Friday, February 19, 2010

I Did A Reading at Oxford Public Library

Had my first official book reading at Oxford Public Library on Monday!  It was great fun.  About 35 people came out (maybe 20 kids, plus their parents) to hear a dramatic reading of LFT.  Leanne, the children's librarian, did a wonderful job with the decorations too (see above photos).  Afterward, everyone enjoyed a delicious lunch together (featuring macaroni and cheese and cupcakes, my favorite!)

Everyone seemed to like the book and I sold a few copies.  The age range was wide though, from toddlers to about 9 years old, so that made me a bit nervous--I definitely lost some of the babies' attention around page 30!  But the middle-range kids listened and actively participated once I remembered my tried-and-true method of asking questions and pointing stuff out as I went along (this works wonders when reading to my classes during substituting).  The older girls pictured above are budding writers and were very curious about my writing/publishing method, which I was more than happy to share!

The main librarian, Ken, said he thought maybe I can come back and do it in the summer.  That would be fun, and now I know more what to do too (I'd like to engage the audience more beforehand--this time I introduced myself and just jumped right in, but I bet it helps to establish some sort of rapport first so they have more of a reason to listen).

Sunday, February 7, 2010

Be Good, Kids! (Or Else You'll Die/Accidentally Kill Someone/Have No Friends/Get Fat, Etc.)

I'm working on some black and white illustrations for the re-publishing of a collection of didactic poems and stories written by a Quaker woman in the 19th century.  Here's one from a poem about a boy who keeps a squirrel as a pet, but eventually decides to let it go free.  My only worry with this project is that I will make the illustrations too Edward Gorey-esque.  He's one of my favorite illustrators (I've probably mentioned him in an earlier post), and one whom I've been compared to on more than one occasion (even before I even knew he existed, back in college).  He wrote several stories that were satirical versions of what I'm illustrating for now, so it's spotty territory, but hopefully I can find enough of my own style to shine through!

EDIT: I decided to color it for fun.  

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Made It Out of NYC Alive

Back from the SCBWI Conference in one piece!  Just kidding, it wasn't that crazy.  Mostly it was fun and informative.  I was completely nervous the whole ride up, worried about that darn elevator speech I needed to figure out, but Sachin helped me perfect it as we drove (he's quite the actor and did a very convincing portrayal of a publisher and an agent who I had to "converse" with).

Friday night we got there and immediately went to the Wheeltapper Pub on 44th Street to meet up for KidLit night (a.k.a. Children's book professionals getting drunk together and having a jolly, no-pressure time).  It was pretty awesome, although I did find the hardest part was breaking in to conversation with people at some points.  We met Elizabeth Mosier, who happened to be from my region in PA, and her friend from California.  Then we talked to Linda McCarthy, an art director from Penguin.  Both had interesting insights into the industry and were a lot of fun to boot! 

Saturday I listened to great keynote speeches by the likes of Libba Bray (crazy and hilarious) and the most amazing, Jackie Woodson.  She gave me a whole new perspective on writing with the hypnotic readings of her picture book Show Way and a YA novel.  She had this mesmerizing tone that complimented the beautifully thought-out rhythm of her writing in a sort of beat prose way.  She got a standing ovation.

I was somewhat disappointed with the Breakout Sessions.  My favorite was Picture Books with Allyn Johnston of Beach Lane Publishing.  She read some select picture books to compliment her lecture, which included all very thoughtful and moving books (it's rare a picture book brings the reader to tears but these books were truly stunning in their simple messages of love).  I was disappointed to not get to talk to her afterwards, however, as they kicked us out of each session immediately after it was over.

I also attended Visual Storytelling with Laurent Linn.  Linn was a cool and charismatic speaker but he just didn't tell me anything I didn't already know from my first year in art school.  It was very basic-level info he was giving out, and to make it worse the lecture was in this basement sort of room with big wide columns and a long narrow shape, so only about the first 2 rows could actually see the slide examples he was projecting to go with his VISUAL storytelling lecture.

Viral Marketing was the most informative session for me because I learned better strategies for interacting with readers online.  Most valuable lesson: I have to finally break down and get a Twitter account, at least for Lizzie.

Lunch was one of my favorite parts! The food was delicious, banquet-style, and the half of my table I talked to the whole time was populated by 3 funny, creative women including Robin Black Walder, a jeweler and children's novelist.

We also heard a good speech by illustrator Peter Sis, who talked about growing up in Communist Prague and his journey to the top once he reached the USA.

Sunday was fun with a hilarious lecture by Jim Benton of the Happy Bunny character (found in Hot Topic). That was followed by a somewhat dull list of what's selling in the market these days (the hour-long litany of which was made completely pointless by the lecturer then reminding us, "But the market trends are constantly changing so don't try to keep up"), followed by a very disappointing agent panel.  Of the three agents only one was relevant to what I do (Rosemary Stimola), and the format, which had Linn Oliver (SCBWI Founder) read pre-determined questions to the agents, did nothing for me.  The questions were not helpful and the answers even less so.  Typical cliche, ambiguous responses: "Well you have to write from the heart" "Write what is true to you," and my favorite, "We are looking for something that speaks to us--but we don't know what that is until we see it."  Not sure what I'm quite supposed to do with those answers.  I thought an audience Q&A, or a critique of a query letter/MS, would have been more helpful.  I left that panel just feeling frustrated.

Jane Yolen gave the final keynote speech, which was good (her list of 20 things a writer should keep in mind was perceptive and chuckle-worthy)...but I'd already heard the exact same one in October of '08 at the SCBWI Mid-Atlantic conference.

So, all in all I would say the conference was good in that it left me inspired and motivated, but nothing more.  I learned that I've been doing most things right, but that it's a tough market out there and there's not a lot of room unless you're really amazing, or really pushy.

...I'm sure I can do at least one of those things!