Sweet little Friday is upon us. Let us celebrate the rapid approach of the weekend with ridiculousness. And that particular item I have in spades.
First off, I’m so pleased and proud and delighted to inform you that my husband of the Cockeyed Caravan blog has written a book. And what a book! Published by Writer’s Digest, it’s called The Secrets of Story: Innovative Tools for Perfecting Your Fiction and Captivating Readers. I like to call it Save the Cat meets Joseph Campbell. Best of all, we’re going to have a lovely release party for it on Friday, November 4th at 6:30 at the Bookends and Beginnings bookstore in Evanston, IL and YOU ARE ALL INVITED!! I’ll even bake something. Not sure what. Something. All information can be found here.
Now that’s a good title. From Publisher’s Weekly: Trenton Lee Stewart Accidentally Starts a Mystery on Goodreads. Don’t you hate it when that happens? But this is actually a very sweet tale (and not a bad idea for someone to think up). Check it out.
Horn Book has a new parenting blog, did you see? Called Family Reading, they’ve so far had posts on newborns who hate to read, reading on the spectrum (Ferdinand the Bull as on the spectrum makes quite a bit of sense, when you think about it), and crafts inspired by picture books. Beware that last link, though. Its author’s kinda crazy.
The site Atlas Obscura has a new book out, but that doesn’t mean they’ve stopped updating their site or anything. As proof, you simply have to read their recent post, A Guide to the Real-Life Homes of the Heroes of Children’s Literature. It’s cool. I was worried from the description that it would be all-white-kids, all-the-time, and that’s definitely the bulk of it. But Kindred, Tar Beach, The House on Mango Street, and a couple others make it on there. It also gets a bit loosey goosey with the term “children’s literature”. Holden Caulfield? Maybe not so much. Thanks to Matt for the link.
The Good News: Folio Magazine nominated this blog for an Eddie Digital Award. Woohoo! Yay, team!
The Weird News: I’m nominated in the “Column / Blog – Government / Public Sector / Education” category (not too weird) alongside fellow nominees Everyday EMS of EMS1.com, PoliceOne.com – Be Advised… of PoliceOne.com, and strategy+business specifically the piece “Why China’s Stock Market Crisis Spread” of PwC Strategy& LLC (significantly peculiar).
Hey, folks. Today the film The Great Gilly Hopkins will open in select theaters and on demand. Don’t know if there’s a theater showing it near you? Then here’s a handy dandy chart where you can see if it’s anywhere near you. Behold:
MARKET |
THEATER |
CITY, STATE |
Atlanta |
Plaza Theater 2 |
Atlanta, GA |
Charlotte |
AMC Concord Mills 24 IMAX |
Concord Mills, NC |
Chicago |
AMC Streets of Woodfield 20 IMAX |
Schaumburg, IL |
Cleveland |
Atlas Diamond Centre Cinemas 16 |
Mentor, OH |
Dallas |
AMC Mesquite 30 IMAX |
Mesquite, TX |
Denver |
AMC Westminster Promenade 24 IMAX |
Westminster, CO |
Houston |
Premiere Renaissance 15 |
Houston, TX |
Kansas City |
Cinetopia Overland Park 18 & GXL |
Overland Park, KS |
Los Angeles |
AMC Orange 30 IMAX & ETX |
Orange, CA |
Los Angeles |
Laemmle Monica Film Center 6 |
Santa Monica, CA |
Minneapolis |
Mall of America 14 |
Bloomington, MN |
New York |
Pavilion 9 |
Brooklyn, NY |
New York |
Carmel Movieplex 8 |
Carmel, NY |
New York |
AMC Loews 19th Street East 6 |
New York, NY |
New York |
Cinema Village 3 |
New York, NY |
Orlando |
Rialto Theatre 8 |
The Villages, FL |
Palm Springs |
Tristone Cinemas Palm Desert 10 |
Palm Desert, CA |
Philadelphia |
AMC Neshaminy 24 IMAX |
Bensalem, PA |
Phoenix |
AMC Arizona Center 24 |
Phoenix, AZ |
Salt Lake City |
Megaplex 20 at The District IMAX |
South Jordan, UT |
Seattle |
Varsity 3 Theatres |
Seattle, WA |
Wash. DC |
AMC Loews Rio Cinemas 18 IMAX |
Gaithersburg, MD |
Good stuff.
Daily Image:
Neat! Travis Jonker discovered this site where you can Brickify (turn into LEGOs) any image. He had a fun post where you could guess his brickified covers. I decided to do my own books out of curiosity. The results:
Is it bad to say that I kinda like some of these more? Thanks to 100 Scope Notes for the link.
Well, the Bird family had a lovely Christmas down in old Atlanta, GA. We didn’t lose any offspring either going there or back again, so I consider that a win. And the presents! Whether it was the Matilda soundtrack (yes, I’m a million years old and still request CDs as presents) or the collected Pogo comics (Vol. 2!) or a new laptop, this was a good little year.
What I did not know when I flew back at 6:15 a.m. yesterday was that I was rapidly winging my way home to an unexpected gift like no other. A gift that can only be described as one-of-a-kind. Indeed, unless more than one was produced this season, I may have the only one quite like this.
You will all recall Alison Morris. Dubbed “The Mayor of Children’s Books” by T.A. Barron she is one of the smartest, wittiest people I know. She is also now currently living in Washington D.C. which is a crime against man (or at least, against the convenience of seeing her as often as I’d like).
Over the years it was Alison who has inspired some of the greatest children’s literature crafts I’ve ever seen. That Shrinky Dink necklace of Newbery and Caldecott winners? Inspired by Alison and our Shrinky Dink Christmas ornament year. The birdhouses made out of F&Gs? All Alison.
So I open a present in the mail from her and this is inside:
Yes. Your eyes do not deceive you. In her infinite awesomeness, Alison created (and I do not know how) a Donner Dinner Party snowglobe.
Best. Gift. Ever.
Thank you, Alison.
Those of you familiar with the Jackson 5 song I’ve referenced in my title are probably now throwing virtual rotten fruit in my general direction. Still, I can’t say it isn’t accurate. This weekend I am pleased to be a speaker at the SCBWI Indiana conference in Zionsville, IN. I haven’t been back in Indiana since my last college reunion in 2010. It’ll be good for me to fill the lungs with some pure uncut Midwestern air once more. A gal need to fill up before heading back into the NYC fray. While you read this I may be zooming up into the clouds above, so enjoy some ephemera in my absence.
- Sure. On the one hand Spain’s reading net, highlighted by Boing Boing this week, looks AMAZING. But while it may work well for Spanish children, you just know that our kids would be leaping and jumping all over that thing within seconds. Plus, there appears to be a gigantic hole in it that’s just asking for trouble. Or maybe that’s how you get in. That would make sense.
- Views From the Tesseract has reached its 100th post and as a result Stephanie came up with What Stories Have Taught Me in 100 Small Lessons. It’s nice without being sentimental. Plus, if you’re in the market for good quotes from children’s books, this here’s the place to go for your one stop shopping!
- My l’il sis is at it again. This time she came up with a way to create comic book shoes. I cannot help but think that this might be possible with old Advanced Readers Copies. Or YA craft programs. Yeah. I think you can tell that the next time I go to the Newbery/Caldecott Banquet I’m recruiting Kate to help me with my outfit. She made one shoe superheroes and one supervillains.
For the record, she also did a post on how to make a hollow book. If you read it, just remember that the world is FULL of extra Harry Potter 7s. One or two less isn’t gonna hurt anything.
- And while we’re feeling crafty, Delightful Children’s Books has come up with such a good idea: a Bookish Advent Calendar. Genius! I may have to steal this idea myself. If I do, though, I’d better get cracking. Start placing holds now. December is practically nigh!
- On the more serious side of things, Marjorie Ingall writes great posts no matter where she is, but it’s her titles that consistently blow me away. At the blog Modern Loss (a site for “navigating your life after a death”) Marjorie wrote 5 Kids Books That Go There: The best of the ‘talking to kids about death’ genre (drumroll, please). It’s a strong five. I’m trying to think what I might add. This year’s Missing Mommy by Rebecca Cobb, maybe. That book ripped my heart from my chest and danced a tarantella on the remains.
- *sigh* Well, if nothing else, this clarifies for me who exactly “McKenna” is and why folks keep asking me to buy her books. And Saige, for that matter. Alexandra Petri writes a rather amusing piece on what has happened to American Girl.
I’m far less upset about the fact that they’re turning What Does the Fox Say? into a picture book. For one thing, I’m weirdly thrilled that the Norwegian YouTube hit sensation has a Norwegian illustrator. And one that clearly has a sense of humor. Hey! Whatever it takes to get some new names from overseas into the American market. At the very least, I want to see it (though I’m fairly certain it is NOT the first picture book to be based on a YouTube sensation). Thanks to Playing By the Book and Matt for the info.
Today, I show something I may have shown before. It’s lithographs of famous books where the text from the story makes up the image itself. Here are some examples:
A Christmas Carol
Alice in Wonderland
A Little Princess
Thanks to Marci for the link!
Gaithersburg is pretty far out to really be the DC market, but I’ll look for Gilly Hopkins on demand. Thanks for posting that!
Congratulations on the Eddie Digital Award nomination!
Thanks!
Congrats to your better half on THE SECRETS OF STORY. I love books on the nuts and bolts of writing, & Writers Digest has put out some great ones (Chuck Wendig, Orson Scott Card, Nancy Kress.) You had me at STC meets Joseph Campbell.
Thanks! STC isn’t really our business so I never know if the reference is going to mean anything to the person I’m talking to. I knew I could count on you to get it!