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Showing posts with label authors. Show all posts
Showing posts with label authors. Show all posts

Sunday, March 6, 2022

50 Precious Words: Prickly

 

Author Vivian Kirkfield holds a contest each year called "50 Precious Words." It does what it says on the label-- challenges writers (especially us picture book folk who are always chasing after profound brevity!) to write a complete story using no more than 50 words. 

You can view all of this year's entries here.  I've thrown my hat in the ring for the first time this year. Mine is below, with a bonus illustration to spice things up. 

 
Caroline’s plants were her triumph. Water, food, and love became leaves, blossoms, and fragrant herbs.  Except the cactus. It didn’t grow or wilt or brighten spirits. It didn’t need her.  “Sturdy,” said Mom. “Prickly,” grumbled Caroline. So she let it be.  Which was exactly what the cactus needed.  To bloom.

(By the way, I used *EXACTLY* 50 words, thankyouverymuch.)

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UPDATED: You guuuuuuys! I won an honorable mention! In the highly coveted and obviously most important of all Nature/Environment category! I drink from the keg of glory!!!

Wednesday, April 29, 2020

Copyright Page Art Notes: A Picture Book Treasure Hunt


Last year I started a long, epic thread on Twitter featuring my favorite hidden thing to hunt for in picture books:
You can click through for the full thread, but here are some favorites I spotted in 2019:
I love hunting for and tracking these notes as I read picture books, mostly to learn more about the artist's process but also occasionally for a little laugh. At the start of 2020, I started a new thread:
Happy hunting! Some early favorites from this year:

Friday, July 5, 2013

Illustration Friday: Protest


Several years ago, I started a little personal project I called "Portraits of People Who Aren't Real," a series of posed-portrait-style pastel renderings of my favorite children's book characters.  Click on the tag below to see the rest, including Fern from Charlotte's Web, Ethan from Summerland, and Sal from Walk Two Moons.  I drew a fourth sketch to complete the set, of Margaret Rose from E.L. Konigsburg's The Outcasts of 19 Schuyler Place, but never did it up in pastels.

Today, just a few months after Konigsburg (maybe my favorite middle grade author of all time) passed away, the topic at Illustration Friday is "protest."  This novel is all about a girl's protest for art, history, self-expression, and individuality over The Man that was the bland and self-righteous local homeowners' association.  If I weren't out of town and away from my pastels, I'd do this last portrait lickety split, because all signs point to I should.  Since I can't do that, I'm re-sharing Margaret Rose's sketch as a reminder to myself to finish this one properly someday soon.  Her story deserves revisiting.

Sunday, June 30, 2013

A Walking Mama


My friend Heather has a blog called A Walking Mama.  As the title suggests, it's all about living simply and car-free as a parent of two young kids (and in Washington state, too, not DC like me-- impressive!)  It inspired me to get to drawing, and what I ended up with was a new header for her:


Yay!

Sunday, January 6, 2013

Books Read in 2012


Happy 2013!  2012 was a good year for book reading-- dare I say, a wonderful one? (Seriously, check out all those titles below with "wonder" in them.  What will this year's literary buzzword be?)

Here's what I read in 2012, with my favorites bolded:

  • Year of Wonders by Geraldine Brooks
  • Catching Fire by Suzanne Collins
  • Mockingjay by Suzanne Collins
  • The Mighty Miss Malone by Christopher Paul Curtis
  • Dead End in Norvelt by Jack Gantos
  • The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman
  • The Art of Fielding by Chad Harbach
  • Everything on a Waffle by Polly Horvath
  • Mudbound by Hillary Jordan
  • Inside Out & Back Again by Thanhha Lai
  • Moneball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Game by Michael Lewis
  • Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel
  • Wonder by R.J. Palacio
  • Run by Ann Patchett
  • State of Wonder by Ann Patchett
  • Here Lies the Librarian by Richard Peck
  • The Teacher's Funeral: A Comedy in Three Parts by Richard Peck
  • I was a Rat!: Or, the Scarlet Slippers by Philip Pullman
  • The Wednesday Wars by Gary Schmidt
  • Okay for Now by Gary Schmidt
  • Wonderstruck by Brian Selznick
  • The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society by Mary Ann Shaffer
  • A Tree Grows in Brooklyn by Betty Smith
  • Penny Dreadful by Laurel Snyder
  • Liar & Spy by Rebecca Stead
  • Breadcrumbs by Anne Ursu

Saturday, December 8, 2012

Notes from an evening with Barbara Kingsolver

My favorite author (of grown-up books, at least) is Barbara Kingsolver.  If you ever scroll all the way to the bottom of this blog, you'll see a quote of hers about artmaking.  I think she's utterly brilliant, and love the not just the stories she has to tell, but the way she tells them.  I've read everything she's ever written, including novels, nonfiction, and poetry--well, all except for her first book, about women mine workers.  Haven't gotten around to that one yet.  My favorites are The Bean Trees and Animal Dreams.

Photo credit: The Baltimore Sun
I also haven't yet read her newest novel, Flight Behavior, but it's right there at the top of my reading list.  She recently kicked off her book tour here in DC, at the Washington National Cathedral, and I went to see her.  She read a bit from the beginning of Flight Behavior, then did a little Q&A.  A few minutes into the conversation, I pulled out a pen and started scribbling on my program.  This was stuff I wanted to remember.  It's been several weeks, so some context might have been lost, but at long last I'm transcribing my notes.  I figured this was as good a place as any to keep them, in case others might be interested, too.

On fiction as a change agent
Her best response to the issues of the day is to write a novel.  Nonfiction reaches those who are already convinced of the importance of something, but fiction reaches a different audience.  "It doesn't just tell you what to think; it asks you what you think." Stories enter through your heart not your brain.

On how we learn
"We think we're rational, but we absorb our truths from people we trust."  We all do it. So cultivating trust is the key to productive conversations.

On being a scientist who writes novels
She feels her scientific education serves her well as a novelist, and sets her apart as a fairly unique writer.  Structuring an experiment can be easily compared and translated to structuring a novel.  In some ways, creating plot is like performing experiments on her characters.

On fiction writing in general.
She starts with an idea, some truth she wants to talk about, then comes up with a plot.  After that come the characters, followed by their backstories. "Fiction is made of details."

Saturday, December 31, 2011

Books Read in 2011

Well, hello world!  I haven't done much in the way of artmaking lately.  Hopefully that'll change when the calendar switches.  But in the meantime, let's talk books.

2011 saw the failure of my hard drive and the loss of my many-years-ongoing "The Books I've Read in My Whole Life, Ever, All Time" spreadsheet (it wasn't really called that, but you get the idea.)  This was absolutely devastating, but a new account on goodreads and some powerful memory searching have allowed me to begin recreating that list.  As far as I can remember, here are the books I read in 2011.  I've bolded my favorites:

Chains, Laurie Halse Anderson
Forge, Laurie Halse Anderson
March, Geraldine Brooks
People of the Book, Geraldine Brooks
The Hunger Games, Suzanne Collins
Bud, Not Buddy, Christopher Paul Curtis
Game Six, Mark Frost           
The Red Umbrella, Christina Gonzalez
Northward to the Moon, Polly Horvath
Never Let Me Go, Kazuo Ishiguro
The Lacuna, Barbara Kingsolver
Beatrice and Virgil, Yann Martel
The Cardturner, Louis Sachar
Moon Over Manifest, Claire Vanderpool
Countdown, Deborah Wiles
One Crazy Summer, Rita Williams-Garcia

And I'm currently reading Wolf Hall by Hillary Mantel and about a third of the way through Catching Fire by Suzanne Collins.  Here's to good art, good books, good living, and good times in 2012*!

*That's twenty-twelve, not two-thousand-twelve.  I strongly believe it's past time for the pronunciation shift.  Are you with me?

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

I Love Reading

Did you know the Newbery and Caldecott winners were announced this week? I had a feeling this day was coming soon, so last week I looked around the internet a bit to scout some Newbery contenders. Because of this, I was lucky enough to have a copy of this year's winner all checked out from the library and sitting by my bed when the announcement was made. Today, I read that book. And I am here to tell you:

You. Must. Read. When You Reach Me by Rebecca Stead. As soon as possible.

For me, this book ranks up there with my very favorite Newbery novels, like Holes, The Westing Game, From the Mixed Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler, and A Wrinkle in Time. Like these classics, it gets the following things just right: a well-crafted story with plenty of mystery, compelling characters who seem like real people, and commentary on the human condition that's not in any way preachy. This book is downright enchanting. Go read it now!!
* * * *
So, a few years ago, my nerdy/organized side teamed up with my sappy/reminiscent side to create an Excel spreadsheet, a place to keep track of the books I read. Thanks to a "Year Read" column, I can easily look back on the books I read each year. I thought I'd share my year in reading. There's really nothing here I wouldn't recommend, but my favorites are in red.

What I Read in 2009
Have you read any of these? Have you read When You Reach Me? Have you read anything GREAT lately? I'd love to hear your thoughts!

Sunday, February 24, 2008

Illustration Friday: MULTIPLE


Anybody out there read Three Lives to Live? It was my favorite book for maaaany years, and its author Anne Lindbergh (daughter of the one you're thinking of ) was my favorite author for those same years. This is a sketch for an Atkins family portrait, circa 1993.

Three Lives to Live is a book about multiples (definitely) and about twins (sort of).

It's a brilliant book, and not well known. It's one of those books that's so special and semi-undiscovered that I feel an automatic kinship with others who've read it. Kind of like Quest for a Maid and The Search for Delicious.

Thursday, January 17, 2008

Iiiiiit's Caldecott and Newbery time!

The American Library Association recently announced the winners of their various prizes (including the well-known ones mentioned above, and others including the Michael Printz, Coretta Scott King, and Pura Belpre awards) for children's literature.

I've not read (or for that matter, HEARD of!) any of the Newbery-cited books, but will remedy that shortly, I hope. Library, here I come!

I HAVE read the Caldecott winner, the delightful The Invention of Hugo Cabret-- thanks to a Christmas-day lending from my aunt Lisa and cousin Emma. I think it took me about a day and a half to get through, and is really worth looking at as a unique storytelling exercise. Part chapter book, part graphic novel, part animated flipbook, part homage to movies... I don't know, hard to categorize, but easy to enjoy.

I've also read one of the Caldecott honor books, Henry's Freedom Box-- the true story of an enslaved man, Henry "Box" Brown, who literally mailed himself to freedom. At the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center here in Cincinnati (where I used to work) there's a special corner featuring Henry's story, including a box kids can crawl in to see how cramped his journey was. Illustrator Kadir Nelson is fairly new to me, but I've loved all of his books I've come across.

Any thoughts on the winners? Any surprises?

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

Nuestra Senora de Guadalupe

Today* is the feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe, the patron saint of the Americas and one of my favorite things about being Catholic (she's right up there with Dorothy Day and Francis of Assisi.)

If you're not familiar with the beautiful Guadalupe story, I googled high and low to find this wonderful blog post (written by someone I don't know at all, but written powerfully!!)

Or even better, read Tomie dePaola's The Lady of Guadalupe (and this anecdote he shares on his website-- might be interesting for some of my fellow artists!)

Happy Guadalupe day!

[*today being the 12th of December. Blogger's time stamp is acting up.]

Saturday, September 8, 2007

Madeleine L'Engle

“Why does anybody tell a story?” Ms. L’Engle once asked, even though she knew the answer.

“It does indeed have something to do with faith,” she said, “faith that the universe has meaning, that our little human lives are not irrelevant, that what we choose or say or do matters, matters cosmically.”

This is from the NY Times obituary for one of my favorite authors , Madeleine L'Engle, who died this week. Troubling A Star, A Ring of Endless Light (which was a Newbery honor book), Many Waters, and, of course, A Wrinkle in Time (a Newbery medal winner) were among my favorites. She created some wonderful characters (Vicky Austin, Charles Wallace Murray, Adam Eddington), some thrilling situations, and she was a master of insightful titles, but I'll always remember the way she wove morality and values so deftly into her stories that you just pulled it in with all the action, almost by accident.

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