I hope this year brings you accomplishment and success, no matter how big or small your goal.
Image from The Stock Solution
Welcome
This is the blog of children's book author and elementary school teacher, Stacy Barnett Mozer. I blog about my own writing journey, the journey of other kidlit authors, my classroom, and talk about books. Thanks for stopping by. Your thoughts are always welcome (and encouraged).
Monday, December 31, 2012
Friday, December 21, 2012
Did the Mayans Get it Right?
At 9:30 ET, in places around the country and the world, time will stop.
People will pause to morn what we have lost.
20 school children.
6 teachers.
1 mother.
1 child.
Our sense of safety.
The piece of our heart that broke and cannot be mended.
Most of us will be forever changed by this event in ways we still can't fully understand.
Maybe the Mayans weren't wrong.
They said the world will end.
Maybe it has.
But hopefully after we stop today,
We can find a way to move forward
People will pause to morn what we have lost.
20 school children.
6 teachers.
1 mother.
1 child.
Our sense of safety.
The piece of our heart that broke and cannot be mended.
Most of us will be forever changed by this event in ways we still can't fully understand.
Maybe the Mayans weren't wrong.
They said the world will end.
Maybe it has.
But hopefully after we stop today,
We can find a way to move forward
into a better, brighter, safer future.
Sunday, December 9, 2012
Interview with Picture Book Author Susan Hood
Before launching a full-time writing career, Susan was the Children’s Content Director of Nick Jr. Magazine and an editor at Sesame Workshop, Scholastic Book Clubs and Instructor Magazine. As a freelance writer, Susan has published board books, beginning readers and nonfiction books with Disney, Fisher Price, Penguin Putnam, Scholastic, and Simon & Schuster, as well as articles for parents and educators in The New York Times, Working Mother and more. Just Say Boo, The Tooth Mouse, and Spike, The Mixed Up Monster are her first picture books. For more about Susan, visit her website.
When did you realize getting published was really going to happen?
When did you realize getting published was really going to happen?
As a former editor and staff writer at
Scholastic, Sesame Street and Nick Jr., I’ve published a lot of baby board
books and beginning readers over the years, but it took me years to attempt an
original picture book. I knew enough to know how hard this genre can be! When I
finally (finally!) finished a manuscript, then there were a lot of little
moments when I thought, “Wow, this is really happening!”
- when a librarian read my manuscript and wrote “LOVE, LOVE, LOVE!”
- when my writers’ group applauded after I read it aloud
- when an agent agreed to represent me
- when the book went to auction
- when my first choice in illustrators said she was “over the moon” and agreed to collaborate
Was there ever a point when you thought about giving up?
No. Not yet, anyway! I’ve wanted to do
this for so long and I can’t imagine doing anything else that would give me as much joy. That doesn’t mean there aren’t frustrations. Children’s books take a long time to
get published and I can get impatient. But when you first have an editor say
“You’ve made my day,” or first see the illustrations light up your words, or
open that first box of bound books, or have a librarian tell you, “I’ve been
looking for a book like this for years,” or have a kid who’s memorized your
book mouth the words as you read aloud, well! What could be better?
You had three books come out in a very short period of time (AMAZING!). What
was that process like?
Well, they all came out at once, but
each one was a long time in the making. THE TOOTH MOUSE took about seven years! I sold SPIKE, THE
MIXED-UP MONSTER in 2009 and JUST SAY BOO in 2010. The work came in different stages. I might be writing
revisions for one book while looking at sketches for another. The only tricky
part is promoting all three this fall. I’ve had back-to-back–to-back readings,
signings, and school visits. Around Halloween, I had one every day!
I've heard that picture authors don't get to approve their illustrator and some
don't even see the pictures until the book releases. What was that process like
for you? Did anything surprise you when you saw the illustrations?
That can be true, especially for a
first-time author. I was lucky. By
contract I was given input on the illustrators for all three of my books. I had
worked with a lot of wonderful children’s book illustrators at Nick Jr. Magazine so my editors and I
shared a frame of reference. We’d each recommend people and discuss different
possibilities. It’s a good way to explore each other’s tastes, sensibilities
and visions for the book. There are practical considerations as well.
Sometimes, your first choice is booked up for years. (In my case, we waited!)
I’d recommend trusting your editor. He or she has the book’s best interests in
mind and wants you to be happy and successful.
I also saw sketches for two of the
three books and color proofs for all three. Did anything surprise me? Everything!
The lighting, the perspectives, the humor, and all the quirky little details
were a thrill and a delight. When I opened one package of art, I started crying
because it was everything I wanted my book to be. True story.
Does anything surprise you about being a published author?
The astonishing generosity of other
children’s book authors, illustrators, editors, agents, teachers and
librarians. I am humbled and grateful for the love and support of this very
special community . There’s so much I didn’t know, especially about promotion,
publicity and marketing. I found that all I had to do was ask.
What advise would you give someone trying to write and publish picture books?
1. Read as many picture books as you can,
the classics as well as the latest releases. Stay on top of the way picture
books have changed and evolved.
2. After you read them, reread them. Study
the way the pictures work in counterpoint to the words. When looking at your
manuscript, cross out all the words that simply repeat what could be in the
pictures. Substitute words that add new information. So instead of saying “the
little red-headed girl in the blue polka-dotted dress,” tell us something the
pictures can’t convey. I think Mo
Willems said it best in his Zena Sutherland Lecture: (link--http://www.hbook.com/2011/10/authors-illustrators/why-books-the-zena-sutherland-lecture/)
“…if
I re-read one of my manuscripts and I understand exactly what is happening,
then the manuscript has too many words. And if I look at the images
without the words and I can fully understand the story, there are too many
drawings. It is only right when both words and image need each other to
make any sense. They need to be as close to incomprehensible, separately, as possible.”
This may be one of
the biggest challenges for writers because we love words, but sometimes the
trick is to stop talking. Leave
enough room for the illustrator to add 50%!
3. Many picture books these days are under
500 words. With so few words, make sure they are the best they can be. Use fresh,
rich, lively language with rhythm and repetition.
4. Encourage interaction. What can you do
to invite kids to participate in the storytelling?
5. Think hard about page turns. Here’s where the drama lies. What will
surprise your readers and/or make them smile? One of the reasons I love THE MONSTER AT THE END OF THIS BOOK
is that that simple act of turning pages is so empowering to kids. That said, be flexible. Your
illustrator, editor, and art director may have even better ideas about how to
pace the book.
6. Think especially hard about your very
last page turn. What kind of ending will make your readers laugh, cry, think?
What will move them, satisfy them and stay with them without knocking them over
the noggin.
7. Read aloud to kids. They’ll show you
things you never saw in a book. I’m embarrassed to admit that I didn’t really
get the genius of BROWN BEAR, BROWN BEAR, WHAT DO YOU SEE? until I read it to
my three-year-old.
Oh, yes. And be patient!
Thanks for the interview, Susan.
And readers, make sure to go to the New York Times Book Review page to read their review of The Tooth Mouse. I won't share with you the whole thing so you can read it yourself, but check out the last lines,
"Mice, it seems, are pretty crafty. One mouse even comes up with a nice way to repurpose the collected teeth. I believe, après tout, these mice could even teach the tooth fairy a thing or two."
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)