by Joyce Audy Zarins If someone from a school overseas invited you to do an author or artist residency in connection with your picture book what would you do? I said yes even before I knew the particulars. If that would be your reaction, there are a few things you may want to consider to […]
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Blog: Constructions: joyce audy zarins (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Art, process, book art, work in progress, the world, Residencies, pearls of wisdom, Joyce Audy Zarins, world books, Diverse books, children's books, picture books, Add a tag

Blog: Constructions: joyce audy zarins (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: children's books, picture books, middle grade fiction, editors, YA fiction, work in progress, Literary Agents, A, traditional publishing, Inc., Andrea Brown Literary Agency, pearls of wisdom, Writing today, Diverse books, Add a tag
I’ve just returned home from Big Sur on Cape Cod, a wonderful mentoring weekend for children’s book authors and illustrators organized by Andrea Brown and her most-successful-in-the-US literary agency, in coordination with Lisa Rehfuss. This event is held annually in California, and for the first time was offered here in New England (lucky us). The […]
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Blog: Constructions: joyce audy zarins (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: marketing, children's books, Interviews, picture books, process, book art, work in progress, traditional publishing, Writing today, Diverse books, Add a tag
I recently did an interview for WritersRumpus.com with Brian Lies, successful author and illustrator of gorgeous books for children. It was posted to coincide with the release of Brian’s latest picture book, Gator Dad. You can see his glorious artwork and read about him here. Bookmark
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Blog: Aris blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: illustration, kids, boy, dog, watercolor, sketching, work in progress, train, pitanki, Add a tag

Blog: Shelley Scraps (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: update, new book, work in progress, Add a tag
My, it's been a long time since I posted to my blog, you may have thought in fact I'd given up on the blog entirely. Well no, not given up at all - but I made a decision to put things on ice for a while. There are a few reasons for this, one of the biggest being a very heavy workload this year, so I've cut back on a lot of social media until things get a little easier.
So what have I been up to then? Here's a brief update on activities.
First and foremost, a cover reveal!
My next picture book collaboration with Jane Sutcliffe is currently awaiting release in the US in March 2016. Will's Words: How William Shakespeare Changed the Way You Talk, is published to coincide with the anniversary of Shakespeare's death in 1616, and takes the reader through the streets of Jacobean London to the Globe theatre. Dropped into the narrative are numerous words and phrases from his plays that are widely used in everyday speech today. I'm greatly excited about this book, research and production of the artwork consumed much of my workload during the first half of this year. This will be my second collaboration with Jane, (our previous book together Stone Giant: Michelangelo's David and How He Came to Be was released in 2013).
Currently I'm working on a picture book for Japanese publisher Fukuinkan Shoten, Yozora o Miageyo, with words by Yuriko Matsumura, which follows a child's discovery of the stars of the night sky, culminating in a country trip to see the Perseids meteor shower. This too is due for release in 2016 in Japan. Here's a sneak snapshot of some work-in-progress.
Other book projects thereafter are currently under wrap - all will be revealed in due time!
Finally, I was recently honoured to be interviewed by writer Kathy Temean for her excellent blog Writing and Illustrating. This is a very full interview with plenty of images, so if you haven't seen it already do please have a look!

Blog: Creative Whimsies (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: collage, painting, work in progress, Laura Zarrin, painting video, Add a tag
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Circles 5x7 on canvas |
Here's a little video of me painting and collaging this piece.
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Totally professional set up here. |
Video and editing credit to my my son, Josh.

Blog: Constructions: joyce audy zarins (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Art, process, book art, work in progress, life in general, Writing health, creative living, pearls of wisdom, Writing today, children's books, Add a tag
also posted on WritersRumpus.com most visuals by author Here’s something for writers and illustrators to consider: the painful physical effects of your work. Don’t laugh. I kid you not. You might think that the arm in the photo (mine, actually) looks pretty healthy. After years of making welded steel sculpture using all sorts of heavy […]
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Blog: Constructions: joyce audy zarins (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Writing today, children's books, middle grade fiction, process, YA fiction, work in progress, traditional publishing, Add a tag
The process of writing or illustrating a children’s has often been compared to having a baby. That gestation-to-birth time is partly the work of creating the story and pictures, but that’s just the beginning. Here is a fantastic explanation of the actual publication timeline, written by tween and teen author extraordinaire, Jen Malone. Bookmark
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Blog: (Maral Sassouni's Secret Blog) (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: children's book, work in progress, ABLA, NordSüd Verlag, JenRofé, North South Books, agent, news, picture book, Add a tag
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Blog: warrior princess dream (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: illustration, Christmas, sketches, pencil, work in progress, bear, cardinal, licensing art, mistletoe, woodland animals, holiday art, christmas art, sara burrier, sara b illustration, pinecone, Add a tag
A very small and sweet story unfolded as I drew these.
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Blog: Phyllis Harris Illustration (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: children's art, sketching, work in progress, illustration process, wall art, girl's room art, wall art prints, Add a tag

Blog: Beautifique (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Life & Stuff, beautifique studio, ninamata, beautifique blog, bellagio hotel, fall theme, nightscape, ninamataillustrations, roughsketches, watermill, vegas, autumn, Illustrations, sketches, trees, work in progress, pumpkin, view, Add a tag
Worked on some fun sketches all week and I can’t wait to share the finals with you!
The hubby and I took a quick trip to Vegas last week. Although it was mostly a business trip rather than a pleasure trip, we managed to squeeze in a little bit of fun in between our chaotic schedules.
I’ve never been to Vegas in the fall..I hadn’t realized how enchanting this place can be. If you get a chance to go this fall I highly recommend it. The weather seems great this time of the year.
This is pretty much what I saw all of last week..I’m not complaining!!
HAPPY MONDAY!
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Blog: the enchanted easel (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: bows, sanrio, the enchanted easel, hello kitty 40th anniversary, art, painting, acrylic, children's art, work in progress, kawaii, stars, whimsical, Add a tag
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©the enchanted easel 2014 |
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©the enchanted easel 2014 |

Blog: Constructions: joyce audy zarins (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: children's books, reviews, picture books, Art, process, YA fiction, book art, work in progress, story structure, traditional publishing, Writing today, Add a tag
This article is a post I wrote for the fabulous Writers Rumpus blog today, September 30th. While recently reading John Green’s Looking for Alaska, I was surprised by the shape of the story. I’ll get to that in a minute, but it reminded me of other authors who played with the structure of their narratives. […]
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Blog: the enchanted easel (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: pop art, tim burton, the nightmare before christmas, the enchanted easel, sally, seamstress, art, sketch, children's art, work in progress, kawaii, whimsical, Add a tag
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©the enchanted easel 2014 |

Blog: the enchanted easel (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: art, sketch, children's art, ocean, graphite, work in progress, mermaid, kawaii, whimsical, sea turtle, the enchanted easel, custom painting, Add a tag
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©the enchanted easel 2014 |
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©the enchanted easel 2014 |

Blog: Barbara O'Connor (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Revisions, Work in Progress, Add a tag

Blog: the enchanted easel (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: girl, art, acrylic, children's art, work in progress, kawaii, bow, whimsical, red head, tori amos, original painting, the enchanted easel, ribbons undone, scarlet hair, the beekeeper, Add a tag
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©the enchanted easel 2014 |
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http://instagram.com/toriamos |
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laying down layers of color... ©the enchanted easel 2014 |
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crimson colored lips... ©the enchanted easel 2014 |
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strands of scarlet... ©the enchanted easel 2014 |

Blog: Barbara O'Connor (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Work in Progress, Books I Love, Add a tag
I had a super busy school year with school visits and conferences and such.
After that I hit the ground running, or rather sitting, pen and paper in hand. (Yes, I write longhand.)
I had a wonderful jumpstart at a writers retreat with my home girls.
(l to r) Kirby Larson, Winston the Wonder Dog, Susan Hill Long, Augusta Scattergood, me) |
Came home and stayed focused despite the gorgeous New England summer weather and my gardens and other distractions calling to me.
My only breaks have been a stroll at beach or bog with the dogs.
But today I'm floating on a little island of time.
I have no idea exactly what that phrase means, but I like it, so I'm using it.
My work-in-progress is temporarily simmering on the back burner, ready to be buffed and polished and Bo-toxed into shape.
So today I'm free floating and it's been bliss.
Started the day with a 5:30 bog walk. (I have to time my visits so there aren't any other dogs for my shelter dog to fist fight with. She sometimes has, um, issues.)
Then I came back and picked fresh flowers from the garden (which look a little limp now but, oh well).
And THEN, I've been hunkered down with this all day.
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Song Writers on Song Writing by Paul Zollo |
Writers, songwriters, readers, music lovers, and anyone who isn't dead would love this.
It's a big fat book full of interviews with the BEST songwriters.
Pete Seeger, Bob Dylan, Carole King, Paul Simon, Brian Wilson, Randy Newman, Neil Young, Leonard Cohen, Frank Zappa, Carlos Santana, Lou Reed, k.d. lang, Merle Haggard.....on and on and on.
I find myself whipping out the yellow highlighter every few minutes.
Feeling even more inspired to get back to my simmering word pot.

Blog: the enchanted easel (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: girl, art, hair, children's art, paint, work in progress, kawaii, acrylics, whimsical, brunette, palette, browns, original painting, the enchanted easel, tresses, Add a tag
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©the enchanted easel 2014 |

Blog: the enchanted easel (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: the enchanted easel, sky full of stars, art, painting, sketch, work in progress, moon, kawaii, stars, sky, whimsical, yellow, coldplay, celestial, chris martin, Add a tag
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©the enchanted easel 2014 |
speaking of...i thought i'd be kind enough to include Coldplay's A Sky Full Of Stars video below....just because i'm nice like that. ;)
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©the enchanted easel 2014 |

Blog: the enchanted easel (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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©the enchanted easel 2014 |
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©the enchanted easel 2014 |

Blog: Constructions: joyce audy zarins (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: marketing, children's books, Interviews, reviews, magazines, process, work in progress, traditional publishing, Joyce Audy Zarins, Norse, Writing today, Add a tag
What is Writers Rumpus? Marianne Knowles, who runs the writers critique groups I belong to, started a blog for children’s book writers and illustrators that is chock full of great information in twice weekly (Tuesdays and Fridays) by our crit group members and guest posters. I’ve written a few of these articles myself. One, titled […]
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Blog: Here in the Bonny Glen (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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So, funny story. A few weeks ago my friend Sarah Tomp, whose upcoming YA novel My Best Everything I can’t wait to read, wrote to ask if she could tag me in the Writing Process Blog Tour. It sounded fun, but I was feeling pretty swamped that week, so I thanked her and declined. A day or two later, another local writer friend, Marcie Wessels, asked me the same question, and again I said I appreciated the nod but would have to pass. Well, about a week after that, my pal Edith Hope Fine issued the same invitation! And that very same day, my friend Tanita Davis did one better—she went ahead and tagged me.
Well, okay, I can take a hint! And what do you know, a holiday weekend rolled around just in time for me to participate. So first: a big thank-you to all four of these generous friends, so eager to share the bloggity fun with me. Do click through on the links above to read their very interesting answers and find out more about their books. (Edith decided to sit out the hop herself, but you guys—I got a sneak preview of her new picture book, Sleepytime Me, illustrated by Christopher Denise, and it is a swooner. This year’s favorite bedtime reading, mark my words. It launches tomorrow! And I happen to know she’s got a companion workbook coming for her excellent Greek and Latin roots book, CryptoMania!, and it’s top-notch. Homeschoolers and teachers, you’re going to love it.)
Okay, so here are the questions, which I actually feel pretty shy about answering. I hardly ever talk about my process.
• What are you working on?
Generally, multiple things at once. The Main Project, always, and then two or three other works-in-various-stages-of-progress, and a scrawly list of ideas. Right now, the Main Project is the book I’ve been laboring over (very much in the childbirth-metaphor sense of the word) for a very. long. time: a historical fiction YA I’m writing for Knopf. It’s a project very close to my heart (involving a good bit of my own family history) and is probably the most challenging book I’ve written yet, in terms of research and subject matter. And I’ll want to talk lots more about it before too long.
So that’s the front-burner book. Then there are the things I work on when that one is being obstreperous: I’m playing with a new Inch and Roly idea, now that Sunny Day Scare has packed its knapsack and gone off into the world to seek its fortune. (They grow up so fast!) And there’s a fantasy novel I play with when historical fiction is besting my brain.
And! And! Very very slowly, very very occasionally, I add a little to a memoir of sorts I’m writing (or thinking of writing, is probably more accurate) about our years in Astoria, New York, when Jane was going through chemotherapy. I have a lot of stories piled up from those days.
• How does your work differ from others in its genre?
That is a really good, and really hard, question. I feel like in a way it’s a question best answered by readers, not by me about my own work. I like to work with characters who are grappling with ethical dilemmas—Louisa struggling to find a way to clear her father’s name without revealing Angus’s secret and therefore exposing him to probably dangerous public scrutiny (The Prairie Thief); Martha wrecking her dustgown and getting away with it, but fessing up after an internal struggle (Little House in the Highlands). Kids trying to sort out right and wrong when the lines seem fuzzier to them than adults give the impression they are. I think in terms of my style itself, I may work differently (but who knows?) in that I’m hearing the work read aloud as I write—probably in part because read-alouds are such an enormous part of my life. I mean, I’m reading aloud all morning long; I’ve spent nearly nineteen years this way, days full of the written word spoken. I think that gets into your fingers, as a writer: the cadence and lilt of a good read-aloud, the distinct character voices, the aural underscoring the visual images created by the text. I think, too, my having studied as a poet comes into play here, too. I entered my MFA program as a poet and emerged as a writer of prose fiction, but you can’t get poetry out of your blood.
• Why do you write what you do?
I put this question to Scott, adding lamely that I write the stories I’m burning to write. “I don’t know how to nail it down more accurately than that.” He chuckled. He knows me better than I know myself. “Well, first,” he said, “there’s the pioneer thing—” and he’s right; he doesn’t mean just Pioneers of the American West, though certainly that period is a lifelong fascination of mine and my original concept for Prairie Thief jumped right out of Edwardian England, where I’d envisioned it taking place, and emigrated happily to the Colorado prairie, circa 1880. Scott, who knows what ideas are crammed into my mental Possibilities drawer, was speaking also of my love of all kinds of frontier stories—the Pern books, the Darkover novels, any kind of pushing forward to unknown terrain and making terms with it.
“But also,” he continued, “there’s your fascination with miscommunication and injustice. The injustice that arises when someone has been misunderstood. You’re always wanting to set that straight, in your work and in real life.”
As soon as he said it, I could see it: this thread woven through so much of my work. It’s the central conflict of Prairie Thief, of course: a man falsely accused, his daughter intent on clearing his name. And other misunderstandings nested inside that larger one. But also: there’s Martha’s first governess, who doesn’t like her and misreads all her errors as deliberate. I had to bring in Miss Crow, didn’t I, to understand her. Over and over in those books, there are miscommunications between family members that lead to conflict. Scott pointed out that Sunny Day Scare, too, plays with this theme: Inch and friends are interpreting a horror in the grass in different ways, and Roly simply has to figure out what the scary thing really is. Even Hanna’s Christmas, my little commercial tie-in from long ago, has Hanna’s parents incorrectly blaming her for all the acts of mischief around the house. This is kind of revelatory, actually, and you can bet I’m going to be pondering it further.
• How does your writing process work?
Ahh, a nuts-and-bolts question. Now I’m in my element. The way I work is married to time. When Jane was a baby and I was first starting out, I had to hurry and write during her naps, sometimes actually wearing her in the sling, though it was hard to type that way. After Rose was born and Scott left his job at DC Comics to stay home and write, I worked longer shifts, a couple of hours at a time. I had very tight deadlines in those deadlines, staggeringly tight as I look back, and had to work with furious efficiency in the spaces available to me. I probably work best that way.
Later still, after Beanie came along, Scott and I settled into a rhythm. My writing time was from 3-6 every day. So again, mega-focus required to stay on task. I started this blog as a way to help me do that: after a day with the kids, spending 20 minutes writing about them helped me transition from mom to writer, and then I could work on the book at hand.
We had a rough year after Wonderboy was born, but that same schedule allowed me to work. It was after Rilla came along that things changed dramatically: Scott took an editing job out here in San Diego, we moved, he was away long hours, I wrote on Saturdays. That’s why The Prairie Thief took so long: years of Saturday afternoons. In 2011, he came back home to freelance (hurrah!) and now I get the whole afternoon and evening to work—meaning both my fiction and my editorial gig at Damn Interesting.
I can’t stand writing by hand. I have complaining wrists. With the current novel, I began working in Scrivener and fell in love—it keeps all my notes, fragments, timelines, character sketches, and primary source material organized and accessible much more handily than any paper system I could contrive. I mean, I really think I’d be lost without it.
I’m a slow writer in that I self-edit ruthlessly, never having managed to do the sort of pour-it-out first drafts that the writing instruction books urge upon you. Dear Anne Lamott, I’ve tried, but I just can’t pull it off. And it’s too bad, because I always write way more than actually belongs in a book. I’ll labor over huge chunks of manuscript, polishing at the word-level, and then wind up ripping them out, a stitch at a time (agony) to hide in a file somewhere. If I were to gather up all my Martha fragments, I’d probably have enough for a whole nother book. (Sorry, it’s not in the cards.)
Every day, I dread starting. After I’ve made myself enter the cave, hours pass in a blink, like Narnia time.
I think I probably love the research stage best of all. I’m happiest with all my papers and books spread around me on the bed, and some old newspaper enlarged on my screen. An orchard robbery in 1817; the constable arrested “a man named Peter Twist and two well-dressed women.” What’s the story there? No one can tell me, so I’ll have to make it up.
Up next:
Now I’m supposed to tag some writer friends. Laurel Snyder (The Longest Night, Bigger than a Breadbox, Seven Stories Up) and Jennifer Ziegler (Sass and Serendipity, How Not to Be Popular, and the hot-off-the-presses Revenge of the Flower Girls—how’s that for a great title?? both said yes, so look for their replies in a week or so. I’m also tagging Chris Barton (Shark Vs. Train, The Day-Glo Brothers, Can I See Your ID?) and my dear friend Anne Marie Pace (Vampirina Ballerina, Vampirina Ballerina Hosts a Sleepover, A Teacher for Bear), in case they’d like to play along. But no pressure, guys! (See paragraph 1, above.)
And Sarah, Marcie, Edith, Tanita: thanks for tagging me. I had fun!
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Blog: warrior princess dream (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Step one: Finish the sketch.
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