I find inspiration in a lot of forms. I love to watch movies and binge watch shows. I enjoy music and listen to podcasts. I love walking outside and focusing on little things, for example, a flower or a bee. This is what inspires me. Another thing that inspires me is my teachers. One specific […]
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Blog: Loni Edwards Illustration (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: mentors, paintings, inspirations, Add a tag
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Blog: BookEnds, LLC - A Literary Agency (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: inspirations, Add a tag
I just learned about vision boards. I'm assuming I'm far behind on this trend, but I'm excited about it nonetheless
Following every blog post, book signing, or any other thing to do with my writing, I end with two words that are very inspiring to me; “Dream Big.” I have been thinking about these two words what they actually mean to me. Everyone has dreams, whether they are dreams for the distant future, or even dreams for the near future. It is up to each of us to make our “dreams” come true. It all depends on how much we want it and what we are willing to do to make it happen.
I have many dreams and aspirations. My dreams are goals that I set for myself. Some dreams are big; Some dreams are small. Whatever they may be, I always try to do my best to accomplish them. Many of my dreams have already become a reality, which feels like an amazing success. At the opposite end of that spectrum, I have many dreams and goals I have yet to accomplish. Knowing that I haven’t accomplished such goals sometimes makes me frustrated, but it just makes me work even harder. I often times find myself making new dreams, or just adding more steps and benchmarks to current ones to make them bigger and better.
For many years, I have had my story “Adventures of the Bunny Baron: Captain Barnacle’s Revenge” written. It took a long time for me to put my mind towards my final goal of getting it published. I ran into many road blocks along the way which made me lose track. After being off that track for a while, suddenly, something would spark inspiration inside of me and make me get back to it. In 2013, I finally reached my goal. I self-published “Adventures of the Bunny Baron: Captain Barnacle’s Revenge.” My dream was completed…or was it? No, it was only the beginning of a much more complex, more ambitious dream which I had really only scratched the surface of. My dream and goals for “Adventures of the Bunny Baron: Captain Barnacle’s Revenge,” is to now get it “out there.” I want people to know who the Bunny Baron is, I want the Bunny Baron to become a household name. My small dream has now expanded into something huge! It will take time, persistence, and ambition on my part to achieve this next milestone.
So, what does “Dream Big” mean? Set short term goals. Set long term goals. Even if you may not be able to attain these goals, have something to strive for and something to keep moving you forward. If you do reach these goals, don’t stop there. Make yourself more goals to hit. It is always a great feeling when you accomplish a dream. Never stop dreaming…Dream Big.
Thinking about my own dreams and goals, I created the following list:
My current dreams:
1). Get out of Wisconsin and move to a warmer climate where I can enjoy the outdoors all year-round.
2). Continue working on the “Bunny Baron” series and get more stories published.
3). Work on SEO for my website so I can have a larger audience and be successful selling my stories.
4). Have my books become a business to support my family.
5). Branch out of the “Bunny Baron” books and expand my portfolio with different types of stories.
6). Continue going on vacations with my wife and experiencing the world.
This is only a short list of many dreams I have for myself. I feel it is a broad spectrum of short term dreams and long term dreams. This list of goals is a great visual for myself to see what I want to do, and is a great way to keep on track. I will continue trying my hardest to make each and every one of them come true.
Dream Big!
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This past week, I was very happy to hear a heartwarming story about my own story, “Adventures of the Bunny Baron: Captain Barnacle’s Revenge.” I wanted to share it because it is very cute and uplifting.
Cannon K.’s elementary school has “secret reader” readings throughout the year. This is where someone surprises the class and reads a book to everyone. Clues are given to the class every day leading up the the end of the week, trying to get the class to figure out who the secret reader will be.
The clues were all issued, and the class had it determined that it was Cannon’s Dad, however, he was supposed to be in Chicago for the day. The time came, and it was Cannon’s dad! He was so happy and so surprised! Mr K. brought in “Adventures of the Bunny Baron: Captain Barnacle’s Revenge” and read it aloud to the class. It is one of Cannon’s favorite books and he was so happy to be able to share it with his class, and even better have his dad read it to everyone! Not only did he treat everyone with the story, but Mr. K also brought in a healthy snack in honor of the pirate Captain Barnacle called “Pirates Booty.”
It is always a great treat for me to hear how well received my stories are and how people like to share them with others. They are obviously intended to be liked, but it is great to be able to see them “in action.” Thank you Cannon and Mr. K for sharing your great story with me.
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Blog: Emily Smith Pearce (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: artist, creativity, creative life, interviews, inspiration, Art, video, Culture, Inspirations, Add a tag
One of my favorite things is Terry Gross’s show, Fresh Air, on NPR. I especially love the interviews with actors and writers. Lately I’ve been listening to the podcasts while I’m doing something boring, like folding laundry.
Sometimes there just aren’t enough of Fresh Air interviews, though, so I’ve been looking for more conversations with authors and artists. Here are a few good ones I’ve found:
This Creative Life, created by YA author Sara Zarr (who btw also blogs here). There are interviews with a lot of writers and other creatives about how they work and live. I especially enjoyed the one with author Andrew Auseon (who is also a video game designer).
Mini studio-tours with artists at Little Scraps of Paper make me smile so much. The one above is of three collaborators who make these wacky wonderful costumey-snuggie-kind-of-things. Trust me, you just have to watch it. The videos are so beautifully filmed and just the right size for a quick pick-me-up. Thank you to Blair Stocker of Wisecraft for this hot tip.
Here’s a video of young fashion blogger/ Rookie magazine editor Tavi speaking at TEDxTeen about the strong female characters she’s looking for, and not always finding. YA writers, if you don’t know Tavi, you SHOULD!
What about you? Do you have any favorite creativity-related podcasts?
And by the way, are you on Twitter? I’ve been on it for years but am really just now learning the language and getting into it. I’m discovering all kinds of things there, including some of the above links. Meet me on Twitter @emilysmithpearc
A few other random things:
-Speaking of talks about art and writing, if you’re in the Charlotte area, check out the April meeting for the Women’s National Book Association (yes, men, you can join us, too): Monday, April 22, 6:30 – 8:30 PM at Consolidated Planning. The talk is titled “Latin American and Latino Women Writers and Literature in Translation.” More details here.
-Did you hear about the break in the Isabella Stewart Gardner art heist case? Soooo exciting. I used to work down the street from this lovely, one-of-a-kind museum.
-Saw Natalie Merchant the other night with the Charlotte Symphony Orchestra. Great show. Her new material is as complex and thought-provoking as ever, though I have to admit my favorite part was the 90′s set she did for an encore. The nostalgia factor is hard to beat. Seriously, what pipes she’s got—and what a talented songwriter.
-Lastly, I love this DIY magic potion kit over at Elsie Marley.
What’s got you inspired these days?


Blog: E is for Erik (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: SCBWI, creativity, podcasts, inspirations, Add a tag

Six episodes it (whilst working on my taxes last weekend) and I'm hooked. Great interviews and a nice insight into so many ways that people, write, draw, dance etc.. These are some fine, accomplished folk who are also real people.
Don't stop what you're doing, but put this on for some company in the studio. And thanks again nudging the creative muse: THIS CREATIVE LIFE

Blog: Emily Smith Pearce (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: fun with kids, Culture, Crafts, gardening, Easter, Inspirations, kid activities, Kid Crafts, Add a tag
If you’ve been reading this blog for awhile, you may remember my first encounter with real Easter grass, in my son’s German kindergarten. I was almost amazed at the simple thought of growing something that we’d always bought manufactured from plastic, in plastic bags.
But really, it’s the simplest, easiest thing you could ever grow, and the payoff is huge. This year, we’re growing our own at home. I’m just as excited as the kids to watch the green pop up.
I got a package of wheat grass seeds from the garden center, we filled some pots, lay the seeds on top, and watered. My son, now 5, told us not to cover the seeds with any dirt.
And shazam!
It’s got me singing Now the green blade riseth…
P.S. The lovely bird pot was a gift from our friend Sally Brotman, she of chicken kebab fame I love, love this pot!


Blog: Emily Smith Pearce (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: toys, Crafts, Germany, craft, Inspirations, Waldorf, Wood craft, Waldorf crafts, Add a tag
I scooped up these beauties at the last Waldorf craft basar we attended in Germany. I got them as much for myself as for the kids.
Don’t the stove and tiny pot, just like, kill you? I realize it’s hard to tell the scale here, but the pot has about the same circumference as an acorn top. I’m powerless before this kind of stuff. Makes me want to take up whittling, because, you know, I totally need another creative hobby.
Acorn dishes!
I think one of the things I like best about these is the bark. For some reason it never occurs to me to make things out of actual sticks from trees.
Hope you had a good weekend. I’m pressing forward on my novel revisions, though I had a reminder this morning of just how slow I am when I looked at where I was last year this same week. Yipes!
Are you in a reflective mood about what you’ve done over the past year? Celebrating goals met? Making new ones?


Blog: Emily Smith Pearce (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Culture, Inspirations, Books, reading, Add a tag
Hey! Just thought I’d share a little of what I’ve been reading/ plan to read.
From the top, Writers I’ve Met and Liked is a blank journal given to me by my friend Bettina. It makes me happy just to look at it. But at the same time sad to think how far away she is now (in Germany).
I picked up A Single Shard by Newbery winner Linda Sue Park when I was in Montpelier for the Vermont College alumni mini-residency (which was great, BTW). Ms. Park was the keynote speaker, and let me tell you, this is the woman I want to be when I grow up. She is a serious writer. Such a wordcrafter. She’s also a gifted teacher, a downright cool person, and has a big, kind heart. I was totally inspired. This copy is signed by LSP herself, as is The Kite Fighters.
Up next is Little House in the Big Woods by Laura Ingalls Wilder, lent to me by my eight-year-old. I decided to re-read (or in some cases read for the first time) the whole series after enjoying Little House On the Prairie so much with the family. Seriously, the woman has got some mad skilz. There’s a reason these books have survived. I’m loving the full-color illustrations in this edition—-go ahead and sue me, purists!
Yes, I realize Jonah Lehrer’s Imagine, about the nature of creativity, has since been recalled, but I’m finishing it anyway since I was already halfway through when I found out. More on that another time. Purchased at lovely Bayswater Books in Center Harbor, New Hampshire.
Also from Bayswater Books is Wonder Show by Hannah Barnaby, an old friend from Vermont College. Oh, the cover is so delicious. Can’t wait to read it.
Then Nueva Salsa from the library. Sadly, I didn’t have a chance to try any of them out, but I’m going to check it out again. Some very interesting combos.
Then Vintage Craft Workshop, a gift from my friend Jamie. I especially loved reading the histories of Aleene’s Tacky Glue and Mod Podge.
Slipcovers—I flirted briefly with the idea of trying to silpcover an old chair, then decided it was just too big a project and swapped the chair instead. Again from the library. It’s a little dated, but the technical info and photos are solid. Appears to be out of print.
Handmade Home, also from the library. Can you tell how much I’m enjoying having access to a full-fledged English-language library? This is a beautiful, beautiful book, and during those awful days when our stuff arrived and the house was a fruitbasket turnover, I’d look at these pages and dream of such cozy, inviting spaces. Oh the handmade wool blankets! The European cottages! The made-from-scratch furniture!
And lastly, also from the library, Reinvention by blogger Maya Donenfeld of mayamade. A book after my own heart, about making new things out of thrifted/ recycled fibers. I’ll never look at a wool blanket or suit the same way again.
Speaking of fibers, I’m currently making a throw blanket out of some inherited silk. Yeah, gettin’ fancy.
Also, watching some great new shows: Julia Louis-Dreyfus in Veep and Aaron Sorkin’s The Newsroom.
Have you read anything good lately? Watched anything that’s worth seeing? Do share.


Blog: Hazel Mitchell (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: sketch for today, doodles, snow, digital painting, children's illustration, inspirations, pink, ballerina, ballet shoes, camden maine, dandelion fairy. fairy. Hazel Mitchell, black and white sketches, Add a tag

Blog: Emily Smith Pearce (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: poetry, winter, Culture, poem, Germany, Inspirations, light, seasonal affective disorder, Add a tag
It’s that time of year again, when the German sun sets at 4 p.m. in a blanket of gray, and even a candlelight lunch doesn’t seem like a ridiculous idea.
In this season I always think of a poem by my friend Etta, and today she’s agreed to share it with us. Thanks so much, Etta.
MOON SHINE
I.
There is never enough light in winter.
Even in the room you chose
for its double window,
the sun barely gives enough
to read by.
*
I imagine you at your desk
scrambling to catch
what morning light there is.
II.
You have made me think about winter.
how the sun is closer to us
but its light is less:
an inverse, illogical proportion
that my science can explain but not excuse.
A tilting on the axis,
a simple change of wavelength,
hardly seems enough to cause
a melancholy season.
*
Winter’s saving grace
is cloudless night,
each star a perfect prick
in blue; midnight’s moonlight
compensates for gray noon,
bleeding cold life
through your thick curtains.
*
Etta Jensen-Barnes
Etta and I have been friends since first semester of our freshman year, when we took poetry with the late, great Robert Kirkpatrick. After that class, I became an English major and never looked back.
With so little light, I’m grateful to have the tree up and the advent wreath to light each day. Did you know German tree stands hold no water? We learned that this week. It’s traditional to get your tree on December 24th and to keep it up until January 6. Trees are cut much closer to the time of sale, so they don’t really need watering during that short period, I guess. We brought our American tree stand, so we’re watering ours anyway. Some habits die hard.
I love this idea for a children’s Christmas tree over at elsiemarley, and also check out her list of Christmas activities to do with the kids. I especially like this woven ornament idea from the crafty crow.
Also, randomly:
An editorial about amazon’s sneaky new promotion. But hey, hardcover book sales in stores are up!
Also, I’m making progress on the sleeves for this. Maybe, maybe it’ll be done in time for Christmas. But I’m not above wrapping it up in pieces. Watch me.
Also making progress on my novel and trying to get an old nonfiction writing project restarted. Back to work.

Blog: Emily Smith Pearce (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Germany children's writers, SCBWI, books, reading, book recommendation, Inspirations, Add a tag
What are you reading these days? I like to keep a little stack by the bed. And in the kitchen. And by the couch… and pretty much everywhere. Ever read If On a Winter’s Night a Traveler? Pretty much like the character described there.
I haven’t converted to an e-reader yet. I’m not anti-digital but I do so love the physical presence of a book. I trained in print-making, after all. I’m pretty much addicted to paper.
I ordered a few things recommended by friends. The Island at the Center of the World I stole from my husband’s night stand. That would be the absolute best way of finding new books.
Although now he’s got a kindle, and because there’s no cover I can never figure out what he’s reading. So every night I have to ask him.
Downton Abbey is of course a TV series, not a book. It’s a British show that’s supposed to be awesome, done by the same guy (Julian Fellowes) who did the movie Gosford Park.
I seem to be into British TV right now. We’ve been watching Doc Martin.
Meanwhile, I’ve been tackling a revision of my work in progress, a young adult novel. I found out about the shrunken manuscript technique here and can’t wait to dig into that. Also using the spreadsheet technique (from the same website) and reading Self-Editing for Fiction Writers. It’s nice to have some new approaches to the process.
A shout out to all the SCBWI folks who attended the talk in Berlin on Saturday. It was great to meet you all! What amazing weather we had, as we sat outside all afternoon and evening chatting about books. If you’re a writer or illustrator (or aspiring one) living in Germany or Austria, join us at our website here. You can also find us on facebook at Children’s Writers and Illustrators—-Germany. I’d love to see some more events and gatherings here in Northern Germany, so say “hi” if you live up this way.
Have a great weekend!

Blog: Emily Smith Pearce (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: inspiration, Culture, photography, Germany, architecture, Inspirations, Europe, Bach, bricks, Lueneburg, Add a tag
At first glance, you may think the bricklayers of Lüneburg knocked back a few too many lagers before work. Many of the multi-colored brick buildings lean and sway, and some turrets are bent like trees in a hurricane.
It’s not the fault of the bricklayers but of the shifting ground in this former salt-mining town. The mining caused the ground to sink in different areas, resulting in the kooky dips in the streets and buildings. The buildings of Lüneburg are stunning examples of Hanseatic architecture, known for its intricate brickwork.
Over the course of my two-day visit there, I was so enthralled with the town that I must’ve taken 200 photos. I never knew bricks could have this much personality.
As usual these days, I’ve got patchwork on the brain when I look at anything. Like this:
Fodder for a quilt?
The contraption below seems to be for lifting items to the top floor. Note the curled brick on the right.
There were a lot of aqua doors, which I loved against the red brick. I’m into any variation of blue-ish with orange-ish.
Here below you can really see the bending. Note the rounded brick used in the little columns and arches.
I loved this sign:
And a special surprise: I stumbled upon a church sign (St. Michaelis) saying J.S. Bach had sung here for two years as a boy. Bach is my favorite composer, so this totally made my day.
Lüneburg is not far from Hannover—about an hour by car or by train. I can’t believe it took me this long to check it out, but I hope to go again soon.
For another great short trip from Hannover, check out Celle.
*Information for this post was gathered from wikipedia.

Blog: Emily Smith Pearce (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Denmark, amusement park, Copenhagen, Danish architecture, Tivoli, Tivoli Gardens, design, food, Travel, Art, Culture, color, architecture, Inspirations, Add a tag
Everyone had told me Copenhagen was beautiful, but it still surprised me. What a classy city. The Danes are a people dedicated to beautiful design.
We were lucky enough to have gorgeous weather, and the blue sky just heightened all the colors.
I highly recommend taking a canal tour. It’s a great way to hit all the highlights and besides is just fun, too. The kids enjoyed it but got a little restlesss toward the end of the hour.
This beauty is hanging out under a bridge or overpass-type thing:
No trip to Copenhagen would be complete without a stop at Tivoli Gardens, the 19th century amusement park right in the center of downtown Copenhagen.
An inspired Tivoli treat: churros with custardy softserve. Mmmmm….
If you enjoyed this post, you may want to check out my other posts about Denmark here and here.
Very interesting and I’m sure fun to watch. Could that be rye grass? I’ve never heard of wheat grass. Growing things are fun to watch, particularly for children. GD Bob
No, it’s definitely wheat grass. Which is really just wheat. You buy the seeds in a packet (rather than a big sack). Some people grow it to blend up and make into a juice—-supposed to be very healthy.
if you haven’t used chemicals you can chop it up and put it on an open sandwhich with a good cheese! yummie!
Really? I didn’t know you could eat it.