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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Greg Taylor, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 3 of 3
1. Texas Librarians Rock--I Cannot Lie!


Had a fabulous and energizing day at the Texas Library Association annual meeting in Austin. First off was the Lone Star Authors Shine panel with fellow Lone Stars James Dashner, Greg Taylor, Jordan Sonnenblick, Melissa Kantor, and Helen Frost. 
 That’s one of the best parts of this job—rubbing shoulders with awesome authors!
At the Disney-Hyperion booth, The Gray Wolf Throne arcs were a hot commodity. I enjoyed meeting hundreds of Texas librarians and re-acquainting myself with many more.

And then on to the Texas Teens for Literacy events. TLA does a fantastic job of getting teens involved in the conference. You could pick them out from their eye-catching yellow tee shirts. Why didn’t they have events like that when I was a teen? 
First, I was on a panel with authors Melissa Kantor and Sophie Jordan.
Then it was on to the Teen Mingle room, where the teens made me feel like a total rock star.
Bravo, Texas! Now on to the Writers’ League of Texas YA A to Z conference.   

4 Comments on Texas Librarians Rock--I Cannot Lie!, last added: 4/17/2011
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2. Cover Stories: The Girl Who Became a Beatle by Greg Taylor

Greg Taylor's The Girl Who Became a Beatle is a novel "about the good and the bad of Hollywood, fame and rock 'n roll." It has a photographic homage for a cover, and it's striking. I had to ask him how that came about.


Here's Greg:


"I had a cover in mind as I was writing the book. It became a kind of visual mantra through the many drafts and years it took for me to complete the novel. As for what it looked like, I think I'll keep that to myself.


"My publisher did not ask for my input on the cover design. Maybe it's different for the big, bestselling authors, but I believe that's common practice, publishers not involving an author in the artwork for their book. Can't say as I blame them.


"I did describe the cover I had in mind to my publisher, however. As it turned out, they went with another idea...."


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3. The Story Behind the Cover

Liz Szabla, Editor-in-chief of the Feiwel and Friends imprint, gives us the inside scoop about the cover for The Girl Who Became a Beatle:

Every once in a while, a book comes along that demands a cover image outside the realm of stock photography. You know those sites—Corbis and the like—where many art directors and designers go for book jacket ideas and images. Why? Because it’s cheaper than setting up a photo shoot. Hiring the photographer, hiring models, renting props—photo shoots can be expensive.

But sometimes, a book needs an original cover. One with an image never before seen. Or, in the case of Greg Taylor’s The Girl Who Became a Beatle, an image that is a play on an iconic album cover.

My husband, Gary Spector, has been a professional photographer his entire career. In the 20 years we’ve been together, I’ve seen his industry change radically—and digital photography is only the tip of the iceberg.

When our creative director, Rich Deas, and our group were brainstorming cover ideas for Girl Who Became a Beatle, we couldn’t resist riffing on that fabulous image from “Meet the Beatles”—the portrait of four young, beautiful guys shot against a dark background.

Rich talked to Gary about it, and they worked out a concept. But when we started looking at models for the two teen girls and two teen boys in the book, we were underwhelmed. This has happened to us before—sometimes, professional models look too…perfect. Too coiffed, too polished, too unapproachable. The result can be, well, vacant.

Our characters for Girl Who Became a Beatle are anything but two-dimensional, and we realized we needed real kids—approachable, attentive, and adorable. Luckily, our MacKids family proved a treasure trove of personality. The kids on the cover are (from left to right): Emma, daughter of Feiwel and Friends publisher Jean Feiwel, Carmean and Walker, daughter and son of our marketing director Joy Dallanegra-Sanger, and Chad, Rich’s niece’s boyfriend (sadly, now her ex-boyfriend). Does Chad look familiar? He’s also the “face” of Feiwel & Friend’s Wereling books by Steve Feasey, as well as the guy behind the freaky glasses on the cover of Andrew Smith’s The Marbury Lens.

Gary loved working with these models. If I do say so myself, he has a way with people, and soon into the shoot, the models were comfortable and connecting with their characters, but also not afraid to let their own spirits shine through. The result is dazzling!

—Liz Szabla

The Girl Who Became a Beatle

By Greg Taylor

On Sale in Hardcover and Paperback today!

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