What Do You Think?

With many thanks to my tech guys (the twelve-year-old Burns boys) and the photographers I have yet to credit in the video (we are working on this), here is my first-ever book trailer. It is a work in progress; I still have to figure out how to roll the photo credits, how to fix the text-heavy back end, and how to insert an image that is being prickly. While I work through those issues, though, I thought I’d post a draft here. If you have a moment to check it out, please do. And feel free to leave your feedback and comments below.

For the record, my tech guys are working on a trailer for THE HIVE DETECTIVES, too. I’m told that quality work like theirs cannot be rushed, and that there is no way to predict when the THD trailer will be ready. Suffice to say that someday the books page of my website will include trailers for each of my books. Someday.

 

Wanna Be in a Children’s Book?

Seriously, who doesn’t?

Children’s author/illustrator and Worcester, Massachusetts native Jarrett Krosochka has launched his first annual Cyber-Monday online auction to benefit the Joe and Shirl Scholarship fund at the Worcester Art Museum … and one of the coolest items up for grabs is the chance to have your likeness drawn into one of his next LUNCH LADY books.

(Yowza!)

The Joe and Shirl Scholarship, created by Jarrett in honor of his grandparents, will fund art classes for needy children in unique familial situations. As a kid who grew up in just such a family, I think what Jarrett is doing totally rocks. And as a gal already worn out by seasonal consumer craziness, I’m thrilled to spread the word about this great cause.

Check out Jarrett’s video above, or click here for information on the Joe and Shirl Scholarship, the other items up for grabs, and how to get in on the action. Happy bidding!

 

Madeline English School

On Wednesday I visited the town where I grew up—Everett, Massachusetts—and wound up on the site of a place I spent a bit of time as a kid: Babe Ruth Park. Do you know what I found there? A school. A very big, very new school. The Madeline English School, to be exact, which is one of four new K-8 schools now in Everett. And if that didn’t make me feel old, meeting the principal, Ms. Massa, who graduated more than half-a-decade after me, did. How can I be old enough that parks are now schools and whippersnappers are now principals? It’s all very unsettling.

Lucky for me, about a hundred chatty fifth graders met me in the library of the Maddy English, and they calmed me down. We spent a fine hour talking about bees and hives and beekeeping … and our hometown. We dispelled rumors, shared stories, and generally mused over the coolness of insects that are at once so important and so scary to us. I don’t know if their exuberance over honey bees had anything to do with our common roots, but it was a thrill for me to answer questions from kids who were so completely engaged and interested in the same things that engage and interest me … and who happen to be growing up in the same place I did.

At some point I asked an obvious question: who was Madeline English? The answer floored me. Madeline English was a national hero, a true baseball legend. And she grew up in Everett! How could a kid who grow up playing rec league softball in Everett—a girl who later played on the high school softball team—not know this? I was a third baseman, for crying out loud! (Okay, only for one season and only because we were desperate that year. But still.)

Good, old Everett: full of memories, smart students, new schools, old friends, and even a few surprises. I’m glad I grew up there, and I’m glad I had a chance to go back for this visit. I made a stop at the Parlin Memorial Library, too, and I will tell you a bit about that amazingness soon. Stay tuned. In the meantime …

** Excited waves to Ms. Lyons’ third graders at the Webster School: it was fun to meet all of you! I thought you would get a kick out of that photo up there at the top of this page. Can you find Ms. Lyons and me in it?**

 

Brookwood School

For three days last week, I got to be part of the incredibly energetic learning community at Brookwood School in Manchester-by-the-Sea, Massachusetts … and I am still glowing. I shared writing adventures with first and second graders, buzzed about bees with saavy sixth graders, talked books with excited teaching interns, and celebrated sustainability with the more than six-hundred folks from northeastern Massachusetts who turned out in force for Brookwood’s fourth annual Sustainability Fair.

Six hundred! That’s a lot of green people.

I brought home some nifty treats to share with my family, like organic peach salsa chopped to perfecton by Brookwood second graders, recycled bookmarks crafted by pre-K students (photo above), composting tips, green cleaning tips, farming ideas and inspiration to keep me thinking and living green for a good, long time. I even found a few minutes to stroll the beach and collect seaweed for my garden. (The garlic bed is now drenched in Atlantic seaweed and very, very happy.)

Congratulations, Brookwood School, on a job well done, and thank you for letting me join in the fun!

 

On Conversations

© Loree Griffin Burns

A couple weeks ago, Sara Pennypacker visited our local library. Being mother to one of Clementine’s best friends (or so she says), organizer of a Mother & Daughter Book Group that has read lots of Clementine adventures, and also a fan of Ms. Pennypacker and Ms. Frazee (writer and illustrator, respectively, of the Clementine books), I went. And something Sara said resonated with me deeply. She told us that the reason she likes to visit schools and libraries is simple: conversation.

Yes. That’s it exactly.

We writers toil and tinker until we’ve got down on paper a story that we think will have meaning for someone. We think what we’ve written is important, and so we send our words out into the world hoping the readers who need them most will find them. Once the book is gone, though, there is not a lot we can do to be sure that happens. We try to spread the word, of course, but so much is out of our hands. In order to avoid the agony of waiting and wondering—and also to keep food on the table—we get busy on the next book.

Eventually, we hear from reviewers. If their criticisms are kind, their whisper of a reply feels good. Sometimes we hear from readers by letter or email, and this also feels good, especially when there is an opportunity to respond. But for me, neither reviews nor letters compare to eye contact with a reader, to an actual exchange of looks and expressions and thoughts and ideas. That sort of loveliness happens only in person, and mostly in a school or library or bookstore setting.

For me, sadly, these events are few and far between. But listening to readers, hearing their responses to my work, knowing—finally!—their thoughts on what I did right, what I did wrong, and what I should do next, is always a humbling experience. I am able to respond, to ask about their thoughts and ideas … and in the asking begins a true, honest-to-goodness conversation. These moments change me in ways that are as profound as they are unexpected.

That Sara Pennypacker is one smart cookie.

All of this is on my mind, of course, because I’ve just returned from two days of school and library visiting in Athol, Massachusetts. The conversations I had there were organic chocolate chip cookies for my writing soul, I tell you …

I met a boy who I think is going to be this world’s next champion of honey bees, a beekeeper with verve and smarts.

I chatted with a girl whose books we will likely all know one day, and she bravely shared with me the opening of her newest short story. It was fabulous … and composed, she told me with a frankness that knocked my breath away, during my presentation. (“When I realized you were going to talk about bees and not writing,” she told me, “I had to tune out. This story had to be written!”)

I sparred with a thoughtful man who is as worried as I am about agricultural chemicals. We are on the same team, he and I, but we use different playbooks, and he reminded me that even in disagreement, conversation is worthy and important.

Many thanks to all the fine folks I met in Athol this week; I am so glad we had time to talk.

A postscript on the illustration: this is an old photo of a special conversation between one of my children and the author of his then-favorite book IBIS: A TRUE WHALE STORY, John Himmelman.

A postscript on my postscript: Yes, I forgot to bring my camera to Athol!

 

Working

I am at this very moment working at the public library in Athol, Massachusetts. I spoke to students at the middle school this morning, and I will speak to adults here at the library later tonight. Rather than drive two extra hours back and forth to home, I decided to park my laptop here and get some work done. It is quiet, and no one has interrupted me in the two hours I have been here. Bliss!

But …

I am all dressed up—or at least more dressed up than I would ever be on a regular day—and it is very uncomfortable. How do people who work in the real world keep their shoes on all day?

Also? No tea pot. And no cookies!

I didn’t realize I was so high maintenance.

Back to work …

 

Ready? Set? Go!


© Loree Griffin Burns

That there is my new bee hive. Cute, yes? Nobody lives in it; this is strictly an educational dwelling. In fact, at this moment it’s packed in the trunk of my car, waiting for me to load in the last of my school visit supplies, hop in, and hit the road. Together we’ll criss-cross Massachusetts, visiting fourteen classrooms, four schools, two libraries, and one Sustainability Fair over the next nine days. That’s a lot of hive demos!

I’m excited about this trip for so many reasons. I get to test out the new hive and, since I’m returning to school communities I’ve worked with before, to see some old friends. Add to that a stop in the city I grew up in (*waves to students and teachers in good, old Everett, Massachusetts!*), the classroom of one of my Everett High School field hockey teammates (*waves to Chrissy Lyons and her students!*), and even the library I shelved books at as a high school student (*waves to everyone at the Parlin Memorial Library!*), and you’ll understand why even the wintry mix in this morning’s forecast hasn’t gotten me down.

So.

Here I go!

See you soon …

 

A Great Migrations PSA

© Ellen Harasimowicz

The hoopla around this Sunday’s premiere of the National Geographic documentary Great Migrations has got me nostalgic for my days in Mexico. Ellen Harasimowicz took this photo of me last winter at the top of Sierra Chincua, where the sight of tens of millions of monarch butterflies overwhelmed me to the point of exhaustion. All I could do was sit down, gaze up, and breathe. It was intense. Here’s a tiny glimpse of an idea of what I saw up in that bright, blue Mexican sky, but truly, a photo cannot do the experience justice:

© Ellen Harasimowicz

Intense.

I’d like to go back to Mexico one day, maybe to share those amazing monarch sanctuary experiences with my kids. But it’s hard to know if or when that might happen. For now, I’m going to pop some corn and plop us all down in front of the National Geographic channel on Sunday. Judging by this mini-trailer, it will be the next best thing.

Great Migrations premieres this Sunday at 8pm on National Geographic station. Find out all you ever wanted to know about the series here.