Wendie's Wanderings takes a look at Steve Jenkins's Never Smile at a Monkey and 17 Other Important Things to Remember.

Owl in the Library is joining Shirley under the sea with books about seahorses this week. Ahoy!
 
 
08 November 2009 @ 10:37 pm
Or: In which I post a random series of links and thoughts, many recycled from my Twitter activity of the past week. Or: In which I provide you with some good reading and viewing to keep you busy until I get back from San Francisco next week and can write a real post again.

- I finally watched Happy-Go-Lucky and loved it. Mike Leigh has such a distinct point of view as a filmmaker, and truly understands the power of comedy. Laughter is a razor-sharp tool in his hands. If you're a Netflix subscriber, this one is available as a watch instantly.

- Speaking of a distinct point of view, if you feel like every realistic YA novel you pick up sounds the same and you're tired of it, read Bennett Madison's The Blonde of the Joke. It reminded me somehow of The Virgin Suicides, though it's been so many years since I read that book I can't say exactly why.

- And speaking of the deadly knife-edge of humor, Jon Stewart needs a special Emmy for these eight-plus minutes that amount to a TKO of Glenn Beck.

- A.O. Scott has an article in the Sunday Times about children's movies, mostly, but really all of his (very insightful) observations apply to YA and kid books as well (and the contrast between them and entertainment for adults). Among other things, he writes:
Sometimes we make too much of the division between generations, which is after all not a gap but a continuum. Every adult is a former child, just as every child is an incipient adult, and at their best, children’s film and literature (which of course are almost never made by children themselves) is an attempt to communicate across this distance. Young viewers may see a premonition of what lies ahead as well as a sympathetic rendering of what they already know, whereas adults may find pleasure in recalling old hurts and relief that they are not at the mercy of them.
- Of all the public radio podcasts I download week after week, the one that most often moves me intellectually, and emotionally, is To the Best Of Our Knowledge. The current episode on war and the theme "Esprit de Corps" is particularly moving and relevant to the news of the week.

- As a writer and reader of the "small" and "domestic," I give Lizzie Skurnick a big, fat thank you for her response to the now-infamous woman-free Publishers Weekly Top Ten of 2009.

- In case you missed the news, my brilliant agent is moving to L.A. to open up a West Coast office for Dystel & Goderich Literary Management. I am very excited about this for business reasons, and selfishly happy that Michael will be 1500 miles closer.

There you go. One link for each day until I'll be back to write a legit post. Yes, I know some of you are eagerly awaiting my What I Love About Boredom and Loneliness post, and yes, perhaps I'm stalling. Until then!
 
 
08 November 2009 @ 10:00 pm
For the first time in about two years, I have uploaded pictures from my camera. In the past, I may have been a wee bit negligent about doing so, to the extent that *some people* might refer to any pictures I take as being lost to the void of despair and nothingness forever.

Ahem.

What this means is that now I have lots of pictures of events taking place since I got my new camera three weeks ago, including, but not limited to: my trip with my parents to NYC (featuring The Rock), a slumber party with Sarah Cross, and (drum roll please)... HALLOWEEN. As I am a huge Halloween person, this makes me very happy. And if any of you are Halloween people, I hope that it will make you happy, too. For Halloween proper, I was a dark faery and spent the evening hanging out with a pirate, Rainbow Brite, and a (male) Care Bear. But on Halloween Eve (night before Halloween, obvi), I was an 80's aerobics instructor who had the bad luck to be attacked by zombies and subsequently zombified while wearing her neon yellow aerobics gear. Which would sound completely random, were it not for the fact that I spent the night at ZOMBIE PROM.

Pause for a moment to take in the awesomeness of that, my friends. Zombie. Prom. And, yes, there is a slight chance that the whole aerobics instructor bit is still random (compared to the zombies who just came in prom gear), but the lovely Professor Zombie who was throwing aforementioned Zombie Prom specially requested that I put together an aerobics instructor outfit, and as she just got Zombie Tenure (also: real tenure), who was I to deny her such a small thing?

What follows is an endeavor of high photojournalistic quality- and given that this is ZOMBIE prom, it is not for the faint of heart.



Read more... )
 
 
08 November 2009 @ 05:26 pm
GIANNA Z. and I were part of a HUGE celebration of books and reading at the annual Rochester Chlidren's Book Festival this weekend.  Families crowded into the festival at Monroe Community College to meet 42 authors and illustrators, make bookish crafts, listen to talks and read-alouds, and of course, pick out new books to have signed.   I was lucky enough to attend this festival two years ago and was so excited to be invited back. I mean, really...how can you not love a crowd like this, all cheering for books?



I loved visiting with all the kids, teachers, & librarians, and some LJ friends like [info]deenaml too!  The fantastic people at Lift Bridge Book Shop handled book sales for the event, and I was in awe of how efficient they were, even with such a great crowd.  



Here's Peggy Thomas, my festival next-door neighbor with some of her fantastic, fun picture books.



And more author friends... Rebecca Stead and Michelle Knudsen.  My daughter came with me to the festival and had been talking for weeks about meeting Rebecca because she loved WHEN YOU REACH ME so much.  When she finally got to say hello, she was a little tongue-tied, but did get to have her own copy signed, which made her very, very happy.  We picked up a signed copy of Michelle's new fantasy novel THE DRAGON OF TRELIAN, too - can't wait to read it!



Here are Herm and Mary Jane Auch, one of the friendliest and funniest couples in children's literature.  E and I have been laughing over our signed copy of their picture book THE PLOT CHICKENS all weekend.



And here, from right to left (pay attention...I'm naming people backwards this time) here's author Elizabeth "Sibby" Falk, who organized this year's festival and is one of the kindest, most talented, and most organized people I know. You really had to experience this festival to appreciate the work that must have gone into making everything run so perfectly.  (Thank you, Sibby!) In the middle is another delightful and talented Rochester author, my friend Kathy Blasi. Both Kathy and Sibby write beautiful historical fiction, so if you're a fan of stories from the past and haven't checked out their books, you'll want to do that.  

And finally, on the left in the photo is Sibby's daughter Sarah.  Take note of that purple shirt...the official uniform of the fabulous festival volunteers, who seemed to be everywhere. They set up and broke down the event, passed out programs, ushered authors to their presentations on time, and even came around with cookies at the end of a long day.  The volunteers at this festival were amazing - so thank you, volunteers, if any of you are reading this. You made us all feel so very welcome and appreciated.

 
 
08 November 2009 @ 04:11 am
In My Mailbox is a weekly meme hosted by The Story Siren. I'm not going to post about Cybils nominee review copies that I receive (but I will probably do a post about them at some point). So besides Cybils review copies, here's what was in my mailbox this week:

The Sky Always Hears Me And the Hills Don't Mind by Kirstin Cronn-Mills. Flux, September 2009. Here's the publisher's summary:

Sixteen-year-old Morgan lives in a hick town in the middle of Nebraska. College is two years away. Her mom was killed in a car accident when she was three, her dad drinks, and her stepmom is a non-entity. Her boyfriend Derek is boring and her coworker Rob has a very cute butt that she can't stop staring at. Then there's the kiss she shared with her classmate Tessa...

But when Morgan discovers that the one person in the world she trusted most has kept a devastating secret from her, Morgan must redefine her life and herself.

It sounds awesome and I love the cover and the title.

Annnnd... Sisters Red by Jackson Pearce. Little Brown, June 2010.

*squee!*
Y'all know that I loved Jackson Pearce's As You Wish (so much so that I nominated it for a Cybil!), so I was very excited to get my hands on this one (although the books sound very different).

Summary from ARC:

Scarlett March lives to hunt the Fenris - the werewolves that took her eye when she was defending her sister Rosie from a brutal attack. Armed with a razor-sharp hatchet and blood-red cloak, Scarlett is an expert at luring and slaying the wolves. She's determined to protect other young girls from a grisly death, and her raging heart will not rest until every single wolf is dead.

Rosie March once felt her bond with her sister was unbreakable. Owing Scarlett her life, Rosie hunts fiercely alongside her. Now Rosie dreams of a life beyond the wolves and finds herself drawn to Silas, a young woodsman who is deadly with an ax - but loving him means betraying her sister and has the potential to destroy all they've worked for.
And this might have been this week or last week, but I was lucky enough to win a copy of Alfred Nobel: The Man Behind the Peace Prize by Kathy-Jo Wargin, illustrated by Zachary Pullen from a giveaway at A Patchwork of Books!

And those are the lovely books in my mailbox this week. What was in your mailbox?
 
 
 
 

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