New England SCBWI – Stephen Fraser

I’m back from the New England SCBWI Conference, and I have so much to share. I’m going to take it slow, though, so check back often this week and next to hear about the people I met, the things I learned and, of course, the books I bought.

The conference opened on Friday afternoon with a keynote address by Stephen Fraser, an agent at The Jennifer DeChiara Literary Agency. His overall message was comforting: a good manuscript will find a home. So just relax, make the manuscript sing, and Believe. Overly simple? Maybe. But it is an approach that appeals to me, and it is ever so much easier than sending your manuscript out with a box of caterpillar-shaped cookies.

Mr. Fraser also suggested writers perfect an “elevator pitch” for every manuscript. Suppose you were to find yourself alone with your dream editor in an elevator of your favorite publishing house. You have two minutes—the time it will take to travel from her fourteenth floor office to the lobby—to get her interested in your work. What would you say? You are going for short, succinct and utterly compelling, a single sentence that will entice your dream editor to acquire your manuscript on the spot … or at least ask to see it exclusively.

I think this is good advice, and I gave it a whirl.

(I tried to hide my “giving it a whirl” bit behind a handy LJ cut, but couldn’t make it work. If you care to read a sample elevator pitch read on. If you don’t skip to the next few paragraphs!

THE MAD MARCH is a picture book biography that introduces readers to the French entomologist Jean-Henri Fabre through the lens of some of the most vivid and accessible experiments ever conducted on insects. Readers of any age or science background will marvel at the mad march of the Fabre’s pine processionary caterpillars.

Okay, that’s two sentences, and it reads a little stiff. But in the elevator I could loosen the language a bit, flail my hands, use pens to demonstrate the amazing caterpillar experiments. The point is that this exercise forced me to focus my thoughts on the book. What is it really about? Why is it going to be important to readers? Why should an editor care about it?

Go on, try it. Write your elevator pitches. It’ll be good for you.)

Finally, Fraser recommended two books to the writers and illustrators in attendance:

THE SOUND ON THE PAGE, by Ben Yagoda

and

READING LIKE A WRITER, by Francine Prose

I’ve read the Prose book and agree it is worthy. Has anyone out there read the Yagoda title? Do you recommend it?

 

Before I go …

Oh! I have so much to tell you, but I have got to run. The New England SCBWI Spring Conference starts at noon and I am not even packed yet. Here is the abbreviated report:

1. I completed a draft of my WIP and have sent it off to my trusted readers. Phew!

2. I met Robie Harris at dinner last night, and she was lovely and kind and encouraging. Her presentation afterward inspired me to continue striving to write HONEST books for kids.

3. I finished reading TIPS ON HAVING A GAY (ex) BOYFRIEND, by Carrie Jones, and I highly recommend this hot-off-the-presses YA title by an up-and-coming YA author. I SO hope to run into her this weekend so she can sign my book.

Can you see why I am not packed yet?

More soon …

 

Tracking Trash in Audubon Magazine

Julie Leibach reviewed TRACKING TRASH for the May/June 2007 issue of Audubon magazine!

In addition to TRACKING TRASH, Ms. Leibach’s “Nature Books for Kids” column included reviews of THE TALE OF PALE MALE, written and illustrated by Jeanette Winter (this one was a hit in the Burns house), EXTREME ANIMALS, written by Nicola Davies and illustrated by Neal Layton, and WHY ARE THE ICE CAPS MELTING, written by Anne Rockwell and illustrated by Paul Meisel.

 

Chicky Chicky Chook Chook

CHICKY CHICKY CHOOK CHOOK
By Cathy MacLennan
Boxer Books, 2007

Category: Picture book

Remember the pile of birthday books for my soon-to-be-two niece? I needed a fifth and you all gave me some great suggestions. Thank you, thank you. All of them are on my list and several will surely be in her book piles in years to come. But I came across CHICKY CHICKY CHOOK CHOOK this week and I simply couldn’t resist.

“Chicky, chicky, chook chook.
Chick, chick chick.

Chicky, chicky, chook chook,
Peck … peck … pick.”

Oh, yes. I can imagine our Little Miss rollicking to this one. Yes. Yes. Yes. The illustrations, like the onomatopoeic text, are jaunty and fun. Rhythm, art, a simple and relevant plot … this is pure read-aloud fun for the toddler set, and just what I needed to round out the 2007 Birthday Booklist.

 

Happy Birth Day!

HAPPY BIRTH DAY!
By Robie H. Harris
Illustrated by Michael Emberley
Candlewick Press, 1996

Category: Picture book

There are weeks when being a writer is hard. Like last week, when I had four projects screaming for attention, three children screaming for attention, and not enough time to do any of them justice. Blech.

And then there are weeks like this one. My writing buddies have helped me focus my project load and I am making good progress on the one needing the most attention. (Thank you, Eric and Liza!) This afternoon I had my first ever television interview and I feel good about how it went. Somehow I have an abundance of alone time on my schedule this week and I might—just might—finish the aforementioned project before leaving for the New England SCBWI Spring Conference in Nashua on Friday. As if all this weren’t enough excitement, I also get to meet Robie Harris on Thursday!

Could the week get any better?

Not surprisingly, I have been exploring Robie’s books all week; I am utterly smitten with HAPPY BIRTH DAY! It is the intimate story of one baby’s birth, and it was impossible for me to read it and not remember the birth days of my own three children. Michael Emberley’s illustrations are lovely and help make HAPPY BIRTH DAY!—like all the books by this author/illustrator team—an accurate and compelling resource for children who want to know a little bit more about the day they were born.

If you live near Holden, Massachusetts, you should stop by and hear Robie speak on Thursday (details below). If you are too far away, check back for a recap of the event on my blog later in the week. And in the meanwhile, treat yourself to one or two of Robie Harris’s books. You deserve a treat, don’t you?

The Gale Free Library presents:

Robie Harris
Thursday, May 17, 6:30pm
Holden Senior Center
1130 Main Street
Holden, MA 01520

 

The Creation

THE CREATION, AN APPEAL TO SAVE LIFE ON EARTH
By E.O. Wilson
W.W. Norton & Company, 2007

Category: Adult Non-fiction

I am reading a lot of non-fiction these days. It started out as an Earth Day thing … I had several environmentally-themed books I had been wanting to read, and Earth Day seemed a good reason to start in on them. And I haven’t been able to stop.

Anyhoo …

Edward O. Wilson has a simple idea. Instead of focusing on the differences between those of us who praise reason and those of us who praise religion, why not focus on that which we hold in common: a dependence on Earth’s biodiversity. Wilson argues that rallying around one inescapable truth—that we humans have a profound impact our environment—will not only breed respect and understanding, but also help to save life on earth.

I applaud Wilson’s idea and recommend his book to anyone interested in a naturalist’s view of the state of our planet. But there were other reasons the book fascinated me. It is chock full of information that shocked my sense of magnitude. For example, did you know that:

“It is mathematically possible to log-stack all the people on Earth into a single block of one cubic mile and lower them out of sight in a remote part of the Grand Canyon.”

Clearly I have underestimated the scale of the Grand Canyon. Or perhaps I have overestimated the pervasive-ness of humankind? Does this statement leave anyone else with their mouth hanging open?

I’ll leave you with a final quote from THE CREATION.

“The power of science comes not from scientists but from its method.”

Amen to that.

 

Little Pea

LITTLE PEA
By Amy Krouse Rosenthal
Illustrated by
Jen Corace
Chronicle Books, 2005

Category: Picture book

My niece turns two this month, and the kids and I have been selecting her birthday books. Okay, well, I guess I have been selecting her books. Everyone else is supremely busy with school and baseball and T-ball and spring. All of which is fine by me, of course, because picking books is my thing.

I read LITTLE PEA when it first came out, and it has become one of my favorite toddler gift books. It is an irresistible concept … Little Pea must finish his dinner before getting dessert. Mama Pea and Papa Pea insist. (Sound familiar?) Yuck! Blech! Plck! Pleh! Little Pea chokes down his five bites, and is rewarded with his favorite desert. But Rosenthal and Corace have turned the familiar dinner time battle inside out, and the result is a round, green chuckle-fest for all ages. I’d love to tell you more, but I can’t bear to spoil the surprise. Read it for yourself!

The other titles in our birthday pile?

ESTELLE TAKES A BATH, written by Jill Esbaum and illustrated by Mary Newell DePalma, and which I have mentioned before. (I cannot wait to see my brother-in-law’s reaction. Will he giggle? Will he blush?)

A GOOD DAY, written and illustrated by Kevin Henkes. Simple, beautiful, perfect. Sigh.

SCAREDY SQUIRREL, the 2007 Cybils award winner in the picture book category, written and illustrated by Melanie Watt. More giggles.

I’d like to add one more book. Thoughts? Ideas? Suggestions? Bring them on! And quickly, please, because the big day is just around the bend.

 

Mic and Me

Mr. Micarelli and I were featured in the Publisher’s Weekly Children’s Bookshelf e-newsletter yesterday. Check it out here.

Many thanks to the publicity folks at Houghton Mifflin for spreading the word about my way-cool high school biology teacher, and our TRACKING TRASH reunion!

 

LibraryThing

A kind reader in Portland, Oregon introduced me to the most amazing website today. Check out LibraryThing. But beware, booklovers, you may become addicted. The very idea of cataloguing my home library is so compelling that I have banned myself from LibraryThing forever. Can you imagine the writing hours I could squander over there?

But that doesn’t mean YOU shouldn’t go and catalog YOUR books …

Oh, and for the writers among you … you can use the LibraryThing search feature to see how many of their 190,000 members own YOUR book. Pretty cool.

Happy catalogue-ing!