Today I bring you 2 authors. Sean McHugh and Katie McHugh Parker are the co-authors of Broomsticks. They were gracious enough to stop by today and tell you the back story of the book and a little about themselves. Check back next week for my review of Broomsticks. Thanks to Diversion Press for allowing me the opportunity to host these authors and review their books.
Sean McHugh was born and raised in Maysville, Kentucky. He graduated cum laude from Morehead State University with a BA in Art. He lived in Lexington, Kentucky for ten years where he was the head writer and cartoonist for the Rock-A-Billy Cafe's Kid's Club Newsletter. In 2000, he moved to Florida and has since been working as a caricature artist at Walt Disney World. You can find him online at ashmont67@aol.com
Katie McHugh Parker was also born and raised in Maysville, Kentucky and graduated from Morehead State University with a BA in Elementary Education and a Masters in Elementary Guidance Counseling. She has been teaching at St. Patrick's School since 1997. She resides in Maysville with her husband Ricky and daughter Sophia. You can find her online at katherine.parker@hotmail.com
Broomsticks was originally conceived as a comic strip that I created in the mid-90s. Since childhood, I knew I wanted to be a cartoonist. I was obsessed with Peanuts by the great Charles M. Schulz and I equally loved the classic TV series, Bewitched. So, I took some inspiration from two of my favorite things, mixed with personal experiences and friendships and POOF!!! Broomsticks was born!
I submitted the comic strip to all the major newspaper syndicates but it was never published. I did, however, receive a lot of positive feedback from some of the editors. Two, in particular, said they liked it but thought it would work better as a children's book.
I had written several children's stories by that time. Along with my Charles Schulz dream, I also dreamed of being L. Frank Baum. I even took a children's writing class taught by Marcia Thorton Jones and Debbie Dadey, the authors of The Bailey School kids series.
Still, I had never tackled a chapter book before. I had worked with a co-writer before on a project and really enjoyed it. But Stamp & Pocky, the lead characters, were my babies. I couldn't just trust anyone with my babies! There was only one person I knew who had a great gift for writing, shared my love for fantasy and comedy, and who I could trust with my babies!
My niece, Katie McHugh Parker, always had a talent for writing and a love for children's literature. She was very excited when I asked her to co-author Broomsticks. Everything was falling into place. Unfortunately, I had just moved to Florida the same year that we wrote the first book. So, we had a long-distance partnership. There were a lot of phone calls and letter writing between us.
It worked out even better than I imagined. Katie and I work very well together. I would usually come up with the plot and storyline. I'd then break them up into chapters. Katie would work on half the chapters and I'd work on the other half. Then we would send each other our chapters to review. I write my chapters in script form. Katie then suggests changes and adds her beautiful narratives to my chapters. She then sends me her chapters and I add my suggestions to hers. It worked beautifully. If we do edit each other, it usually consists of Katie telling me that a nine-year-old wouldn't say that, or me telling Katie that Stamp wouldn't say that. I admit, I'm rather parentally protective over the two main characters and Katie respects that. The personalities of Stamp & Pocky were established early on in the comic strip, but there were no supporting characters in the strip. So, Katie co-created all of the characters in the supporting cast. Once our story is finished, Katie types it, and I do the artwork. It works like...magic!
Tuesday, April 26, 2011
Monday, April 25, 2011
Blog Tour: Flip
This has been a month for blog tours and I am pleased to be working with yet another wonderful author, as he tours the blogosphere. Please help me welcome, Martyn Bedford, author of Flip, to the blog today.
Since I first came across M.C. Escher’s work, I’ve been a fan. I love the way his optical illusions draw you in, making you see the picture first one way then another, until the layers of sense and interpretation pile up.
One of my favourites is “Hand with Globe”, in which a bearded man with an intense expression is gazing at his reflection in a glass sphere. We see the hand holding the sphere but otherwise everything else in the picture is contained in the surface of the glass and, as a result, appears to be trapped inside.
There’s the man, of course, as well as the room he’s sitting in, with its chairs and bookshelves, but everything is distorted by the fish-eye curvature of the glass so that, in fact, the picture takes on the appearance of a surrealist work. I had a post-card sized print of this picture on my wall for years and, later, on my writing desk.
It chimes with one of the ideas I wanted to explore in FLIP – this notion that if we look at (or inside) ourselves closely enough, we begin to see ourselves differently. Who are we, really? Are we actually more interesting, more complex, more strange than we – and others – assume? Are we forced by the conventions of society to present a false image to the world which distorts the “true” us trapped inside?
Similarly, “Drawing Hands”, another of Escher’s better known works, has long been a favourite. Two hands in the final stages of sketching one another, each hand simultaneously creating the hand which creates it . . . it’s a wonderfully impossible puzzle. And if we assume they are the right and left hands of the same artist then it has something to say, too, about the interplay and interdependence of the right and left sides of the brain in creating works of art. This interests me very much as a writer.
In relation to FLIP, the image informs another of the novel’s themes, as Alex’s mind and Philip’s body become increasingly intertwined until it’s hard to tell where one begins and the other ends. Is this hybrid Alex-Flip actually two separate boys or are the two slowly merging into one and, if so, how can Alex ever break free?
About the Book: One December night, 14-year-old Alex goes to bed. He wakes up to find himself in the wrong bedroom, in an unfamiliar house, in a different part of the country, and it's the middle of June. Six months have disappeared overnight. The family at the breakfast table are total strangers.And when he looks in the mirror, another boy's face stares back at him. A boy named Flip. Unless Alex finds out what's happened and how to get back to his own life, he may be trapped forever inside a body that belongs to someone else. Questions of identity, the will to survive, and what you're willing to sacrifice to be alive make this extraordinary book impossible to put down.
Here are the other stops on the blog tour, if you'd like to go back and visit them:
FLIP BLOG TOUR SCHEDULE:
Monday, April 18th Figment
Tuesday, April 19th Cracking the Cover
Wednesday, April 20th Suvudu
Thursday, April 21st The Children’s Book Review
Friday, April 22nd
Random Acts of Reading
I have been given 3 copies of Flip to give away to 3 of my readers. Please let me know in the comments if you would like to have one and random.org will choose the winners on Friday, April 29th. You can enter until Thursday, April 28th at midnight CST.
Martyn Bedford talks about M.C. Escher's Connection to Flip
Since I first came across M.C. Escher’s work, I’ve been a fan. I love the way his optical illusions draw you in, making you see the picture first one way then another, until the layers of sense and interpretation pile up.
One of my favourites is “Hand with Globe”, in which a bearded man with an intense expression is gazing at his reflection in a glass sphere. We see the hand holding the sphere but otherwise everything else in the picture is contained in the surface of the glass and, as a result, appears to be trapped inside.
There’s the man, of course, as well as the room he’s sitting in, with its chairs and bookshelves, but everything is distorted by the fish-eye curvature of the glass so that, in fact, the picture takes on the appearance of a surrealist work. I had a post-card sized print of this picture on my wall for years and, later, on my writing desk.
It chimes with one of the ideas I wanted to explore in FLIP – this notion that if we look at (or inside) ourselves closely enough, we begin to see ourselves differently. Who are we, really? Are we actually more interesting, more complex, more strange than we – and others – assume? Are we forced by the conventions of society to present a false image to the world which distorts the “true” us trapped inside?
Similarly, “Drawing Hands”, another of Escher’s better known works, has long been a favourite. Two hands in the final stages of sketching one another, each hand simultaneously creating the hand which creates it . . . it’s a wonderfully impossible puzzle. And if we assume they are the right and left hands of the same artist then it has something to say, too, about the interplay and interdependence of the right and left sides of the brain in creating works of art. This interests me very much as a writer.
In relation to FLIP, the image informs another of the novel’s themes, as Alex’s mind and Philip’s body become increasingly intertwined until it’s hard to tell where one begins and the other ends. Is this hybrid Alex-Flip actually two separate boys or are the two slowly merging into one and, if so, how can Alex ever break free?
About the Book: One December night, 14-year-old Alex goes to bed. He wakes up to find himself in the wrong bedroom, in an unfamiliar house, in a different part of the country, and it's the middle of June. Six months have disappeared overnight. The family at the breakfast table are total strangers.And when he looks in the mirror, another boy's face stares back at him. A boy named Flip. Unless Alex finds out what's happened and how to get back to his own life, he may be trapped forever inside a body that belongs to someone else. Questions of identity, the will to survive, and what you're willing to sacrifice to be alive make this extraordinary book impossible to put down.
Here are the other stops on the blog tour, if you'd like to go back and visit them:
FLIP BLOG TOUR SCHEDULE:
Monday, April 18th Figment
Tuesday, April 19th Cracking the Cover
Wednesday, April 20th Suvudu
Thursday, April 21st The Children’s Book Review
Friday, April 22nd
Random Acts of Reading
I have been given 3 copies of Flip to give away to 3 of my readers. Please let me know in the comments if you would like to have one and random.org will choose the winners on Friday, April 29th. You can enter until Thursday, April 28th at midnight CST.
Tuesday, April 19, 2011
Blog Tour: Halloween Kentucky Style
I am pleased to be partnering with a new to me publishing company, Diversion Press, for some blog tours this month and next. Hopefully it's the start of a great relationship! Today's guest is Charles Suddeth, author of the book, Halloween Kentucky Style.
Although he was born in Indiana and grew up in Michigan, he has spent most of his life in Kentucky. He lives in Louisville with his two cats, Binks and Wendy (Wendy says it should be Wendy and Binks). He is a graduate of Michigan State University. He has also done graduate work at MSU, Spalding University, and the University of Louisville. He is a member of Green River Writers of Louisville, a PAL member of SCBWI (children’s books writers and illustrators), and is active in the Midsouth division (Kentucky and Tennessee).
About Halloween Kentucky Style: For Halloween 1959, best friends Mike and Timmy try to scare their cousins, Alice and Rose. The trick’s on them when a homeless man and their younger neighbor team up to give them a Halloween scare that they will never forget! It’s Halloween Kentucky Style!
Stats on Halloween Kentucky Style:
For today's tour stop, I asked Charles to tell us the back story of Halloween Kentucky Style. Here is what he had to say:
I write for only one reason. Joy! I love writing stories, and I want kids to love reading. Once reading becomes fun, they will read more and read better and exercise their minds. Halloween is my favorite holiday. It’s dark and scary so thoroughly mixed up with fun and silly that you can’t tell one from the other. And you don’t want to.
“Halloween Kentucky Style” is not true but….Some of the people, places, and events bear ghostly resemblances to some real ones. And horses? While I live in the suburbs, and I’m not a horse person, I love the critters. And what would a story taking place in Kentucky be without them? 1959? It was a simpler time. And Halloween 1959 fell on Saturday, which is the perfect day for Halloween because school is out. Boo!
Charles Suddeth
I hope that you will visit the other stops on Charles' tour and look for more Diversion Press tour stops and authors on the blog, in the future.
Diversion Press April 25
Buried in Books http://wwwburiedinbooks.blogspot.com April 26
Tales from the Bayou http://ritamonette.blogspot.com May 3
Outrageously Wonderful Literature From the Middle Grades http://owlforya.blogspot.com/ May 10
Although he was born in Indiana and grew up in Michigan, he has spent most of his life in Kentucky. He lives in Louisville with his two cats, Binks and Wendy (Wendy says it should be Wendy and Binks). He is a graduate of Michigan State University. He has also done graduate work at MSU, Spalding University, and the University of Louisville. He is a member of Green River Writers of Louisville, a PAL member of SCBWI (children’s books writers and illustrators), and is active in the Midsouth division (Kentucky and Tennessee).
About Halloween Kentucky Style: For Halloween 1959, best friends Mike and Timmy try to scare their cousins, Alice and Rose. The trick’s on them when a homeless man and their younger neighbor team up to give them a Halloween scare that they will never forget! It’s Halloween Kentucky Style!
Stats on Halloween Kentucky Style:
- Reading level: Ages 9-12
- Paperback: 64 pages
- Publisher: Diversion Press, Inc. (October 15, 2010)
- Language: English
For today's tour stop, I asked Charles to tell us the back story of Halloween Kentucky Style. Here is what he had to say:
The Birth of Halloween Kentucky Style
I write for only one reason. Joy! I love writing stories, and I want kids to love reading. Once reading becomes fun, they will read more and read better and exercise their minds. Halloween is my favorite holiday. It’s dark and scary so thoroughly mixed up with fun and silly that you can’t tell one from the other. And you don’t want to.
“Halloween Kentucky Style” is not true but….Some of the people, places, and events bear ghostly resemblances to some real ones. And horses? While I live in the suburbs, and I’m not a horse person, I love the critters. And what would a story taking place in Kentucky be without them? 1959? It was a simpler time. And Halloween 1959 fell on Saturday, which is the perfect day for Halloween because school is out. Boo!
Charles Suddeth
I hope that you will visit the other stops on Charles' tour and look for more Diversion Press tour stops and authors on the blog, in the future.
Diversion Press April 25
Buried in Books http://wwwburiedinbooks.blogspot.com April 26
Tales from the Bayou http://ritamonette.blogspot.com May 3
Outrageously Wonderful Literature From the Middle Grades http://owlforya.blogspot.com/ May 10
Labels:
backstory,
blog tour,
Diversion Press,
guest post,
Halloween,
Middle Grade
Wednesday, April 13, 2011
Blog Tour: Fifo "50 States"
I am pleased to be participating in another Pump Up Your Book Promotion's Blog Tour.
Title: Fifo "50 States"
Author: Hayley Rose
Review Copy Provided by: author
About the Book: Fifo s been bitten by the travel bug! Digging up diamonds in Arkansas, looking for fossils in Kansas, enjoying a delicious bowl of gumbo in Louisiana, and even seeing a Broadway show in New York. America is an exiting place! In Fifo s second book, told in rhyme, Fifo dreams about visiting all 50 states. A colorful reference-like book, Fifo discovers the wonders each state has to offer. He learns along the way each state s capital, shape, flag, motto, and much, much more. The possibilities are endless! So, come along with Fifo and you ll soon discover the beauty of America one state to another.
My Thoughts: What a great way to share facts about the 50 states! Fifo the Bear takes children on an alphabetical field trip through each state in the United States. Each state is described, through poetry, with references to state flowers, mottos, capitals, etc. In the border of the page is the name of the state as well as the motto. The illustrations give even more information about each state. They show the shape of the state, the state flag, and other pictures that are indicative of that particular state.
I can definitely see this book being used in the classroom. Young children want to learn about the states, but there aren't many books out there that are kid-friendly. Hayley Rose has solved that problem along with her illustrator, Jessie Orlet. Kids will love this book because of the rhyme and vivid pictures. There is also a pattern to each page that young children can pick up on: "It's a wonderful place to visit, I'd like to go there, wouldn't you?" Even if they were unable to read all of the other words, they would catch on to the last lines quickly and be able to read along.
There are so many facts loaded in the pages of the books, that it is a goldmine for the child traveler! He or she, along with Fifo, will learn many things about the state they live in along with all the other states in the US. Kudos to Hayley Rose and her book; it's a winner!
"Waiting On" Wednesday - Moonglass
"Waiting On" Wednesday is a weekly event, hosted over at Breaking the Spine, that spotlights upcoming releases that we're eagerly anticipating.
This week's pre-publication "can't-wait-to-read" selection is:
Moonglass
By Jessi Kirby
Publication Date: May 3rd 2011 by Simon & Schuster Children's Publishing
from Goodreads:
From Jessi Kirby, a debut novel about confronting the past in order to move ahead.
I read once that water is a symbol for emotions. And for a while now, I've thought maybe my mother drowned in both.
Anna's life is upended when her father accepts a job transfer the summer before her junior year. It's bad enough that she has to leave her friends and her life behind, but her dad is moving them to the beach where her parents first met and fell in love- a place awash in memories that Anna would just as soon leave under the surface.
While life on the beach is pretty great, with ocean views and one adorable lifeguard in particular, there are also family secrets that were buried along the shore years ago. And the ebb and flow of the ocean's tide means that nothing- not the sea glass that she collects on the sand and not the truths behind Anna's mother's death- stays buried forever.
I actually have an ARC of this one that I'm just dying to get to! It seems like a great summer read and I am getting summer ready!
Labels:
2011 books to read,
2011 debut,
2011 release,
ARC,
Breaking the Spine,
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Waiting on Wednesday,
weekly,
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Wednesday, April 6, 2011
"Waiting On" Wednesday - I'll Be There
"Waiting On" Wednesday is a weekly event, hosted over at Breaking the Spine, that spotlights upcoming releases that we're eagerly anticipating.
This week's pre-publication "can't-wait-to-read" selection is:
I'll Be There
By Holly Goldberg Sloan
Publication Date: May 3rd 2011 by Little, Brown Books for Young Readers
Raised by an unstable father who keeps the family constantly on the move, Sam Border hasn't been in a classroom since the second grade. He's always been the rock for his younger brother Riddle, who stopped speaking long ago and instead makes sense of the world through his strange and intricate drawings. It's said that the two boys speak with one voice--and that voice is Sam's.
Then, Sam meets Emily Bell, and everything changes. The two share an immediate and intense attraction, and soon Sam and Riddle find themselves welcomed into the Bell's home. Faced with normalcy for the first time, they know it's too good to last.
Told from multiple perspectives, Holly Goldberg Sloan's debut novel offers readers fresh voices and a gripping story, with vivid glimpses into the lives of many unique characters. Beautifully written and emotionally profound, I'll Be There is a story about connections both big and small, and deftly explores the many ways that our lives are woven together.
I'm very intrigued by this one because it deals with a child who has not been in school, forced to take care of his younger brother. The fact that the younger one doesn't talk and the older one still knows how to communicate with him fascinates me.
This week's pre-publication "can't-wait-to-read" selection is:
I'll Be There
By Holly Goldberg Sloan
Publication Date: May 3rd 2011 by Little, Brown Books for Young Readers
Raised by an unstable father who keeps the family constantly on the move, Sam Border hasn't been in a classroom since the second grade. He's always been the rock for his younger brother Riddle, who stopped speaking long ago and instead makes sense of the world through his strange and intricate drawings. It's said that the two boys speak with one voice--and that voice is Sam's.
Then, Sam meets Emily Bell, and everything changes. The two share an immediate and intense attraction, and soon Sam and Riddle find themselves welcomed into the Bell's home. Faced with normalcy for the first time, they know it's too good to last.
Told from multiple perspectives, Holly Goldberg Sloan's debut novel offers readers fresh voices and a gripping story, with vivid glimpses into the lives of many unique characters. Beautifully written and emotionally profound, I'll Be There is a story about connections both big and small, and deftly explores the many ways that our lives are woven together.
I'm very intrigued by this one because it deals with a child who has not been in school, forced to take care of his younger brother. The fact that the younger one doesn't talk and the older one still knows how to communicate with him fascinates me.
Sunday, April 3, 2011
The Sunday Salon - Not a Good March
I have never done end of the month wrap ups on my blog. Yes, others do it, yes, I read them on others' blogs, yes, it's fun to see the stats, but I just don't do it. I'm not sure why. Maybe this past month is a good reason why I don't.
March was not good to me as far as reading went. For what it's worth, April hasn't taken off with a bang either, but my plan is to remedy that before the month gets away from me. Anyway, back to March. Did I even finish a book? According to Goodreads, I did...Adventures in Nowhere, but it was at the very beginning of the month, so it's just a blur in my memory. Did I do a lot of reading? Not as much as I would have liked, but I started some books: Alice in Zombieland, Hailey Twitch and the Great Teacher Switch, and The Wilder Life. These are all good books, but they just didn't hold my attention. I've been in a reading slump before, but enough already! I want a book that will "catch" me. So, last night I started reading Hourglass while I took a bath. 2 chapters in and so far so good...let's hope it lives up to all the blogger hype. I really need to get through this one, for me, for my reading inspiration, for the love of blogging.
April is a busy work month for me, but I've got to learn to prioritize so that it doesn't consume me. For those of you with children or who are in the education industry, you know that states give standardized tests. The end of the month is the TAKS, Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skills, test in Math and Reading for our 3rd and 4th graders. They have been busily preparing, we have been anxiously stressing over practice test scores, etc. Once it's over, I'll be able to breathe a whole lot easier and so will my teachers.
After that, it's adoption anticipation. We went for our 2nd and final day of PRIDE training yesterday. Now, we have CPR/first aid on Friday, our home study on the 13th, psychotropic meds on the 14th and then behavior management on the 23rd. We've got almost all of our paperwork turned in, so after the 23rd, she can submit for our license and then we just wait on a phone call. My oldest step-daughter is coming over today to help me clean out and redo the middle room for a nursery and my mom's coming to go get the material for all the nursery "stuff." My grandmother and I will spend next Saturday sewing everything. It will make for a long day, but in the end, it will be so worth it. This is the material that we will be using.
March was not good to me as far as reading went. For what it's worth, April hasn't taken off with a bang either, but my plan is to remedy that before the month gets away from me. Anyway, back to March. Did I even finish a book? According to Goodreads, I did...Adventures in Nowhere, but it was at the very beginning of the month, so it's just a blur in my memory. Did I do a lot of reading? Not as much as I would have liked, but I started some books: Alice in Zombieland, Hailey Twitch and the Great Teacher Switch, and The Wilder Life. These are all good books, but they just didn't hold my attention. I've been in a reading slump before, but enough already! I want a book that will "catch" me. So, last night I started reading Hourglass while I took a bath. 2 chapters in and so far so good...let's hope it lives up to all the blogger hype. I really need to get through this one, for me, for my reading inspiration, for the love of blogging.
April is a busy work month for me, but I've got to learn to prioritize so that it doesn't consume me. For those of you with children or who are in the education industry, you know that states give standardized tests. The end of the month is the TAKS, Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skills, test in Math and Reading for our 3rd and 4th graders. They have been busily preparing, we have been anxiously stressing over practice test scores, etc. Once it's over, I'll be able to breathe a whole lot easier and so will my teachers.
After that, it's adoption anticipation. We went for our 2nd and final day of PRIDE training yesterday. Now, we have CPR/first aid on Friday, our home study on the 13th, psychotropic meds on the 14th and then behavior management on the 23rd. We've got almost all of our paperwork turned in, so after the 23rd, she can submit for our license and then we just wait on a phone call. My oldest step-daughter is coming over today to help me clean out and redo the middle room for a nursery and my mom's coming to go get the material for all the nursery "stuff." My grandmother and I will spend next Saturday sewing everything. It will make for a long day, but in the end, it will be so worth it. This is the material that we will be using.
It's gender neutral because we won't know if we'll be getting a boy or a girl until the phone call comes. We don't have a preference one way or the other, just a healthy baby to love. It's amazing to think that our life will change overnight and I'm trying to prepare for it in a month. Pregnant women have 9 months to do all of that...hmmm...maybe I'm crazy!
Labels:
2011 books read,
about me,
adoption,
general,
The Sunday Salon,
weekly
Saturday Snapshot - April 2
Last weekend, 2 of our granddaughters came over for a little while. They rode horses and then my husband washed down the horses before putting them up. Our youngest granddaughter had so much fun playing in the mud that when she left, she was only in her shirt and diaper. Boy, was she a mess!! This picture was taken after she had been splashing in the water. She was laughing because she thought it was so funny!
Saturday Snapshot is hosted by Alyce of At Home With Books. To participate, just post a picture that you, family, or a friend have taken. The amount of captioning is up to you. Pictures must be clean and appropriate for all eyes.
Friday, April 1, 2011
Friday Fill-Ins - 4/1/11
No April Fool's jokes for you today, just a fun Friday Fill-In. Have a great weekend!
1. I can't believe it's April already.
2. Drinks for everyone.
3. How can I get all this done in just a month?
4. Chicken soup with vegetables was the last thing I cooked.
5. Six of one half a dozen of another is a saying I use all the time.
6. Oh my gosh; nonono!
7. And as for the weekend, tonight I'm looking forward to relaxing at home, tomorrow my plans include our 2nd day of PRIDE training and Sunday, I want to clean out the middle bedroom to turn it into a baby room!
1. I can't believe it's April already.
2. Drinks for everyone.
3. How can I get all this done in just a month?
4. Chicken soup with vegetables was the last thing I cooked.
5. Six of one half a dozen of another is a saying I use all the time.
6. Oh my gosh; nonono!
7. And as for the weekend, tonight I'm looking forward to relaxing at home, tomorrow my plans include our 2nd day of PRIDE training and Sunday, I want to clean out the middle bedroom to turn it into a baby room!
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