06. November 2008 · Comments Off · Categories: Thoughts · Tags: ,

This just in from Publisher’s Weekly:

As bedtime books go, Goodnight Moon by Margaret Wise Brown, illustrated by Clement Hurd (HarperCollins, 1947), remains one of the gold standards. But author/illustrator Michael Rex thought the classic tale could use a healthy dose of spookiness, so he set to creating Goodnight Goon: A Petrifying Parody (Putnam). Apparently, plenty of parents and kids were ready to follow Rex down the parody path, because the book has hit bestseller lists and now has 100,000 copies in print, since its August publication.

read the full story

Jumpstart’s Read for the Record is a campaign designed to bring attention to the importance of early education. By encouraging hundreds of thousands of children and adults to read the same book on the same day, Jumpstart aims to break a world record and to make early education a national priority.

Children and adults will read together at events nationwide on October 2, in schools, libraries, stores, hotels, playgrounds, offices, and homes. This year’s book is Corduroy, by Don Freeman.

Proceeds from the sales of the book will benefit Jumpstart, a mentoring program that helps at-risk preschool children build vital literacy, social, and emotional skills. Jumpstart delivers a research-based, best practice curriculum to nearly 13,000 preschoolers in close to 70 communities across 20 states in America.

Learn more at http://www.readfortherecord.org

My new book, Rabbit’s Song has a book trailer. That awesome voice on the sound track you hear is one of the authors –S.J. Tucker.

I am truly excited about this project. It was so wonderful to be able to work with such talented and extraordinary ladies.

20. August 2008 · Comments Off · Categories: Thoughts · Tags: , , ,

The beginning of the month I was initiated into Cronehood. It was amazing and peaceful and the year of planning and waiting finally ended.

Today, I sent my baby off to high school. Well, she’s not a baby any more, obviously. But still, I miss her small head laid in my lap and her requests for me to “scratch my belly, Mommy.” Now-a-days she spends most of her free time with friends or holed up in her room writing fan fic on her lap top. She’s awesomely talented, by the way.

It seems so hard to believe that this is the same girl I wrote and illustrated my first book for. She was my model and my inspiration for An Ordinary Girl, A Magical Child which came out in 2005 as a paperback.

It took me so long to find a publisher for that first book, she out grew it before it was ever printed.

Still, the last thing she said to me this morning as she poked her head back in the door on her way to school this morning was “Get to work on your pictures!” She is still an inspiration. I am so proud of the woman she is becoming. *snif*

An article in the Atlantic entitled Is Google Making us Stupid came to my attention this morning. The author starts out by writing about his inability to concentrate on long articles or books. I have to admit I have noticed the same affliction in myself. In fact, I ended up skimming through his rather longish article as well.

I had put the phenomenon down to too much television watching. As a result, I decided to watch less and read more. Unfortunately, I haven’t curtailed my use of the internet as well. Less TV has helped some, I have been able to devour a few more books in the last months, but they haven’t been really thick ones, and on top of that, they’ve been mid grade and young adult fiction titles. The non-fiction 500+ pages books I have on my to-read pile have remained untouched.

I wonder if this changing of our minds and the sound bites our brains are now accustomed to receiving via the web, the phone and the TV haven’t been the reason for the sharp reduction of the word count in picture book text. I have children’s books from my childhood. There was a lot more story intermingled in the illustrations. I also have books from my daughter’s younger years. Again the word count is much more than today’s typical picture book.

Publishers Weekly has been reporting for years that the publishing industry is in trouble. Children’s books are among the hardest hit. Kids just aren’t being read bedtime stories on a regular basis anymore. There is too much competition for their attention. Even pre-schoolers have access to the net these days, with tons of sites geared just to them and their level of development.

Think about it, when was the last time you actually picked up a pen and scribbled a letter? I’m not talking about signing you name to a get well card or the annual holiday season greeting card. I’m talking about an actual letter where you relay your life’s doings to a friend or family member, fold up and place in an envelope, address and place a stamp on and deposit in the mail box for the postman to pick up. It’s been a long time since I’ve done that. It’s been even longer since I received one. The last handwritten letter I got was so long ago, I don’t even remember when it was. I do receive typed (most likely on a PC in a word program of some description) letters on occasion. The last one was in late January. I have it on my desk, still awaiting a reply, which I have on my to-do list, but that’s another story.

Will the future of picture books see the reduction of the text part reduced into nothingness? Will the picture books in 10-20 years be all wordless books?