I picked up a recent issue of Entertainment Weekly and opened to the page where they asked authors questions about books.  The quirky question that jumped out at me was:

What book would you use to swat a fly? 

What a terrific question!   Years ago I picked up a young adult novel and began reading.  The two girls, who were best friends, talked to each other.  It went something like this: 

“Mary, I do so admire your father, the town vet, who took care of my horse when he was so sick and saved his life.” 

“June, we’ve been best friends since kindergarten.  Isn’t it great to have been friends for ten years?” 

I read a few pages more, and yes, the author continued to give information the characters already knew in dialogue rather than in narration.  Of course I didn’t read it. 

Which classic have you never read –but pretended you did?  

As a children’s author, you’d think I’d have read all of the children’s classics.  In college, I played a role of the queen in a take-off in Alice-in-Wonderland.  I double-majored in education and children’s theater.  OF COURSE everyone in the child drama center knew that book by heart.  Everyone but ONE PERSON. 

Uh-hem.  Try as I might, I couldn’t get through that book.  Of course, a little background information of the time and place when the author wrote it may have helped me but that never happened. 

Eventually I did ‘fess up and admit I hadn’t read it.  A copy was bestowed upon me and I can’t remember if I choked my way through it or not.  (Apologies to all Alice fans out there!)

Tell us what your favorite childhood books were.

Charlotte’s Web by E.B. White, The Borrowers by Mary Norton, The Little House in the Big Woods series by Laura Ignalls Wilder, and The All-of-A-Kind-Family series by Sydney Taylor. 

Are there books you’ve gone back to and read over and over again?

Diary of a Young Girl by Anne Frank.

Is there a book that scared the pants off of you?

If there had been I would have closed it so fast . . . I wouldn’t have read it. 

Seriously, although I love good suspense stories, they don’t seem to “stay” in my mind as other books do.

Is there a book you always meant to pick up but never did?

I never read Gone with the Wind.  I asked my mom to give it to me for Christmas one year as an adult and she did.  And yet, it still sits on my shelf unread.  I’m not sure why.  Perhaps because I’ve already seen the movie and I know how it ends? 

What do you want to read next?   I have a book by Carson McCuller’s The Member of the Wedding on request at the library.  It was suggested by a friend.  I love adult books where the main character is a child.  Another friend told me I have GOT to read the children’s books Heart of a Shepherd by Rosanne Perry and Chicken Boy by Frances O’Roark Dowell.  I read her fabulous book Falling In so now I’m hooked on her!

I’ve read children’s books all of my life.  So it’s affirming that the tide is turning and grownups are reading young adult books because they enjoy them.  

Although I do resent the line in the following New York Times article saying these books are easier to read and take less thinking than adult books.   Both adult books and children’s books have their share of fabulous reads and lousy ones.  You can’t lump them all together. 

As for a few good examples of young adult books with depth, read Holes by Louis Sachar.    The Giver by Lois Lowry.    Speak by Laurie Halse Anderson.      And my favorite, written by a teenager herself . . . A  Diary of a Young Girl by Anne Frank. 

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/08/books/review/Paul-t.html?_r=2&scp=1&sq=YA%20literature&st=cse

http://www.publishersweekly.com/pw/by-topic/childrens/childrens-industry-news/article/43840-in-brief-july-15.html?utm_source=Publishers+Weekly%27s+Children%27s+Bookshelf&utm_campaign=09ce3d971b-UA-15906914-1&utm_medium=email

Which author . . .

said, “Nonsense wakes up the brain cells.” 

Sold 222 million books.

 Received 27 rejections for his first children’s book, And to Think it Happened on Mulberry Street.

composed 200 versions of every verse paragraph that found its way into the final version of one of his stories.

Answer:  Dr. Seuss (Theodor Geisel)

A friend of mind and fellow Seuss-o-phile, Chuck Carroll, has something in common with the famous children’s author.  He graduated from Dartmouth.    Carroll sent me some Dartmouth material regarding the famous children’s author. 

Geisel received a doctorate of humane letters in 1955 and served as a writer for Dartmouth’s humor magazine, the Jack-O-Lantern, where he could be found, face down on his typewriter, fast asleep in the magazine’s office. 

To discover more about this anecdote and others,  you might enjoy reading the new biography, Theodor Seuss Geisel (Lives and Legacies)  by Donald E. Pease.   

And one of my favorite quotes from Seuss in Carroll’s Dartmouth’s alumni magazine?

“I’d rather write for kids.  They’re more appreciative; adults are obsolete children, and the hell with them.”

Writing Prompts: 

1.  Nonsense is fun, but not easy!  Try your hand at writing in the Dr. Seuss style.   Or write nonsense in your own style and voice.

2.  Read about this author’s life and read or re-read his books to remember why he is so talented. 

3.  Do you have a favorite Seuss book?  Which one?  Why?

http://us.macmillan.com/BookCustomPage.aspx?isbn=9781596436060&m_type=2&m_contentid=1635367#video

I have no idea what the book is like, although I love the author, Lane Smith.  But the trailer is FABULOUS!

 

To enter:

  • Describe a special quiet moment and email it to [email protected] by May 15, 2010.
  • You can send us a drawing as an attached file as well, if you like, but please try to keep it under 40K.
  • If you’re affiliated with a bookstore, school, or library, be sure to let us know which one!
  • NOTE: You must be 13 or older to enter this drawing.

Here are some of your quiet moments:

“Walking to the beach in the early morning quiet.”—Beth, librarian, Norwich Public Library

“Before the public library first opens its doors in the morning.”—Susan, librarian, Dearborn Dept. of Libraries

“Skiing down an empty slope on a cold winter morning quiet.”—Sarah, reader

“Snow falling in the woods quiet.”—Vicki, librarian, Stark County District Library

“The moment between the asking and the YES.”—Wanda, Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance

“Smelling my baby’s head quiet.”—Amy, librarian, Doyle Library

“Staring at the stars quiet.”—Nancy, bookseller, Unabridged Bookstore

“Power outage quiet.”—Jane, reader

“Watching the bookseller unlock the front door quiet.”—Carol, bookseller, Eight Cousins

“After the birthday party quiet.”—Joanna, reader

“First sip of tea quiet.”—Paula, bookseller, Covered Treasures Bookstore

http://www.hmhbooks.com/quietmoments/

If you had to make a list of the top ten  children’s books of all time, what would they be?  Oh, this is a difficult job once you begin.  Here is my list.  Feel free to hit comment and share your list of books. 

1.  Charlotte’s Web by E. B. White

2.  Diary of a Young Girl by Anne Frank

3.  Little House in the Big Woods by Laura Ingalls Wilder

4.  The Giver by Lois Lowry

5.   Charlie and the Chocolate Factory  Roald Dahl

6.  The Adventures of Tom Sawyer by Mark Twain

7.  Holes by Louis Sachar

8.  The Secret Garden  by Frances Hodgson Burnett

9.  A Long Way From Chicago by Richard Peck

10.  Tuck Everlasting  by Natalie Babbitt

My favorite books when I was a child:   Charlotte’s Web, The Diary of Anne Frank, The Borrower’s by Mary Norton, The Moffats by Eleanor Estes, The All-of-a-Kind-Family books by Sydney Taylor and Bristle Face by Zachary Ball.

I’m reading Richard Peck’s A Season of Gifts which follows the antics of Grandma Dowdel, star of the Newbery winning A Year Down Yonder and the Newbery Honor A Long Way from Chicago.  

If you haven’t read them yet, you’re in for a treat.  Are you an adult who thinks children’s books are just for children?   Tis a pity.  Your loss.  Run, don’t walk to the nearest bookstore or library and get a hold of these to learn all you can about voice, setting, character and great dialogue. 

In chapter two of A Season of Gifts, an “evangelist of the sawdust circuit”  comes to town.  Delmer “Gypsy” Piggott, called Texas Tornado for his style,  could “scare a lot of money out of town.”

People and cars were everywhere.  Some “believers” had rented rooms from Mrs. Dowdel.   But late one night, the main character, twelve-year-old Bob, Mrs. Dowdel’s neighbor, is awakened by noise on her front porch. 

Stuff began to fly off the porch and bounce in her yard.  Suitcases?  Trumpet cases?  More came.  White moths seemed to flutter across the grass, but it might have been sheet music.

I couldn’t see how many people were on the porch. But it was Mrs. Dowdel who barged through them and outside.  She wore a nightgown the size of the revival tent.  Cold moonlight hit her white hair loose in the night breeze.  She held something high and poured from it onto the ground.

“WINE IS A MOCKER, STRONG DRINK IS RAGING,'” she bellowed into the night.  “Proverbs. 20:I.  You could look it up.  I don’t have hard liquor in my house.  It goes, and so do you.” 

She seemed to pour strong drink out on the grass.  Now she hauled off and threw the bottle.  She had an arm on her.  The bottle glinted in moonlight, hit her cobhouse roof, and rolled off.

“Now, now, Mrs. Dowdel,” a voice said, “calm yourself.  ‘A man hath no better thing under the sun, than to eat, and to drink, and to be merry.’ Ecclesiastes. 8:15.”

I’d have known that voice in the fiery pit.  It was the Texas Tornado, Delmer “Gypsy” Piggott. Now I could hear Mother and Dad stirring around in their room. 

My nose was flat to screen wire.  “GET OFF MY PLACE,” Mrs. Dowdel bellowed, “and take these . . . sopranos with you.  Trumpets, strumpets –everybody out.”

More shoe-scuffling came from the porch, and the peck of high heels.  A sob and some squealing.  The gospel quartette milled. 

“You’ve rented your last rooms in this town, you two-faced old goat,” Mrs. Dowdel thundered.  The whole town was wide-awake now.  “Hit the road.”

“Dad-burn it, Mrs. Dowdel,” the Texas Tornado whined, “we done paid you out for the whole week with ready money.  Cash on the barrelhead.”

“I’m about a squat jump away from a loaded Winchester 21,” Mrs. Dowdel replied, “And I’m tetchy as a bull in fly time.”

Note the unique dialogue between the characters, Peck’s vivid verbs, word choices, and use of humor.   With his characterizations in this brief passage, he’s brought these two to life so that we are dying to know more about how Bob will interact with Mrs. Dowdel. 

Writing Prompt: 

Choose two characters of your own.  Give them a strong conflict.  How can they oppose each other?  How will they show this through dialogue?  Action?  How will you show their character through vivid verbs and word choices?

I attended a writing conference this weekend with friends at Asilomar in Monterey, California.  Set across from the rhythmic ocean waves, we walked among the tall aromatic pine trees, and breathed in the fresh smell of rain.  Deer wandered among us, not caring we were close by. 

It’s a place where nature helps you reach your spiritual self.  Whether or not you believe in a higher power, you’ll find your soul here.  Looking for the kernel of your story?  Need to reclaim the silence in your life?  Try changing the scenery of your day-to-day existence.  Even if it is only for an hour or two, take your pen and paper and visit a park, a cafe, or a crowded corner in an airport. 

Take notes about your surroundings.  Or ignore them completely and go into a deeper space. 

At the conference, agent Sarah Davies said, ” The best books teach us more about ourselves than the characters.” 

She suggested writers create larger than life characters with description revealing the character.  “What do the torn jeans tell you about the character?”   And this insightful comment about your character:  The “external of conversation needs to reflect the internal agenda of your character.”  

Author Liza Ketchum talked about finding the voice of your character.  “Voice is the most important metaphor for writing style.”   It’s the sound in your head that continues after you close the book.    She suggests that when you write a scene, end it with a cliffhanger so the next day you’ll begin momentum to inspire your writing day.

Author Gary Schmidt tells writers to get your reader to want to ask, “What happens next?”  This is the ultimate dramatic question.  His talk was so moving everyone gave him a standing ovation.

Author Ellen Klages suggested another way to describe “hook” is the “wow value.” 

Agent Ken Wright says there is a saying among agents about reading a book.  “You cry you buy.” 

What happens when writers get stuck?  What should you do then? 

Gary says, “What happens around you main character?”  Write about that and see what happens.  You may make some interesting discoveries.

Liza takes a shower or a walk.  Ellen goes to a mindless movie and then she’ll begin writing on her hand.  Yuyi Morales looks for an image she loves to motivate her to write.  Author Deborah Underwood goes to an art museum or a concert.  “Be around creativity in another form.”

                                        Toni Buzzeo Announces:

 No T. Rex in the Library (S&S, 2010) will be published on February 23, 2010!

In honor of its imminent arrival, I am currently conducting a writing contest for preK to sixth graders. PRIZES include ten hardcover autographed copies of the book. The grand prize is a free ½ hour Skype visit with the author.

CONTEST RULES:

 1. Librarians/Teachers will share the title and the cover image (but not a synopsis of the book) that depicts Tess riding a T. Rex with books in his jaws. They will ask students to write a story telling what happened to get Tess onto that dinosaur and what happens next.

  1. Submission will be a fiction story of 50-750 words based exclusively on the cover image of the book.
  2. A 9×12″ poster of the cover is available by mail to any librarian or teacher who plans to enter the contest. E-mail [email protected] for a mailed poster (limited to the first 150 entries)-or if you would rather print it locally, it can be viewed online at http://www.tonibuzzeo.com/index.html.
  3. Each entry will be accompanied by a contest submission form which will be included with the mailed poster or may be downloaded online at http://www.tonibuzzeo.com/booksnotrexinthelibrary.html.
  4. An entry may be a group-composed story (especially good for PreK-First Grade) or an individual story, but will be limited to ONE submission per class of students; librarians or teachers who have individual students write stories should formulate a way to choose the one best story for submission.
  5. The contest is open to all librarians (school and public) and all teachers/students (public, independent, and homeschool).
  6. All entries must be postmarked by Saturday, March 13, 2010. Legible scans will be accepted with accompanying contest submission form by e-mail to [email protected].
  7. Author Toni Buzzeo will personally judge all submissions.
  8. The top ten stories will earn those ten submitting librarians or teachers an autographed hardcover copy of NO T. REX IN THE LIBRARY.

10.The grand prize will be awarded to the top story of these ten. That submitting librarian or teacher will win a free half-hour Skype visit with Toni Buzzeo.