Thought for the day: The road to hell is paved
with works-in-progress." ~Philip Roth~
A gift for my writer
friends. I have a few links I think are really worth checking out. I’ve
been so busy I haven’t been blogging very regularly – summer hours, you know –
so I have more than my usual two to offer.
First, there is a famous saying in
writing about how you have to learn to kill your darlings. I’ve been working on
revisions, and it is very, very tough to kill my darlings. Here is a link
with a pretty good article on that process.
Writer’s Digest has some good articles. I’m always
interested in grammar (What can I say? I’m an old English teacher!) and this
one had some things in it I thought were pretty interesting.
http://www.mcsweeneys.net/articles/the-ultimate-guide-to-writing-better-than-you-normally-do
Last, but far from least and absolutely the most fun, is Shannon Messenger’s blog post about a fabulous time waster. This could explain one of the reasons I haven’t blogged in a while! It is WAY too much fun.
Suzanne Bloom (left) and Nicole Groeneweg |
We went to a Highlights Foundation week-long retreat in Boyds Mills, PA with über-editor Carolyn Yoder. I worked hard on a non-fiction manuscript that Carolyn says is now ready to send out. WooHoo!! (Okay. One more polish first.) We had visits from several of the editors at Highlights Magazine, High Five Magazine, and Boyds Mills Press. We also had visits from Suzanne Bloom and Gail Jarrow, both terrific authors. Suzanne read us her latest Bear and Goose story, Oh! What a Surprise!, (one of the sweetest and funniest picture books I've ever read) then gave autographed copies to each of us. Gail also autographed copies of our choice of two of her books: I got a copy of Lincoln's FlyingSpies: Thaddeus Lowe and the Civil War Balloon Corps and some received The Amazing Harry Kellar: Great American Magician, a book I already own. Both are simply wonderful books and, although kids will love them, adults will as well. I highly recommend them both.
I have lots of new ideas for writing projects from the travels, the editor and author visits, as well as from the other wonderful attendees during our many unbelievable meals, critique
sessions, and casual meetings. We have such a great group that comes together
there in August. This is our third year and it is amazing. As long as the
Highlights Foundation continues to offer this retreat, I will be going. I
really recommend if there is any way you can get to one of the Highlights
Foundation workshops or retreats, you should try to do it. It’s a magical
place.
Another reason I’ve been so tardy with my writing is a new
teaching assignment I’ve taken on. I will be working one-on-one with two
students who, due to illness, can’t attend school. One is a 7th
grader, the other an 11th grader. The time it takes to prepare to
teach each of them the full curriculum is daunting, but I just love the
opportunity to work with these brave kids. It looks like it will be a year-long
assignment, so I might just blog a little less often, but it’s for a good cause.
I will try to be more regular with my blog posts though.
Rebecca Stead |
I do want to share a review of a middle-grade novel I read
and reviewed recently for the Sacramento Book Review. It’s called Liar & Spy by Rebecca Stead. This is
simply one of the best middle-grade novels I’ve read in awhile. It’s a story
about a boy who is going through what a lot of young people today are facing –
moving out of their life-long home due to the economic downturn and a parent
losing a job. Georges, named for Seurat and suffering from having what most
middle-schoolers would call a lame name, has to deal with many changes in his
young life. When he and his dad go to the laundry room in the basement of the
apartment building they’ve moved to, they see a sign on a storage room for a
spy club. Georges’s dad puts a note on the door that asks what time the meeting
is and later they find an answer. Georges decides to go to that meeting and
this begins a journey of mystery, learning, tolerance, and friendship that is clever,
smart, and authentic to the life of a middle grade boy. I described it in my
review as being nearly a thriller, and it is. I loved this book. Rebecca Stead
won the Newbery medal for her book WhenYou Reach Me, and I can’t wait to read that one. In the mean time, one of
you can have my very own ARC of Liar & Spy if you are the lucky winner. Leave a comment below, and I will put
your name in a hat. If you spread the word about this post by putting a link to
it in your blog or on your Facebook page or some such social media, let me know,
and I’ll put your name in a second time.
On the book giveaway, this is for U.S. only. Sorry, but it
would be too expensive for me to send books out of the country. But please
leave a comment. I’d love to hear from you. Remember, if you have trouble
leaving a comment, click on the title of the post and it will give you just
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