New Link on My List: Cheryl Klein's Talking Books...
Last week when I spoke to a group of writers at a local library, a few of them mentioned how much great information they found on Arthur A. Levine Books Senior Editor Cheryl Klein's website. I've just added her site to my "Alice Recommends..." links list.
Check out Cheryl's conference presentations covering things like plot, revision, and finding a publisher, as well as info on on queries, books she's worked on, a recommended reading list and lots more. (There's even a little Harry Potter thrown in here and there).
Also visit Chery's Blog, Brooklyn Arden. (Her most recent post is on plot problems.)
Monday, October 20, 2008
Friday, October 17, 2008
Blog of the Week:
Susan Gray's Gottawrite Girl...
"I started blogging to better live and breathe children's literature," says Susan Gray. "Gottawrite Girl is my shrine to the genre. It features everything I love reading as an aspiring author, from interviews and publishing news, to musings on the writing life."
Susan, whose day job writing for a DC non-profit doesn't satisfy her yearning to write from the heart, says she "wanted to get closer to 'my people,'" through blogging. "Gottawrite Girl lets me create my ideal writing life! My best life-moment sprouted from Gottawr
ite Girl. I finagled my way into the National Book Fair as press and interviewed Katherine Paterson. Slam dunk of a day. I'm also making silly-wonderful friends! And I'm supporting my fellows with every interview."
Facebook, Susan says, has been invaluable for bolstering her blog. "I have a happy number of Gottawrite Girl 'fans' that I constantly update. And it's a great way to attract author interviews."
When she's not b
logging, Susan is working on her first YA novel, and writing for Lucy Magazine. "My trembling but tenacious dream? That happy God-coincidences like this will include my novel becoming real. I will collapse," she says.
Posted by
SCBWI
at
10:29 AM
3
comments
Labels: facebook, Gottawrite Girl, Katherine Paterson, Lucy Magazine, Susan Gray
Thursday, October 16, 2008
Busy Day--Just Catching Up on My News...
I've spent the better part of my workweek--and pretty much my entire workday today--looking over a book that's about the go to the printer, so now, at 9 p.m., I'm just getting time to check on publishing news. Here are a few things that might interest you:
- The weekly PW Children's Bookshelf came out today. If you don't subscribe, sign up!
- The GalleyCat blog on MediaBistro has an interesting discussion of book reviews going on. (Did I mentioned that during the Portland Kidlitosphere conference, none other than Eric Kimmel declared to online children's book reviewers: You are so important--publishers need you. Not in those exact words, but that was the gist of it.)
- GalleyCat also has a post on press releases which I actually didn't find all the interesting (well, it's not that it's uninteresting, it's just that there's an awful lot of links
and instructions), except that it features the cover of Martha Brockenbrough's Things that Make Us [Sic]. And since I saw on facebook there was a book release party for the book today, I feel I should show her cover on my blog, too. (Plus I just got my copy of [Sic] in the mail today. Yeah Martha!)
Posted by
SCBWI
at
8:57 PM
1 comments
Labels: Eric Kimmel, GalleyCat, Martha Brockenbrough, PW Children's Bookshelf, Things That Make Us [Sic]
Wednesday, October 15, 2008
National Book Awards Finalists Announced...
The National Book Foundation recently announced this year's finalists for the National Book Awards. Here is the five titles up for the Young People's Literature award chosen from among 274 nominees:
Laurie Halse Anderson, Chains (Simon & Schuster)
Kathi Appelt, The Underneath (Atheneum)
Judy Blundell, What I Saw and How I Lied (Scholastic)
E. Lockhart, The Disreputable History of Frankie Landau-Banks (Hyperion)
Tim Tharp, The Spectacular Now (Alfred A. Knopf)
The judges for young lit include Daniel Handler (chair), Holly Black, Angela Johnson, Carolyn Mackler and Cynthia Voigt. (And yikes--I haven't read any of these yet--I better get on the stick. I like to make predictions)
Follow this link to see the nominees in all categories. And note the covers of the fiction and nonfiction titles. Is it just me or are they collectively dark and depressing looking? They all look like a terribly dreary day. And the titles of the nonfiction picks make me feel like curling up in the fetal position under my covers and not leaving bed for a few days.
Posted by
SCBWI
at
12:56 PM
5
comments
Labels: E. Lockhart, Judy Blundell, Kathi Appelt, Laurie Halse Anderson, National Book Award, Tim Tharp
Tuesday, October 14, 2008
Local SCBWI Meeting at the Library...
Tonight I'm attending the local meeting of SCBWI members that takes place at the Sharonville Library branch here in the Cincinnati area at 7 p.m.--I'm the group's invited guest for their October gathering.
I really enjoy attending meetings like these. It's great to reconnect with the local writers, a number of whom are published authors. I like to hear about what they're doing and discuss all things children's publishing with them.
Most of all, I love the chance to get to the library. I love the quiet, the smell of the books, the children's section, all the people reading. But must confess that I haven't been to a library since last year--the last time I spoke to a library group. I go to the bookstore all the time. (Murray and I hang out there regularly.) I buy lots of books. I get lots of books for free. I just never think about checking out a book. Does a library card expire?
I think next time Murray bugs me about going to the bookstore (he really just wants a new Thomas train and some chicken fingers from the cafe) maybe I'll take him to the library instead. He's four--he should have his own library card. The problem is, I don't think he'd be cool with the concept of giving books back. If he brought a book home, I'm sure he'd assume it's his forever. (We've been down this road with DVDs a million time. He insists, "They aren't Blockbuster's; they're mine!")
I guess it's worth a shot.
Posted by
SCBWI
at
3:53 PM
9
comments
Labels: library, library card, SCBWI, Sharonville Library
Monday, October 13, 2008
Fun with Acronyms: Meet the other CWIMs...
Every day I get several Google alerts. Of course I have one set up for my name. (Who doesn't?) I also get one for CWIM, which mostly includes references to my book. But not always--and I've been keeping track of them. (And I might have also done some googling for non-my-book CWIMs when I was bored.) I will now share my list (with descriptions mostly using made up words):
- Covenant Warriors International Ministries (religiousy)
- Command Work Information Management (techie)
- Cetera Work Information Manager (also techie)
- Christian Women in Management (religousy + businessy)
- Colorado Women in Music (musicy)
- Chris Woollam Icon Magazine (newsy)
- Color Wheel Index Mark (printery)
- Corwyn's World Instant Messaging (chatty)
- Convergent Work Integration Manager (businessy)
- China Water Institution Management (environmenty)
- Climbing Works International Masters (outdoorsy)
- Cat Who Isn't Mine (cat sittery)
Posted by
SCBWI
at
10:22 AM
1 comments
Labels: CWIM
Friday, October 10, 2008
Blog of the Week:
Johanna Wright's what's new on JohannaWright.com...
In addition to a portfolio, a bio page, a link to her etsy store and other standard artist's website features, illustrator Johanna Wright offers a wonderfully visual blog on JohannaWright.com. Johanna says blogging allows the public to get to know her, feel connected with her artwork, and follow her career, wherever it may go.
"As an illustrator, a website is key. I feel like having a blog keeps people connected to my work in a way that they haven't been able to be in the past," she says. "I lived in New York for many years, and spent four of those years selling my artwork on the streets of Manhattan. Sitting on the street was a great way to connect with thousands of people, and get them interested in my art on a personal level. Now, blogging has replaced that for me. I can spend the day painting in my studio, record some of my artwork in a blog post, and still connect to more people than I have in the past."
Johanna say she feels like she's "in a really happy place creatively." Her first book, Secret Circus, is coming out with Roaring Brook Press in spring '09. Two other RBP titles she wrote and illustrated follow in 2010, Bandits and Rabbits on Skates. And she illustrated Clover Twig, by Kaye Umansky, also slated for spring 2009.
"I feel like there is a small group of blog readers that have followed my path to this place. That's so great to me! It gives me the freedom to do more of what I love to do, and spend less time trying to get people invested in what I'm creating."
If you enjoy her work and would like to keep up with what Johanna's doing, you can sign up for her email newsletter. I did--I think her style offers the perfect mix of warmth and wonder.
Posted by
SCBWI
at
10:08 AM
12
comments
Labels: Blog of the Week, Johanna Wright, Roaring Brook Press
Thursday, October 09, 2008
I Have to Post Something Today...
...Or I'll break my streak very soon after my blog-every-weekday resolution.
I took the day off work today. I spent the morning at a pumpkin farm with Murray and a bajillion other four-year olds. I spent the afternoon seeing Obama speak with a bajallion other Cincinnatians. Both events we're exhausting and amazing in their own ways. I'm tired and keyed up.
Come back tomorrow for my Blog of the Week.
Posted by
SCBWI
at
6:46 PM
4
comments
Labels: Barak Obama, pumpkins
Wednesday, October 08, 2008
I'm Left Handed and So Is Our Next President...
Last night I watched the presidential debate between Barak Obama and John McCain on TV (I'd listened to the first one on the radio) and noticed that, like me, they are both left handed.
Naturally, I did some googling and found that there have been lots of lefties in the White House. Says the Washington Post:
No matter who wins in November, 6 of the 12 chief executives since the end of World War II will have been left-handed: Harry Truman, Gerald Ford, Ronald Reagan, the elder Bush, Clinton and either Obama or McCain. That's a disproportionate number, considering that only one in 10 people in the general population is left-handed.
This phenomenon of lefty Commanders-in-Chief has been covered in a number of other places including The New York Sun (which had a great photo of southpaw Obama autographing books), ACB News (which has a headline like a sugarless gum ad), and Economist.com (which includes a nifty lefty visual).
Come forward all you creative people--who's else out there is left-handed? (Maybe we should start a Facebook group.)
Posted by
SCBWI
at
1:35 PM
30
comments
Labels: Barak Obama, John McCain, left handed presidents
Tuesday, October 07, 2008
Mark Your Calendar for readergirlz "Night Bites"...
Next week, in celebration of YALSA's Teen Read Week™, the fabulous readergirlz are presenting “Night Bites,” five online themed author chats featuring more than a dozen published authors. The readergirlz event plays off YALSA’s theme of “Books with Bite,” and will take place at the readergirlz forum at 6 p.m. (Pacific)/9 p.m. (Eastern), October 13-17.
Here's their lineup:
- Monday, October 13: Multicultural Bites with authors Coe Booth (Tyrell); An Na (The Fold); and rgz diva Mitali Perkins (Secret Keeper)
- Tuesday, October 14: Verse Bites with rgz diva Lorie Ann Grover (On Pointe); Stephanie Hemphill (Your Own Sylvia); and Lisa Ann Sandell (Song of the Sparrow)
- Wednesday, October 15: Contemporary Bites with Ally Carter (Cross My Heart and Hope to Spy); rgz diva Justina Chen Headley (North of Beautiful); and Maureen Johnson (Suite Scarlett)
- Thursday, October 16: Fantasy Bites with Holly Black and Ted Naifeh (The Good Neighbors); rgz diva Dia Calhoun (Avielle of Rhia), and Tamora Pierce (Melting Stones)
- Friday, October 17: Gothic Bites with Holly Cupala (A Light That Never Goes Out), Christopher Golden (Soulless), Annette Curtis Klause (Blood and Chocolate), and Mari Mancusi (Boys That Bite).
Posted by
SCBWI
at
3:39 PM
5
comments
Labels: Book with Bite, Night Bites, readergirlz, YALSA
Monday, October 06, 2008
This Blogging Daily Thing...
The thing about me and blogging every day is that I'm not always great at planning posts ahead of time. I saw Cynthia Leitich Smith talk at the SCBWI Conference last year and she mentioned that she has, like, a bajillion non-time-sensitive posts on deck in case she doesn't have time to do something fresh. I'm not sure she ever sleeps. Do you other bloggers out there do this? (I refer to the planning ahead thing, not the never sleeping thing.)
It's fun for me when I'm getting my CWIM newsletter together--I know I'll have a few posts to go along with it. (My October newsletter will include my Debut Author of the Month along with an editor interview and the long versions of both of will be posted here.) And later this week I'd like to get a few new CWIM book publisher listings posted here as well. (My assistant Fharris is hard at work getting a few together for you.)
There are also many days where, when I get to the office, I feel like I'll have nothing to blog about, then ten things pop into my head and/or inbox through the course of t
he day. Today, for example, it was my turn to post on Farmers & Writers. Having a Monday slot is sometimes tough. But I was inspired this morning by my lack of a spam filter and wrote a post with help from the spammers who continually spewed crap into my inbox every few seconds as I wrote.
Posted by
SCBWI
at
2:12 PM
11
comments
Labels: Cynthia Leitich Smith, Farmers and Writers, SCBWI, SCBWI conference
Friday, October 03, 2008
Blog of the Week:
Lee Wind's I'm Here. I'm Queer. What the Hell do I read?...
This week I kick off my new recurring Friday feature, Blog of the Week, with I'm Here. I'm Queer. What the Hell do I read?, "The Place to find out about Young Adult fiction books with Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer and Questioning characters and themes....and other cool stuff from Lee Wind, Teen Action Fantasy author."
Wind began blogging in 2007, and had since amassed a comprehensive collection of GLBTQ books which are listed by category on I'm Here. I'm Queer. "When I was a teenager, I read everything sci fi and fantasy and YA I could get my hands on," he says. "But there were NO gay characters. In anything. Today my blog lists over 170 books that would have changed my life if I could have read them when I was 16. Hopefully, knowing these books are out there so they can get them and read them will make a difference for Teens today."
Lee's blog mission is to:
- Provide Lists, Synopses and Reviews of every YA and younger book with Gay (GLBTQ) Characters and Themes
- * Share Hidden Gay History--the stuff they don't necessarily teach in school
- Talk about Popular Culture, Gay Teens, and Kid Lit
- Spark and nurture a sense of community--(i.e., providing weekly topics for Gay Straight Alliance Meetings)
You can read more about I'm Here. I'm Queer by clicking here. Click on the individual books listed on the blog to read overviews along with reviews from blog readers and add your own reviews. And be sure to direct teens who have an interest in GLBTQ literature to Lee's Blog.
Posted by
SCBWI
at
10:00 AM
14
comments
Labels: Blog of the Week, Gay America, I'm Here. I'm Queer. What the Hell do I read, Lee Wind, Linas Alsenas, PW Children's Bookshelf
Thursday, October 02, 2008
It's Nomination Time for the 2008 Cybils...
The nominations period has begun for the 3rd annual Cybils awards--the premier Web awards for children's lit for which the readership at large nominates books in a variety of categories and a host of top bloggers reads them and chooses winners.
You can nominate books October 1-15. Finalists will be announced on New Year's Day, winners on February 14 (what a nice Valentine's Day gift for an author). In the meantime, Cybils will publish excerpts of reviews of the nominated titles.
Click here for the lowdown on the voting rules and to see the list of judges. Then vote! (Now and on election day.)
Posted by
SCBWI
at
9:12 AM
3
comments
Wednesday, October 01, 2008
You Must Watch Jaime Temairik's Video Because It's Hilarious...
A children's librarian. Zombie sock puppets. Thank you Jaime!
Posted by
SCBWI
at
3:30 PM
4
comments
Labels: Betsy Bird, Fuse #8, Jaime Temairik, sock puppets, Stephanie Meyer, zombies
Portland Kidlitosphere Conference Report...
Here's a quick rundown of the kidlit bloggers conference featuring a few words of wisdom from each of sessions I attended:
- Bloggers Jackie Parker (Interactive Reader) and Colleen Mondor (Chasing Ray) gave a session on Making the Most of the Community: Blog Tour Events. Jackie and Colleen coordinate the Summer and Winter Blog Blast Tours, the only mixed author blog tours offered online. They're not in favor of the blog-tour-like-bookstore-tour events set up by publishers. (These publishers tours have the same author on blog after blog day after day answering similar question which can't be exciting for readers.) These bloggers and the other handful who participate in the Blasts strive to offer a good mix of authors that fit in with their varying interests. Their big tip for authors: give good interviews and do them on time.
- Next up I attended a session with Pam Coughlin, aka Mother Reader in which she offered tips to Kick Your Blog Up a Notch. Pam gave a dozen suggestions for being a bigger (not necessarily a better) blogger. These include having a distinct voice, filling a particular niche, updating daily, commenting on other blogs, and doing self-promotion. Self-promotional efforts can be as simple as including your blog on your email signature, sending out occasional updates to your email list, and asking other bloggers to mention something super-special that's going on on your blog. (Note: Pam volunteered to coordinate the 3rd Kidlitosphere Conference next year in D.C.)
- In Mark Blevis' session, he updated the classic book starring lovable, furry old Grover to There's a Podcast at the End of this Book. Mark, who along with his wife Andrea Ross, produce the popular podcasts for Just One More Book!!, emphasized content, context and delivery in terms of what makes a strong podcast. Then he talked about lots of techie audio geek stuff which I didn't fully understand but wrote down some of: libsyn.com, Samson Zoom H2 recorder, Skype, podsafe music network, Podcasting Legal Guide. Truthfully, all the podcasting business really didn't seem as complicated as I imagined. And I spied Mark with recorder in hand throughout the weekend.
- After lunch (I had a great prawn salad with mint citrus dressing and mangoes in the hotel restaurant--the other option was eating at the airport) conference co-coordinator Laini Taylor and blogger Jen Robinson (Jen Robinson's Book Page) discussed The Bridge Between Authors and Book Reviewers with much focus on protocol. Bloggers should offer review policies on their blogs and authors should read them and follow them, says Jen. When authors contact reviewers, they should personalize their request as much as possible. (In Jackie and Colleen's session they noted that reviewers can tell if an author doesn't read their blogs when you contact them. That's a no-no.) Authors should never pester reviewers--they have a lot of material and get through, the majority of which comes straight from publishers (which Jen prefers, as it's less pressure for her).
- Greg Pincus (Gotta Book) offered Promoting Your Book and Yourself on Facebook/MySpace and Other Social Networking Tools. He conducted his own mini self-promo experiment which he ran through with us. Your goal as an author/blogger, he says, is "setting yourself up for the happy accident." He suggests you have a FeedBurner (rss) account. You should give blog posts a strong title (for example the stronger, "Goal!--A Soccer Poem" vs. simply "Goal.") You should link to your blog from your facebook page. It's much harder to reach people if you're not trying to reach people, he says. Check out this wiki link for more tips.
- The last session I attended was with the fabulous author Sara Zarr on Balancing the Personal and Professional on Your Blog. Sara starting blogging around 1999/2000, and ended up deleting five years' worth of posts that were very personal once she got her book deal. An author's blog, she says, needs a voice--posts should represent the face you want to show to the world. It's an author's most controllable aspects of publicity, wholly the author's, not dictated by a publisher. Don't be shy about sharing good news and don't assume that readers are equally interested in your bad news (save that for trusted friends). Don't post anything you wouldn't want your editor or agent to read. In terms of controversial subjects like sex, religion and politics, don't censor yourself, but those types of post must really be thought out, really composed.
After the conference dinner and raffle (for which no one at my table was privy to the fact that we needed raffle tickets and therefore had no possibility of winning prizes) the amazing and awesome readergirlz threw a party to celebrate the amazing and awesome Holly Cupala's promotion to official readergirlz Diva!
Posted by
SCBWI
at
9:23 AM
5
comments
Labels: kidlit bloggers conference, Portland



