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We met at Princeton, my brother's undergraduate campus, where many happy memories live. My boy was looking his handsome self in a sunny-day colored shirt. He had stories. Posture. A photograph inside a frame.
Together we discovered
Mistral, an exquisite "fast pace, small plates, fresh local fare" establishment, whose chefs—Scott Anderson and Ben Nerenhausen—were both named 2014 James Beard Foundation Award Semi-Finalists. I'd lately been watching
Chef's Table (watch this trailer!), the sumptuous Netfix series. I wanted a little of that. And so there we were, and such is fine, great happy for me: memories of my brother on his campus, the companionship of my husband and my son, and a restaurant in which everything we ordered was unlike anything I've ever ordered elsewhere.
We watched them make it. They brought it to us. I could do that again and again.
To those who love. To those who are loved. To those remembering. This day.
William H. Scheide, a graduate of Princeton University, passed away last year and left a very valuable rare book collection to his alma mater.
The collection includes about 2,500 books collectively worth about $300 million. Princeton’s Firestone Library has held the collection since 1959. The Scheide Library includes the first six printed editions of the Bible, including a 1455 Gutenberg Bible, as well as an original printing of the Declaration of Independence. There are a number of musical manuscripts in the collection as well including music sketchbooks from Beethoven, Bach, Mozart, Schubert and Wagner.
Follow this link for more details about the inheritance.
(Via NJ.com).
Guess what? I got into Princeton!
Wait a minute, though. Before you go shining up a class ring for me and calling Goldman Sachs to tell them they’ll have a new CEO in a few years, I should probably qualify that statement. I wasn’t invited to Princeton the University. I was invited to Princeton the Children’s Book Festival.
Which, of course, is even better!
Here are the details:
Saturday, September 8, 2012
11am–4pm
Princeton Public Library
65 Witherspoon Street
Princeton, NJ 08542
I’ll be hanging out in the Purple Tent, signing copies of DWEEB and The Only Ones. We can chat about The Riverman Trilogy, maybe talk some sports or movies, and perhaps solve some of the world’s problems. Hope to see you there!
By: Kathy Temean,
on 7/19/2011
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DOES YOUR PICTURE BOOK MANUSCRIPT HAVE WHAT IT TAKES?
INSTRUCTOR: Rebecca Frazer
Description:
This picture book workshop is intended for those with a picture book manuscript (or dummy) in progress.
Participants will analyze the strengths and weaknesses of their work.
Materials: A picture book manuscript and or dummy. Notepad and pencil.
_____________________________________________________________________________
“VOICE: What Goes Into It & How to Make It Work for Your Manuscript”
INSTRUCTOR: Cheryl Klein
Description:
A novel’s voice is the emotional atmosphere that carriers a reader through the story. In this session, Cheryl will discuss the many elements that make up a narrative voice, including tense, rhythm, syntax, tone, and personality. We’ll learn the pros and cons of different POV’s and tenses, and uncover common mistakes that make a novel’s voice feel inauthentic.
Materials: Pen and Notepad
Attendees will be able to purchase Cheryl’s book titled, SECOND SITE: An Editor Talks On Writing, Revising and Publishing Books For Children And Young Adults and get it signed after the workshop.
Cheryl and Rebecca are staying over night and joining us for the Mentoring Workshop the following day.
Agent Stephen Frazer is also coming for dinner and giving a talk for the people who sign up to stay (not free) and will be a mentor on Sunday.
Adam Gustavson who is coming in on Saturday to do an oil painting Workshop for the Illustrators will be having dinner with us and staying overnight to work with Illustrator’s attending Illustrator Day on Sunday.
To read more: http://kathytemean.wordpress.com/2011/07/09/11650/
VERY IMPORTANT: You must e-mail to save space and then fill out the registration. Space is limited, so we will be going on the registration forms that get mailed in to the Ringoes address. We are not going to chase you around to find out if you are showing up. If we don’t have a registration from you, you may not be able to attend. Please do not say you want to attend, knowing that you might not come. That keeps someone else from coming. Here is the link for the form: http://www.newjerseyscbwi.com/forms/workshopregistration.pdf
Hope to see you there,
Kathy
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November 5
By: Kathy Temean,
on 6/19/2011
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With the conference behind us and summer arriving this week, I thought I would remind everyone of the Summer Networking Dinners taking place with editors and agents in NYC and one in September in Princeton. I have added information for the editors and will add agent info later this week. Please do not rush out to submit to the editors on this list. Most are not open to unsolicited submissions. Please check out the info from additional sources.
IMPORTANT: If you sign up to join one of the dinners, you will receive the most up-to-date detailed information on the editors and agents attending the dinner.
Sign up: Don’t miss the chance to build a relationship with an editor or agent. As writers and illustrators we always feel like we are being judged, but the fact is, we are judging, too. Attending events like these where you can meet editors and agents, allows you to form opinions about who you would like to work with. Everyone is not a fit for you, so save yourself some time and join us. The networking dinners are a great way to find out who is right for you in a non-threatening venue.
July 5th – Cafe Centro - in their private dining room. Includes glass of wine, salad, dessert, and choice of entrée. $150 Time: 6:30 pm
STEVEN MELTZER- Associate Publisher/ Executive Managing Editor, Dial, Dutton, Celebra. Great PB books, fiction or narrative nonfiction. Some nonfiction (PB only) Graphic Novels, Fantasy, Edgy, YA. He suggests that authors need to answer certain questions when they send a book to an editor: What makes your book special? What is the unique draw of the book? What makes it exciting? Is there a curriculum tie-in? Timely topic? Historical setting? What are the comparison titles?
Steve has edited many books for young readers, including John Madden’s Heroes of Football: The Story of America’s Game; The Sydney Taylor award-winning, Hanukkah at Valley Forge by Stephen Krensky, illustrated by Greg Harlin; Barbarians! By Steven Kroll, illustrated by Robert Byrd; Useful Fools by C.A. Sc hmidt (a Booklist Best Book of the Year). Also, Every Cowgirl Needs a Horse by Rebecca Janni, illustrated by Lynne Avril, and Mud Tacos! by Mario Lopez and Marissa Lopez Wong, illustrated by Maryn Roos. He has also helped many unpublished SCBWI writers find their way to publication.
EVE ADLER, Editor, Grosset & Dunlap. Eve works on a variety of formats from baby to YA, and is looking for manuscripts for all ages: PBs, MG novels, and YA. She has worked with award-winning authors and illustrators such as Kimberly Willis Holt, Elise Broach, and Janet Tashjian. She enjoys manuscripts with a fresh voice and exceptional writing; for MG and YA projects, she likes contemporary, edgy, historical, coming-of-age, humorous stories, and for PBs. She‘s most interested in texts that have a curriculum tie-in or educational hook.
SHAUNA FAY is an Assistant Editor at G. P. Putnam’s Sons, a division of Penguin Young Readers Group. Shauna works on everything from PBs to YA novels. She has edited the PB book, Little Pink Pup by Johanna Kerby, and has worked on Jack Higgins’ YA action series written with Justin Richards, as well as Jan Bret’s Snowy Treasury, and Goodnight Goon and Runaway Mummy by Michael Rex. While open to books for all ages, she is particularly interested in MG fiction with a strong narrative voice, historical fiction, and is a sucker for a romantic ending. She is also interested in young funny, simple picture book texts and is open
By: Megan,
on 6/3/2009
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Megan Branch, Intern
In addition to all my blogging and publicity intern duties here at OUP over the past six months, I’ve also been interning for the 19th Annual Virginia Woolf Conference. The Conference is held at a different university every year and this year it just happens to be taking place in New York. The majority of those attracted to the Woolf Conference are Woolf scholars, but this year there is something for the rest of us: there’s going to be a band.
The band is called Princeton and they almost never make their way to the East Coast, so their one-night-only performance at the Woolf Conference is even more special. The band is made up of 3 guys based in Los Angeles who sound like a cross between The Shins, Sufjan Stevens, and a library. Princeton write and perform music based on the lives and work of the members of the Bloomsbury Group that included Virginia Woolf, Leonard Woolf, Lytton Strachey and John Maynard Keynes. One of my favorite songs from Princeton’s Bloomsbury EP, “The Waves”, shows off what they do best. The song pairs heartbreaking lyrics, detailing Woolf’s last thoughts before her suicide, with music so upbeat that it’s practically bursting with sunshine. Princeton’s music makes you happy, and then it makes you think.
For the Woolf Conference, Princeton will be playing all of their songs from the Bloomsbury EP and have collaborated with the Stephen Pelton Dance Theater to produce “Lytton/Carrington”, influenced by Bloomsbury member Lytton Strachey’s unique relationship with the painter Dora Carrington. Also premiering at the Woolf Conference is the dance theatre piece “it was this: it was this:”, choreographed by Stephen Pelton, which uses movement to illustrate Woolf’s use of punctuation in one paragraph of To the Lighthouse.
Princeton and the Stephen Pelton Dance Theatre will be performing in Fordham University’s Pope Auditorium, 113 W. 60th St, on June 5th at 8 PM. Tickets will be available at the door for $20.
You can learn more about the 19th Annual Virginia Woolf Conference here.
See for yourself how awesome Princeton and the Stephen Pelton Dance Theater are.
And here’s the music video for my favorite Princeton song, “The Waves.”
Click here to view the embedded video.
By: Rebecca,
on 3/12/2008
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By Evan Schnittman
12 years ago I learned an incredibly valuable lesson about marketing that has influenced how I see business development and many aspects of electronic licensing. In 1996 I left my job in traditional publishing and entered the test preparation industry at a company called The Princeton Review(TPR). TPR was an incredibly well known brand and this made the company seem huge from the outside – but at its core it was very much a small operation that had managed to become a household name. (more…)
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5x7
Oil pencil on illustration board
I felt like drawing chocolates. I think these look suspiciously like See's. I may have to do a series:
See's, Godiva, Josef Schmidt, Tootsie Rolls... What else?
I'm also getting away from burnishing so much. I like leaving the texture of the board showing, and it also saves my hand from cramping. Burnishing is like a fast track to carpel tunnel. And who needs that?
I’m SO excited about this! Thanks so much for offering something so wonderful, Kathy
Donna
I sure wish I lived in New Jersey. It’s a bit too far to come from California, but I would love to attend these!