I spotted this lonely kitten mitten on the walk to school today. I've been taking pictures of objects dropped by kids for a potential photo project called "Kids Were Here." This guy is so cute he could even inspire a story, thanks to my son's reluctance to label the mitten "lost" or "lonely" -- it comforted him to think it would find it's way back to its owner, and perhaps have an adventure along the way. We'll see what I can come up with!
Monday, March 2, 2015
Tuesday, February 17, 2015
Dreaming of summer...
With another snowstorm upon us in the Northeast and temperatures in the 20s, I find myself dreaming of summer. My daughter picked this pretty peony and daisy bouquet last July in her uncle's garden in Maine. Maybe if I stare at it long enough, I'll warm up. (My LL Bean shearling booties are helping, too!)
Kids are in camp this week and I have a long list of things to do. Waiting to hear back about a new kids story I think has potential--fingers crossed! Also want to see if I can publish or self-publish an older story based on my beloved aunt Fitzle. Let's see what happens! Now back to that to-do list...
Kids are in camp this week and I have a long list of things to do. Waiting to hear back about a new kids story I think has potential--fingers crossed! Also want to see if I can publish or self-publish an older story based on my beloved aunt Fitzle. Let's see what happens! Now back to that to-do list...
Monday, February 9, 2015
More coffee = more ideas!
When it comes to finding inspiration for a new story, nothing beats an hour in a cafe or bakery for coffee and sweets. Fortunately for me, I live in a largely Italian neighborhood in Brooklyn, NY, so there are many places to choose from! Here's a coffee and cannoli break I took last week. I ended up sending the kids book idea I'd found sketched out but never finished to my editor -- fingers crossed! More ideas are in order, so after finishing my Bob Vila.com posts this week, it's back to the bakery!
Thursday, January 29, 2015
Discovered Old Notes!
Ever find old notebooks or journals with stories you'd sketched out and then forgotten about? That happened to me yesterday. Among my finds were these notes for a Halloween story I had started for my daughter this past fall, then set aside. It's kinda cute. Think I'll try to get it into shape and send around. Kids market so, so difficult these days, but who knows? Wish me luck!
Thursday, March 21, 2013
Christmas Book Almost Here!
After four years of waiting, my Christmas picture book—Christmas Eve with Mrs. Claus—is being printed as I type (and already available for pre-order on online book sites)! The delays came with finding the right illustrator (Teri Weidner, who's work I adore) and then finding the right look for Mrs. Claus and Santa. I can't wait to see an actual printed copy, probably in about a month from now. Sonia Manzano, aka Maria from Sesame Street and a children's and young adult author herself, was kind enough to write a blurb for the back cover. All too exciting!
Haven't come up with another winning formula for another kids book yet, though something's always brewing, especially with my 6- and 9-year-olds sparking ideas without their even knowing it. In the meantime, I hope everyone enjoys Mrs. Claus!
Haven't come up with another winning formula for another kids book yet, though something's always brewing, especially with my 6- and 9-year-olds sparking ideas without their even knowing it. In the meantime, I hope everyone enjoys Mrs. Claus!
Thursday, October 18, 2012
Learning more about one of my favorite children's book authors, Margaret Wise Brown, by reading her biography: Awakened by the Moon by Leonard S. Marcus. In the 1930s she attended the highly progressive Bank Street teacher's college in NYC and worked with children in the lower grades of the Little Red School House. The philosophy there sounds like something I'd love for my own children, presently in the 21st-century NYC public schools. So much about exploration and imagination. Brown herself spoke of how much she admired the creativity of her students. In this atmosphere it is not surprising that she will develop a writing style that is abstract and inventive and so much like the way children themselves speak and think when they are very young. Loving this book!
Tuesday, September 25, 2012
Where I work... here is a picture of my office. It is not always this neat! As I look around me now there are piles of paper on the white desk where my son and daughter often draw. Outside the window is a tree-lined street in Brooklyn. I've always loved the look and feel of "Brownstone Brooklyn." One day, though, I hope to have a desk that overlooks a pretty garden--a house in the country would be so nice, and would probably inspire stories of tiny creatures that live in the woods and the flower beds. These days I'm going through old stories I have in various stages of completion. Some aren't half bad, but others, in retrospect, are forgettable. No one particular story has grabbed me for a while. I'll start working on one, convinced that it would be enthusiastically received, then after a week I lose interest, or better--I begin to doubt myself. Sometimes all it takes is for someone besides myself, especially someone in the publishing industry, to tell me that a story has potential and then I can focus 100% till it's done. For now, I'll keep sifting through my files and hope I can spot the one I should finish!
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