Archive for November, 2010
November 15, 2010 @ 6:04 am | Filed under:
Betsy-Tacy
At 7pm Eastern time, 4pm my time, Mitali Perkins and I will join Jennifer Hart (aka BookClubGirl) on air for a discussion of all things Betsy-Tacy. Emily of Deep Valley! Carney’s House Party! The true color of apple blossoms!
You can even call in and ask questions. I am really hoping you will call! From Jennifer:
Be sure to register on the site before 7 on Monday so that you can participate in the chat from the beginning. You can also call in and ask questions directly by dialing 347-945-6149 during the show.
Click here for more info.
Now I just have to figure out what to wear.
(Kidding!)
(Although actually there is a right way to dress for radio, or a wrong way at least. On my first radio interview ever, back in 1998—this was before internet radio, so I mean radio-radio in a radio station—I happened to be wearing a bead necklace and when I leaned forward, the beads clickety-clacked against my mic and made a horrible racket. Fortunately we weren’t live. They had me take off the necklace and redo that part of the interview. So note to self: no beads tomorrow. Hahaha. As if any necklace could survive the grabbyhands of Huck.)
November 14, 2010 @ 1:08 pm | Filed under:
Books
Yesterday was the monthly meeting of the San Diego chapter of SCBWI. (Which in my head I pronounce Scwibby even though a) no one ever says that acronym as a word, they always spell out the letters; and b) if they did turn it into a word it would logically be pronounced Scibwy or Scubwy, something like that, not Scwibby, which mixes up the order of the initials. And yet to me, and to my family who hear me say it, Scwibby it is.)
Anyway: the guest speaker at yesterday’s meeting was nonfiction author Kelly Milner Halls. Her presentation was fantastic. Erm, wait, that doesn’t work, because it was all about real stuff, not fantasy. Fascinating, then. Excellent. Informative. Yeah.
Halls tells a great story—I can see why she’s in demand for school visits—and shared a bunch of interesting anecdotes about the research and writing of her books. She writes the kind of books my kids go crazy for, about weird, creepy, truth-is-stranger-than-fiction topics. After hearing Kelly’s stories, I’m eager to read these books myself, especially her Sasquatch book and the one about the Baghdad Zoo rescue mission.
At the end of her talk, she said she had a few copies of her books to give away to audience members and decided the winners would be the three people with birthdays closest to hers. “So who has a December birthday?”
Guess whose birthday was closest.
I was thrilled because when I she spoke about that book, I thought OH MAN MY KIDS WOULD LOVE THAT.
And two of them have already read it, and they do.
I finally found time to create a Facebook author page—this is something writers are strongly encouraged to do these days, and it’ll be a help, I think, in keeping my personal Facebook stuff separate from the professional. So if you feel inclined to visit it and maybe even give it a Like, that’d be swell. 🙂
Don’t forget to tune in this Monday evening at 7pm Eastern time for a blogtalkradio conversation about all things Betsy-Tacy and Maud Hart Lovelace between Jennifer Hart, Mitali Perkins, and me—and you, if you call in!
And if you’re in the San Diego area, please visit Readers Inc, that wonderful children’s bookshop in La Mesa Village, next Saturday, Nov. 20th, from 3-5 pm and join in our Betsy-Tacy Celebration. I’ll read from one of Maud’s books and we’ll talk Deep Valley to our hearts’ content.
Now back to my tower of CYBILs nominees!
November 11, 2010 @ 8:42 pm | Filed under:
Poetry
For Poetry Friday this week, another one of mine. Like Lena, it’s an old one, written during grad school. It came to mind recently because I realized I’d borrowed an image from this poem for a newer manuscript.
When I wrote this poem, I wanted to try my hand at a sestina, which is a strict form comprised of six six-line stanzas, each line ending with the same six words but arranged in a different order in each stanza, ending with a final three-line stanza in which every line contains two of the repeated words. Um, did you follow that? It sounds more complicated than it is—it’s a simple form, though devilishly hard to write.
For the narrative of the poem, I wanted the speaker’s reality to reflect the repetition; I wanted to place someone in a situation where a few stark elements would be dominating her world. Thus the prairie homestead setting.
In the Dugout
July 15, 1892
Hard to write with my arm so sore but right now I need
the comfort of this dear book. I’m burning what’s left
of the oil but Lucas he won’t know, he’s out in the fields
and he’s like to stay there all night.
It’s cool in here this evening, a nice wind
singing in the grass on the roof, but again
no sign of rain. Looks like we’re in for it again.
Another dry year. Oh dear Lord how we do need
some rain, with the land dry as burlap, blowing off in the wind
till I don’t believe we’ll have any topsoil left.
And I can’t keep Lucas from straying out night after night
to dig holes between the rows in all our fields
because he thinks if he frees the moisture, the fields
will produce, pushing up corn and potatoes again
like in the good years. I remember the nights
we used to spend catching stars for each other, no need
for neighbors. But those times left
so long ago, carried away by this never-ending wind
and dried up by the summers. And maybe the wind
is what whipped that parched man in the fields,
took his grand schemes and his spark and left
him slack-eyes and broken, muttering those fool words again
and again about rainfall following the plow. All we need,
Lucas says when he’s clear, is a few nights
of good solid rain, the kind to soak a sod roof overnight
which I’m sure wouldn’t take much with this place. The wind
shrieks in through a dozen holes as it is. I need
a new cloth to hang above the table so bits of field
won’t sift into the food again.
But that muslin I used for my sling was all I had left.
I know it’s wrong but I’ve got so I wouldn’t care if he left.
The way he flew at me all wild last night
because I killed a broody hen again.
We got to eat, don’t we? Can’t live on dirt and wind
and we certainly ain’t getting anything else from those fields.
But—sometimes I think maybe that is all I need—
just what we’ve got left: earth and wind.
One night I’ll go out and plant my own self in the field
and drink wind till I’m full again, with no burning need.
This week’s Poetry Friday roundup can be found at Scrub-a-Dub Tub.
November 10, 2010 @ 6:27 am | Filed under:
Family
This afternoon, I was out in the backyard, enjoying a long overdue telephone chat with a faraway friend. I heard Huck squawk and looked up from the flower bed to see Rilla clutching him by the head, both hands locked in his curls. She was attempting to yank him upward and he was quite understandably outraged by this.
I called to her to let go of him. It really looked like she was hauling hard on his head. She gave me a sharp look, a frown of confusion and disbelief, as if she were aghast at my interference. But she let go and took a step back, leaving the baby in peace.
At which point Huck ducked his head down to a puddle of dirty rainwater pooled in a hollow in the base of the kids’ basketball hoop. And began slurping.
Um, as you were, Rilla. My bad.
November 8, 2010 @ 1:23 pm | Filed under:
Poetry
Carlie asked:
Thanks so much for introducing me to the idea of Poetry Friday. I love it. Can you tell me where I can find the schedule for who is hosting each week so that I can follow along and play too?
You bet! The schedule is posted at Kidlitosphere Central. This week’s host is author Liz Garton Scanlon at her blog, Liz in Ink Scrub-a-Dub Tub (thanks, Tabatha, for the correct link).
Ooh, fun! I just noticed that Amy at The Poem Farm is scheduled to host on my birthday next month. Poetry and cake: will that be a perfect day, or what?
November 8, 2010 @ 6:47 am | Filed under:
Photos
My dad and I have an informal agreement: he can borrow my children any time he likes, and I get to steal his photos.
I’m pretty sure my end of this bargain is called “eating your cake and having it too.”
(Thanks, Daddy!)
November 7, 2010 @ 8:31 am | Filed under:
Art
I think Rose and Beanie are ready to start their own fashion label.
November 5, 2010 @ 5:33 am | Filed under:
Poetry
For Poetry Friday this week, two poems:
one from Sara, one from me.
Barter
by Sara Teasdale
Life has loveliness to sell,
All beautiful and splendid things,
Blue waves whitened on a cliff,
Soaring fire that sways and sings,
And children’s faces looking up,
Holding wonder like a cup.
Life has loveliness to sell,
Music like the curve of gold,
Scent of pine trees in the rain,
Eyes that love you, arms that hold,
And for your spirit’s still delight,
Holy thoughts that star the night.
Spend all you have for loveliness,
Buy it and never count the cost;
For one white singing hour of peace
Count many a year of strife well lost,
And for a breath of ecstasy
Give all you have been, or could be.
String of Beads
by Melissa Wiley
Well, I’ll tell you
it’s a long time
since I’ve strung words
on these taut threads
My mouth got busy
and my fingers with tales
and showing how the bunny
goes around the tree
and through the tunnel
Busy playing cat’s cradle,
learning the shapes,
fingers together then drawing apart
like the sign for story
I learned from my deaf son
Bring the strands close,
slip a finger, loop another.
Catch the top rung of Jacob’s ladder
in your mouth for just a moment.
The angular teacup rests on its saucer.
Broom, candles, manger, diamonds.
Anything may happen.
How mutable the forms,
how fluid, more forgiving
than the faceted words winking
thisway thatway as you squint
at the sharp wet end of a line.
If you forget to tie a knot in the string
the words slide off the end and skitter
to all corners
Anyway, which is it?
Yarn shapes or beads on a string?
Sooner or later
you have to make up
your mind.
This week’s Poetry Friday roundup can be found at Teaching Authors.