What is JacketFlap

  • JacketFlap connects you to the work of more than 200,000 authors, illustrators, publishers and other creators of books for Children and Young Adults. The site is updated daily with information about every book, author, illustrator, and publisher in the children's / young adult book industry. Members include published authors and illustrators, librarians, agents, editors, publicists, booksellers, publishers and fans.
    Join now (it's free).

Sort Blog Posts

Sort Posts by:

  • in
    from   

Suggest a Blog

Enter a Blog's Feed URL below and click Submit:

Most Commented Posts

In the past 7 days

Recent Posts

(tagged with 'vermont')

Recent Comments

Recently Viewed

JacketFlap Sponsors

Spread the word about books.
Put this Widget on your blog!
  • Powered by JacketFlap.com

Are you a book Publisher?
Learn about Widgets now!

Advertise on JacketFlap

MyJacketFlap Blogs

  • Login or Register for free to create your own customized page of blog posts from your favorite blogs. You can also add blogs by clicking the "Add to MyJacketFlap" links next to the blog name in each post.

Blog Posts by Tag

In the past 7 days

Blog Posts by Date

Click days in this calendar to see posts by day or month
new posts in all blogs
Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: vermont, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 26 - 32 of 32
26. Montpelier state of mind

Hard to believe though it may be, given the amount of work I need to do between now and then, but this Wednesday I leave for my Vermont College fall '08 residency. Normally, I'd say that Vermont is lovely this time of year, but the weather forecast actually seems to call for rain. D'oh!

I just opened up my tentative rez schedule and briefly wished I hadn't; they sure do know how to make the most of ten days! That being said, I am thrilled to death that VCFA golden child Tobin Anderson will be offering a lecture. That one is sure to be packed.

I, however, am exactly the opposite of packed. In fact, I'm not even back in NYC. N and I decided to stay up at the cottage for one more night, so enamored were we of the writers' retreat (and so unfinished are we with our writing). To that end, my "prep" for rez has largely consisted of thinking about the people I'm so looking forward to seeing again. I could go on forever. Instead, I'll just post on 3 VCFA-types about whom you should know!

1. Gwenda Bond, kick-ass fantasist and book-blogger extraordinaire. Do you read "Shaken and Stirred?" You should. Reviews, updates, and occasionally, tales of red-velvet baked goods. She's also my roomie. Love.

2. Rachel Wilson won me over with her mad karaoke skills. I just might have a girl crush (don't worry; she knows. She's cool with it. I think.).

3. Varian Johnson has published a fabbity fab book with Flux, the new-ish and quite edgy imprint that will be releasing SO PUNK ROCK (The Work Previously Known as Tribe) next July. He is also one of the minds behind The Brown Bookshelf.
*Flux is also one of the publishers of the amazing Miss Carrie Jones. Carrie has been an inspiration to me in every possible way. And yes, this is me sneaking an extra entry into my way-too-short list.

Well, that's just not nearly enough, is it? I've had the opportunity to work with some AMAZING faculty directly, such as: Kathi Appelt, Uma Krishnaswami, and Tim Wynne-Jones. Kathi's new book, THE UNDERNEATH, has gotten fantastic reviews. Some people have already heard Newbery buzz. Check it out:



I can't believe it's been almost two years since I left my job to write full time and to study at Vermont. I knew at the time that it was the right decision for me, but I had no idea how rewarding the experience would be. I can't recommend it enough.

Any other MFA-ers out there? What sort of feedback to you have to give on *your* programs?

Add a Comment
27. remaindered links and a short report

where you put your library fines and how the librarian gets them out

People have been sending me some great links which I’ve been consolidating for a “best of inbox” post here today. This is a rainy Vermont weekend coming up which means indoor projects and I’m waiting for the kitchen floor to dry.

The above image is from the Royalton Library up the road from here. I went there on Wednesday after recording the MetaFilter podcast. The librarian had a patron who had gotten a “free” computer (actually two) and needed help setting it up. I went over with Ubuntu CDs and a cheery frame of mind. That outlook soured somewhat when I learned more about the computers. They were given to this family by the VT Department of Children and Families. They were, I think, donated to them. Neither one worked right — one had no operating system (and a possibly broken CD drive) and one froze intermittently. DCF had given these computers to this family, this family already needing a bit of help, as a way of helping them out. All they wound up doing was giving them a project, a somewhat futile project. The mom and daughter were good natured about it, but I felt totally on the spot — if I fixed the computers, the family would have a computer. I took them home to mess with and I’ll probably just replace them with a working computer from my attic. What a pickle.

On to the links I’ve assembled.

That’s the short list for now, I have a few that are begging for more explication which I’ll be getting to shortly.

5 Comments on remaindered links and a short report, last added: 6/11/2008
Display Comments Add a Comment
28. Vermont Library Association conference this Tue/Wed

I’ll be heading up to Burlington for the Vermont Library Conference both to attend and to present. I’ll be giving a talk on how I got the VLA website up and running with WordPress and Meredith and I will be presenting a Top Tech Trends talk on Wednesday. Both talks are at 1:45 if you happen to already be in the area. I’m looking forward to schmoozing with some of my favorite librarians and just generally immersing myself in Vermont library culture. Please say hi if you’re in the area.

5 Comments on Vermont Library Association conference this Tue/Wed, last added: 5/15/2008
Display Comments Add a Comment
29. Love a Good Mystery?











It was a dark and stormy night when... two very good old friends of mine decided to chuck it all and move to Vermont. To do what, you inquire? Why, no mystery here-- to open a new bookstore. Yes, a new independent bookstore! (Oh, how much fun to write that!)

So if mysteries make your blood curdle, check it out-- it's called Mystery on Main Street, and it's located at 119 Main Street in Brattleboro. They've started a blog, too.

0 Comments on Love a Good Mystery? as of 1/1/1900
Add a Comment
30. Moose Crossings

I knew I wasn't in New York anymore
Southbound, I-89, Vermont to Long Island
Somewhere near Randolph,
one of those towns you only see
on picture postcards,
in art house movies,
and pinpoint black dots on a road atlas

These are the towns we pass straight through
these are the places we forget
These are the people we ignore

And I would never have known Randolph
And I never would have stopped
I would have kept my foot on the pedal
and soared by,
sixty-five miles per hour

But I know this name
I know this place
because my car's oil pressure gauge
went flatline at exit 4,
You don't fool around
with "STOP SAFELY!" messages
blinking on the dashboard
Something tells you
you're in trouble

Like a mirage,
a Mobil gas station appeared,
just off the exit ramp,
tucked into a white carpet,
sheaths of jagged, shaggy layers of snow
surprisingly busy with snowmobiles
truckers in workboots and parkas and knit caps,
and locals, fair-skinned and sturdy,
buying the Sunday paper and a pack of cigarettes

I pulled in, parking my unruly Volvo SUV in a corner,
ashamed and awkward and intimidated
by people who knew where they were going
and what they were doing

I prayed someone inside
the tiny store at the edge of the crossroad
would save me

"We're too small," the manager said,
never looking at me, ringing the cashier,
wiping the counter,
answering the phone
"We don't service cars.
You're gonna' need a tow.
25 miles to the nearest town
Don't worry.
25 miles is nothing around here."

AAA had to come to
rescue me
I learned a lot about Randolph, Vermont
in the two hours of my unintended visit to this
town, buffered by crossroads in the middle of nowhere

I asked Brenda,
the Mobil gas station attendant,
what people did in Randolph
and she told me:
"You're doing it."

Brenda bought me coffee
and lent me her cell phone
to call AAA
("Only Verizon works out here,"
she said)
We were the same age
Fortysomething
She'd rather be
a stained-glass artist
than a Mobil gas station attendant
but she already has grandchildren
she was abused for nine years
she knows how to open car hoods
she knows how to find dipsticks
she wants her children to join
The National Guard
I told her:
"I write poetry"

Driving home in a thick, white breeze of snow Sunday afternoon
Clutching the wheel for dear (not deer, ahem) life,
afraid my car would roll over
as two cars did just before me
on an icy bend on I-89 South

I saw a sign just like this



I thought I had stepped onto the set of Northern Exposure, a show I remember more for the cute Jewish doctor in Alaska
(okay, it could happen, but his mother wouldn't be happy about it)
and the nomadic moose in the opening credits

You see a lot of strange things on Long Island:
fake body parts pumped plump with Botox and gel,
Ugg boots and cuffed denim shorts,
Wrinkled in Time Grandpas in red Corvettes

We've got lots of doctors my mother wished I married
but we don't have moose



We do have the occasional MEESE-kite,
now that I think about it.
I wonder if MEESE is the plural of MOOSE

FYI: In Yiddish, meesekite ("mieskeit") are unattractive human faces.

Not that a moose isn't pretty in its own way.
It's an acquired taste, I suppose
Like squid
Like liver
Like gefilte fish




website tracking

Add a Comment
31. The mother of all book-signings!

Meet  43 children's authors & illustrators!

Kindling Words Caravan
Thursday, January 24, 2008
4:00-5:00
Phoenix Books
Essex, VT

I'll be there signing copies of Spitfire, and I'm bursting at the seams over the company I'll be keeping. 
Here are some hints...






Add a Comment
32. An Honor For Memory

medical-mondays.jpg

Last week, Nobel-prize winning scientist Eric Kandel wrote about the five most unforgettable works on memory for The Wall Street Journal. Today we will look more closely at two of these titles, Memory and Brain by Larry R. Squire and Memory From A to Z by Yadin Dudai. Below is an excerpt from the beginning of Memory and Brain. Check back later today to learn more about Memory From A to Z.

(more…)

0 Comments on An Honor For Memory as of 1/1/1990
Add a Comment