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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Chicken Soup for the Soul, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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Blog: Galley Cat (Mediabistro) (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Adaptation, Chicken Soup for the Soul, Add a tag
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JacketFlap tags: Midwest Book reviews, Tavia Gilbert, Grant Overstake, Inspirational Sports Stories, Maggie Vaults Over the Moon, young adult sports, Track and Field Stories, Recommended sports books for teens, Maggie Wheatley, Nancy Julien Kopp, Taylor Millsap, Great Summer Reads, Uncategorized, YA Fiction, Audiobook, Chicken Soup for the Soul, Kirkus Reviews, Guideposts, Girls Sports, Add a tag
Looking for a sunny summer read? Maggie Vaults Over the Moon lets the sunshine in. The young adult novel about a courageous farm girl, Maggie Steele, who overcomes tragedy and rises to new heights as a pole-vaulter, has brightened the … Continue reading
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JacketFlap tags: Amazon.com, Uncategorized, Christmas, YA Fiction, Kansas, Chicken Soup for the Soul, Moon, Kirkus Reviews, Indiebound, Girls Sports, Becky Holliday, Grant Overstake, Inspirational Sports Stories, Maggie Steele, Maggie Vaults Over the Moon, young adult sports, Track and Field Stories, Pole Vault, Maggie Vaults, Nancy Julien Kopp, Dr. Timothy M. Tays, Farm Stories, Guidepost, Hopeful stories, Inspirational Christmas Gifts for Teeens, John Rickenbaugh, Maggie Christmas, Nostalgic Farm Life, Thoughtful Gifts for Teens, Add a tag
Looking for a motivational gift this holiday season? Inspire them with a Maggie Christmas! Maggie Vaults Over the Moon is the story of a courageous teen, Maggie Steele, who finds the strength to overcome a tragedy and rise to new … Continue reading
Blog: Noblemania (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Chicken Soup for the Soul, Bill Finger, books by other authors, Add a tag
I've contributed cartoons to several Chicken Soup for the Soul books.
And now I've contributed a story to one as well.
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JacketFlap tags: Uncategorized, YA Fiction, Kansas, Chicken Soup for the Soul, Sports Stories, Manhattan, Guideposts, Girls Sports, Grant Overstake, Inspirational Sports Stories, Maggie Steele, young adult sports, Kansas State Track and Field Championships, Kansas Farm Life, sports novels, Recommended sports books for teens, wholesome reading, Kansas Book Festival Authors, Nancy Julien Kopp, Wholesome Teen Fiction, Writer Granny's Blog, Add a tag
One of America’s most inspirational writers has discovered a satisfying new source of inspirational reading: “I spent two evenings reading Maggie Vaults Over the Moon and this long-time adult enjoyed the story immensely,” writes Nancy Julien Kopp. “Maggie is a … Continue reading
Blog: From the land of Empyrean (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: children, forgiveness, spirituality, charity, spiritual, inspirational, disabled, faith, chicken soup for the soul, benefit, Mark Miller, give kids the world, Sarah Price, Murray Pura, Add a tag
The idea of One started small and grew into a year's worth of amazing, thought-provoking, inspirational stories. The resulting anthology was combined into a beautiful paperback book (not unlike Chicken Soup for the Soul, and definitely nice enough for any Doctor's office).
Blog: Kat's Eye (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: caregiving, trusting the process, publishing, creative process, caregivers, chicken soup for the soul, perseverance, Add a tag
Time and again, writers, editors and other folks in the industry say that if you want to be published, you should "Write what you know." So, in between Elena's first and second brain surgeries last year, I managed to sit butt in chair long enough to write a short story for an upcoming Chicken Soup for the Soul book. The beginning drafts were painful. I'd been away from the process for so long that slogging through my prose felt like an exercise in futility. But in the end, the hard work paid off. The Chicken Soup folks bought my story! Getting the news in the midst of our family drama was a highlight of my Year That Went to the Dogs, and a reminder to Trust the Process, wherever it takes you. Chicken Soup for the Soul: Family Caregivers hits bookshelves nationwide on March 13th. Check out this link for a look inside and to pre-order.
Blog: Writing for Children with Karen Cioffi (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: The Secret, Chicken Soup for the Soul, Jack Canfield, writing perseverance, writing focus, Add a tag
I’m a huge fan of positive thinking and projection. I believe our mind has a great influence over our well being and the direction our life can take. Granted, it’s not always easy to harness that influence, but there is enough content out there, including The Secret, to at least strive to think positive and project.
For example, Jack Canfield and co-creator Mark Victor Hansen, of Chicken Soup for the Soul, were rejected 144 times from publishers. Finally, in 1993, their book was accepted. Since they were in debt and couldn’t afford a publicist, they did their own promotion. In 1995, they won the Abby Award and the Southern California Publicist Award.
In a teleconference I attended with Jack Canfield as the speaker, he said the co-authors created vision boards of what they wanted. They even took a copy of the New York Times Best Selling Page, whited out the #1 spot, and replaced it with Chicken Soup for the Soul. They put copies of it everywhere, even in the toilet. They envisioned and projected success. The rest is history.
On a much smaller scale, my daughter and co-author of Day’s End Lullaby, Robyn, practices the philosophy of The Secret. For ten years she’s dreamed of being in the audience of the Oprah show. She actually got tickets twice, but for one reason or another, she was unable to attend. But, it didn’t stop her, she persevered and kept trying. Well, the weekend of May 8th, Oprah had her Live Your Best Life weekend in New York City. Robyn got a ticket for the weekend event and ended up being photographed. Her photo is now on Oprah’s website. In addition, she was about four feet from Oprah at one of the events, while she took a picture. This may not mean much to some, but for a young woman who has dreamed of being in the same room as Oprah, it’s a big . . . no HUGE deal. You can check it out at (she’s the one on the right, her friend Christine is on the left):
http://www.oprah.com/omagazine/Photos-from-O-Magazines-Live-Your-Best-Life-Weekend/5#slide
So, what has this to do with you and me as writers . . . plenty . . . just about every writer has heard the adage, it’s not necessarily the best writers who succeed, it’s the writers who persevere. Stay determined and focused on your writing goals. Don’t let rejection stop you . . . persevere.
Related Articles:
Writing to Get Published
Writing, Motivation, and Guidance
A great way to stay focused is to join:
Write More, Sell More, Make More Money Than EVER in 2010 Coaching Program.
This program is facilitated by Suzanne Lieurance and provides daily writing motivation, guidance, resources and tools to help you get published. You can even ask your writing and marketing questions, Suzanne will answer them in a weekly audio clip.
Or, for more hands on instruction and guidance, check out the Children's Writers' Coaching Club. You are given weekly teleclasses on writing and marketing from experienced and multi-published authors. And, you can submit a weekly manuscript of up to 1000 words which Suzanne Lieurance will personally
Blog: 2k8: Class Notes (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Samantha Hansen Has Rocks in her Head, Chicken Soup for the Soul, Nancy Viau, Chicken Soup for the Soul, Samantha Hansen Has Rocks in her Head, Nancy Viau, Add a tag
Quick T.I.P.:
Little Willow/Slayground has interviewed Daphne Grab!
Read it now, then cruise on back for more about heroes.
To sum up this week's hero theme, we take a more serious turn and talk with Nancy Viau. Nancy is the author of Samantha Hansen Has Rocks In Her Head, a middle-grade novel that explores the heart and soul of a ten-year-old who loves rocks, and hates the fact she can’t keep her temper under control.
Who’s your hero, Nancy?
Well, when I first think of heroes, I think of the men and women who give up their comfortable lives to fight overseas. They do this unselfishly, and I am so grateful. It’s because of them that I (quite selfishly) get to do what I do—write. Thankyouthankyouthankyou!
On a personal note, my dad is my hero. And it’s not just because he served in the U.S. Army for 26 years. (I’m an Army brat, can you tell?) There was never a day that my dad did not believe in me. In fourth grade, when I told him I wanted to be an astronaut, he said, “You can do anything you set your mind to.” In high school, when I longed to be a Broadway dancer, he said, “That’s great!” And in college, when I told him I was planning to be an elementary school teacher, he looked at me kind of relieved, and replied, “Perfect.” Years later, as I worked toward getting published, his encouragement kept me going. He dealt with the death of a wife, son, and most of his good friends, and lived in extreme pain, yet this “Energizer Bunny” met each day with a positive attitude, a twinkle in his eye, and a sense of humor. I hope to honor him by doing the same.
Nancy has written a special tribute to her dad that can be found in the latest Chicken Soup for the Soul anthology: Chicken Soup for the Soul Celebrating People Who Make a Difference. Pick up this book in a store near you, and read her heartfelt essay: “Save the Best for Last.”
Think you’d like to try your hand at writing a personal essay? Click HERE for the “Recipe For A Winning Chicken Soup for the Soul Story.”
Stay tuned next week for a list you can’t miss:
28+ Reasons Why You Need a Web Site.
Blog: Children's Illustration (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Cartoon Retro, Susan Perl, Richard Armour, Adolescence, Add a tag
"a 1962 book by Richard Armour... Susan Perl is credited with the illustrations"
From Cartoon Retro where you can see many more illustrations.
Wow! What a great endorsement, Grant. Very high praise from an author who knows great writing and a great story.