This is a children’s picture book structure break down for This Orq. (He Cave Boy.) by David Elliott and Lori Nichols. This breakdown will contain spoilers.…
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Blog: RabbleBoy (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Book Reviews, Children's Picture Books, children's picture book, David Elliott, Lori Nichols, animals picture book, cave boy picture book, cave man picture book, dorq, orq, Add a tag
Blog: The Official SCBWI 10th Annual New York Conference Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Illustration, picture books, SCBWI Success Story, lori nichols, #LA15SCBWI, Add a tag
Isn't Lori cute? And so is whoever is photobombing her. |
"If I had to break it down to two things, it would definitely be SCBWI, I went to my first conference in 2002, I left two small children at home with the flu and drove five hours to a regional conference (where I then got the flu) but I learned so much. I met my agent at a SCBWI conference, and she's the other thing that's broken me through, my amazing agent Joanna Volpe."
Lee asks Lori about some craft tips: Lori quotes Kelly Light, "Writing is like punching myself in the face."
Lori says, "That quote really spoke to me, for me, I have to show up every day, and sometimes what I write is going to stink. It's the showing up every day and not waiting for perfection. I think part of what makes a beautiful book are the imperfections, maybe a line is too scratchy, so what! Show up to your paper, your easel, your computer, and stay there, do it daily. Study other writers and illustrators, too."
Blog: Miss Marple's Musings (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: picture book, NO NO KITTEN, picture books, shelley moore thomas, Perfect Picture Book Friday, teachers' resources, Lori Nichols, Add a tag
Title: No, No, Kitten Written by: Shelley Moore Thomas Illustrated by: Lori Nichols Published by: Boyds Mills Press, 2015 Themes/Topics: kittens, mischief, imagination Suitable for ages: 3-7 Opening: Kitten wants a basket. Kitten wants a pillow. Kitten wants a blanket. Kitten wants… Synopsis: Kitten … Continue reading
Add a CommentBlog: Miss Marple's Musings (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Perfect Picture Book Friday, Lori Nichols, Davide Elliott, THIS ORQ. (HE CAVE BOY), wooly mammoth, pets, picture books, stone age, Add a tag
Title: this ORQ (he cave boy.) Written by: David Elliott Illustrated by: Lori Nichols Published by: Boyds Mills Press, 2014 Themes/Topics: pets, cave boys, cave moms, wooly mammoths Suitable for ages: preschoolers Opening: This Orq. He live in cave. He carry club. He cave boy. … Continue reading
Add a CommentBlog: Susanna Leonard Hill (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Perfect Picture Book Fridays, Nancy Paulsen Books, Lori Nichols, Maple & Willow Together, Add a tag
Whoopee! It's the first Perfect Picture Book Friday of 2015!
Isn't it wonderful to look forward to all the books we're going to share this year? Think of all the new titles that will come out! Sadly, mine will not be one of them, as it has been pushed back to Summer 2016, but that just gives me something special to look forward to next year :)
I have a lovely book to share today, one that those of you who have just spent a couple weeks with all your kids home for the holidays may find especially appropriate :)
Written & Illustrated By: Lori Nichols
Nancy Paulsen Books/Penguin, November 2014, Fiction
Suitable For Ages: 3-8
Themes/Topics: sibling relationships, family, fighting/making up
Opening: "Maple and her little sister, Willow, were always together. It was hard to remember a time when the girls weren't together. In fact, their parents even wondered if the girls had their own language. And in a way, they did."
Brief Synopsis: Maple and Willow do everything together, which works out just fine most of the time. But sometimes big sisters can be bossy, and sometimes little sisters want to do things their own way, and sometimes that leads to trouble. In the end, though, Maple and Willow would rather be together than apart :)
Links To Resources: Story Hour Activity Kit from Lori Nichols, and here's the trailer: (at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uXhe9jvpVds in case it doesn't embed properly! :))
Why I Like This Book: Although Joanna beat me to reviewing Maple for PPBF, I am a huge fan. This book is the sequel, and it's equally sweet and touching - a spot-on glimpse of sibling relationships. The description and depiction of Maple and Willow's time together is lovely and evocative - very true to childhood. When they inevitably get into a fight (because really, would you believe a sibling relationship where they never fought? :)) their anger and hurt are clear. But it doesn't take much time apart before they're longing for each other's company again, the fight over and forgotten. For any child who has a sibling, this is a nicely done reminder that arguments are normal, that it's okay to be mad sometimes, and that ultimately it's wonderful to have a sibling to be with. (P.S. I just realized that Joanna also beat me to reviewing this one, so apologies for duplicating!)
For the complete list of books with resources, please visit Perfect Picture Books.
PPBF bloggers please be sure to leave your post-specific link in the list below so we can all come visit you! I can't wait to see what's on your favorites list this week!
Have a wonderful weekend, everyone! :)
Blog: Tara Lazar (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Good Knight series, NO NO KITTEN!, Picture Books, Shelley Moore Thomas, Lori Nichols, PiBoIdMo 2014, Add a tag
Okay, so last year I did PiBoIdMo. At the same time, I was also trying to get 1,000 words a day finished on a middle grade novel. If you do the math, you can see that I’d have had 30,000 words on a novel and 30 ideas finished by the end of the month, were I to have been successful.
That would have been an AMAZING amount of writing.
But I was not successful. Not completely, anyway.
I logged about half of that amount of words on my novel—but that is still 15,000 more words than I would have had otherwise. So I felt pretty good about that.
But my picture book ideas. Ugh. I ended the month with 22 of them. Most were pretty crummy. I mean, I was trying to do the best that I could, but man, some of my ideas were really dumb/hideous/terrible/lame. What? You want an example? Okay, I’ll cut and paste some entries from my PiBoIdMo Journal, 2013:
November 3: (Came up with this one in my sleep) Baby Kangaroo Won’t Get Out of the Pouch I kind of see lots and lots of animals getting invited over to Joey’s pouch, but he is too scared to come out. Not sure what is going to get him to come out.
Really? I read that idea now and all I can think is POOR MAMA KANGAROO!! And also yuck. I think yuck.
Hungry for another?
November 13: Dream Dinos (Little dinos that live in your head and help you sleep….hahaha)
This whole idea just gives me the heebie-jeebies. And nightmares. Ick.
The list continues on in a similarly awful manner. 18 completely un-writable ideas.
Notice I said 18, not 22. That is because 4 of the ideas I recorded last November were pretty darn good. Actually, they were incredible. I am working on two of them right now, and will tackle the other two a time permits. (I wish I could tell you about them, but I can’t talk about picture book ideas when they are in progress. Ruins the magic of it.)
The truth of it is that I never would have come up with the 4 ideas that I really like if I hadn’t been willing to take a chance and just try and come up with one idea each day. (And each day, I did feel pretty satisfied with what my muse had given me. It was only upon later reading that I thought BLECH. But that is okay. From mounds of fertilizer sprout beautiful blossoms, right?)
So make your PiBoIdMo list. Let it sleep (or ferment, as the case may be) for a month, then see which ideas still smell sweet.
Shelley Moore Thomas is the author of the nine picture books (including the much heralded GOOD KNIGHT series) and one middle grade novel, THE SEVEN TALES OF TRINKET. Her upcoming tenth picture book, NO, NO, KITTEN! (Boyds Mills Press) hits shelves on March 3, 2015. In addition to being a writer, Shelley is also an elementary school teacher. So, no, she doesn’t really ever get to sleep.
www.ShelleyMooreThomas.blogspot.com
blog: www.storyqueenscastle.blogspot.com
twitter: @story_queen
Shelley is giving away a pre-order of her upcoming picture book with Lori Nichols, NO, NO, KITTEN!
This prize will be given away at the conclusion of PiBoIdMo. You are eligible for this prize if:
- You have registered for PiBoIdMo.
- You have commented ONCE ONLY on today’s post.
- You have completed the PiBoIdMo challenge. (You will have to sign the PiBoIdMo Pledge at the end of the event.)
Good luck, everyone!
Blog: Miss Marple's Musings (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: picture book, picture books, nature, trees, Book recommendation, sisters, teaching resources, making up, Perfect Picture Book Friday, Lori Nichols, actiivities, Maple & Willow Together, pig latin, sibling bond, Add a tag
Title: Maple & Willow Together Written and illustrated by: Lori Nichols Published by: Nancy Paulsen Books, Nov. 4th, 2014 Themes/Topics: sisters, sibling dynamics, making up Suitable for ages: 3-7 Fiction, 32 pages Opening: Maple and her little sister, Willow, were always together. … Continue reading
Add a CommentBlog: Liz's Book Snuggery (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Picture Books, Earth Day, Maple, 3-5, Frends, 0-2, Lori Nichols, Add a tag
Maple
By Lori Nichols
Recently I was coming out of a local breakfast gathering place in our small town. It happens to be next to the Historical Society’s building and as I put my hand on the door handle of the car, I glanced down at a brass plaque in the grass at my feet. It jogged my memory to something I had intended to do, but had forgotten; and that was, to plant a tree.
The town has a program to honor someone with the planting of a new tree. For a donation, the tree is planted along with a brass plaque at its base, inscribed with the name and details of the life of the honoree. I meant to do it for my parents. Sort of says, “I was here” and someone recognized that fact. It’s a look backward at a life, as compared with the look forward method celebrated in a picture book that BEGINS with a planting.
Meet Maple. Even BEFORE her appearance, her parents plant a tiny maple tree in her honor. With the planting of that tree variety, comes the perfect name for the soon-to-be-born infant dovetailing rather perfectly with the tree planted – Maple!
Trees symbolize so many things to me, but chief among them are change and growth. And so it is with young Maple. She grows AND changes side by side with her namesake. I love the sense of camaraderie and acceptance that Ms. Nichols builds between the arboreal maple and the human one. If Maple is having a bad day, she visits her leafy counterpart. She sings to it, sways for it and even pretends to BE it. Sweet!
The maple’s leaves provide shade and a place for dreaming amid its branches, but as the seasonal changes inevitably occur and colder weather ensues, the branches are blown BARE! What’s the young Maple to do for her namesake? Why enfold it with her jacket, of course. It is absolutely something a child would do. Instinctively, they seem to want heal the hurting and protect the defenseless. But as we grow older, it sometimes seems a struggle to stay in touch with that basic instinct that we had as children. Thanks for the gentle reminder, Ms. Nichols!
Through a winter that sees new friendships born of snow, via the making of a snowman, Maple finds THAT friendship literally disappears with the appearance of warmer weather. But no matter, Maple and her tree are a forever friendship.
Remember what I said earlier about trees symbolizing growth AND change? What is young Maple to think when she sees a NEW tree planted by her parents? Yup, she is soon to be the BIG SISTER! And Maple is nothing if not adaptable to new situations, sharing HER hat and gloves if the new sibling seems cold, and introducing HER playthings to the baby for amusement. But even young Maple discovers babies can have their fussy times when you wonder WHAT next to try to pacify.
Maple remembers what and who soothed HER, and if past can sometimes provide prologue, then the solution is a simple one; the leafy shade of her tree and the dancing shadows that provide diversion is a nearby solution to this age-old problem. And so the theme of this picture book of nature as friend is both soothing and satisfying.
And lest you think ANOTHER maple was planted for the new arrival to the family, you need not be surprised as Ms. Nichols is wise enough to know that just as no two trees are EXACTLY the same, no two children are EITHER! The new baby’s name and the tree planted in honor of her coming are both named WILLOW!
Lori Nichols has written a book taking the themes of siblings, growth and change and woven them all into a simple tale with a symbolically strong message for parents and young readers. Her art is perfectly matched to the story with Maple’s soft blue shirt, tan pants and standout red maryjanes painting a picture of a charming child going through every day events that may SEEM every day, but actually mark milestones of growth in her life as reflected in nature, not merely numerically, but emotionally.
And, oh yes, before I forget, I have TWO trees to plant, mom and dad!
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Just showing up is half the battle. Thanks for the take away.
Great advice! Thank you!
Fun post!
Okay, Shelley. I’ll keep cranking the ideas out. You just never know! I love the idea of No, no, Kitten!
Thanks for the reminder to keep writing ALL ideas – you gotta get the bad ones out somehow! It reminds me of a quote from the great cartoonist Chuck Jones about art: “Every artist has 1,000 bad drawings in them. The only way to get them out is to draw them out.” Switch out ‘drawings’ with ‘ideas’, or any creative endeavor.
Huge fan of the GOOD KNIGHT books! Thanks for the encouraging post.
Perfectly timed post! My ideas began taking a nosedive somewhere around day 2 or 3 and I now find myself surrounded by nonsense. I was beginning to doubt myself. Thanks for the encouragement to keep at it. And look! There really is sense in nonsense!
I needed the reminder that out of several ideas, only a few will be good. It takes away the stress of thinking all my PB ideas need to be great.
I have read your Good Knight series to my grandchildren many times. They are incredible! Interestingly, I read a picture book many years ago about a Joey who didn’t want to leave his mother’s pouch. Fortunately for her it didn’t take too long and he was still little.
Writing is sometimes like a good recipe, it has to cook or bake, then sometimes sit a bit to become delicious. Thank you for reminding me of that!