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Viewing Blog: The Divine Miss Pixie Woods (Cecil Castellucci), Most Recent at Top
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Author Cecil Castellucci's blog - Renaissance Gal in Fancy Land
Statistics for The Divine Miss Pixie Woods (Cecil Castellucci)

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1. where I internet live now

*is this mic on?*

Reminder of where I live now on the internet:

I tumbl at misscecil.tumblr.com

I twitter at @misscecil

I facebook page at www.facebook.com/cecilcastellucci2

my website is misscecil.com

I hope you will come find me there.

love, cecil

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2. TIN STAR ARC giveaway

I'm back from Comic Con! I've got a couple of ARCs of TIN STAR to giveaway for those of you who couldn't be in San Diego to snag one!

Leave your name in the comments (or tweet me) along with your fave alien / human friendship/relationship (just for dorky fun!) and I'll draw the winners at random on August 1st.

On their way to start a new life, Tula and her family travel on the Prairie Rose, a colony ship headed to a planet in the outer reaches of the galaxy. All is going well until the ship makes a stop at a remote space station, the Yertina Feray, and the colonist’s leader, Brother Blue, beats Tula within an inch of her life. An alien, Heckleck, saves her and teaches her the ways of life on the space station.

You can read an excerpt of TIN STAR over at tor.com

add it at goodreads!
Tin Star

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3. San Diego Comic Con Schedule

San Diego Comic Con Schedule!!!

Come and say hello!

Thursday, July 18th

10 am Trickster* Panel with
Faith Erin Hicks, Lea Hernandez, Vera Bergasol

(* trickster is at 900 Market Street)

Get tickets here!

3 PM Signing TIN STAR advanced copies at the MacTeen Booth at COMIC CON

Saturday, July 20th

4:30 PM Comics and Prose: the Hybrid Novel

with Douglas Wolk, Jeffrey Brown, Nate Powell, Janet Tashjian and Jim Pascoe
Room 26AB

Sunday, July 21st

9:30 am ODD DUCK signing at First Second Booth

 

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4. Tin Star Cover reveal will be this Thursday 7/11 on io9!

Attention! TIN STAR cover reveal is this Thursday 7/11 over at io9 !!!

And FYI there will be ARCs for you to snag at Comic Con. 3 PM MacKids Booth 7/18. Come and snag one!

tin star teaser

add it at goodreads Tin Star

Tin Star

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5. Rumpus Interview!

Rumpus Interview!

J Ryan Stradal interviewed me last week for the Saturday Rumpus Interview.

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6. ODD DUCK Los Angeles Book Launch / May 25th at Skylight Books / 3 PM

Come join me on May 25th at 3 PM at Skylight Books for the Los Angeles launch of ODD DUCK!

There will be (iced) tea and cupcakes! Bring your little ones and your odd ones!

Skylight Books /1818 N Vermont

3 PM

OddDuck-cov-2P

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7. Odd Duck reviewed in NY Times

oddducknytimes

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8. New Book anouncement: From publisher’s weekly/ April 1

Castellucci, Infurnari Go with Dark Horse

YA (and graphic) novelist Cecil Castellucci sold North American rights to a currently untitled Depression-era graphic novel to Dark Horse’s Sierra Hahn. The book, which William Morris Endeavor’s Kirby Kim represented, will be illustrated by Joe Infurnari, and is currently set for a fall 2014 release. The story is set in 1932 and follows, Dark Horse said, two misfits “and a relationship built during a train-hopping journey from the cold heartbreak of their eastern homes toward the sunny promise of California.”

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9. Yappiest Day on Earth

This past weekend I participated in the Yappiest Day on Earth! the brain child of Cat Patrick. It was 16 YA authors, bloggers and librarians and you! Imagine us all running around Disneyland with matching blue shirts like we were on a school trip. Every ride to conquer! Thrilling screams to be had!

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Here we are before our adventure began!

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I wanted to go onto the Winnie the Pooh ride. BUT WE GOT STUCK IN THE HONEYCOMB!

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Or as Kevin Emerson, Sean Beaudoin, Rachel Cohn and I now will say for all things that suddenly go wrong: "Tigger spilt some honey on the tracks."

Kevin Emerson and I in the Pooh "trap."

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I also went on Splash Mountain which was wet. I was terrified at the drop.

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Me and Gabrielle Zevin pre-drop. We talked a lot about the Bears. And Zippity Doo Dah.

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I spent a lot of the day hanging with Sean Beaudoin. He even won me a stuffed mouse at the midway in California Adventure. He also won a Dumbo that he gave to a tiny child who waddled off with the biggest grin on her face. He also snuck in some Cruella de Ville time.

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Anyway, it was a fun day and much thanks to Harper Collins for sponsoring the book signing afterwards and to Mysterious Galaxy for selling books.

Thanks to all of those who came out! You should totally come next year.

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10. Events upcoming next week! Dystopia Panel! Teen Author Read Night! Yappiest Day! Wondercon! LitOrang

Here are my upcoming events next week!

I will have Odd Duck buttons to give away. :D

Monday, March 25th

Dystopian YA Panel at Skylight Books

1818 N Vermont - Los Angeles




teenage dystopia poster different spacing


Thursday, March 28th

Teen Author Reading Series


LAPL Central Libraray

630 w 5th Street


Teen Author Reading Night_Mar2013

March 30th
Yappiest Day on Earth!Come join me and 15 other YA authors at Disneyland

To participate, meet the authors inside the gates of Disneyland at 8:00 AM on March 30th. Or, join us at the book signing at 5:30 PM at the Anabella Hotel, 1030 W. Katella Ave.


facebook invite here.
Disney flyer FINAL


March 31st
Wondercon in Anaheim


Signing at Mysterious Galaxy Booth 11:30 - 12 #1201

Writing the Fantastic 2:30 - 3:30
Heroes vs. Villians 3:30p.m. - 4:30p.m., Room: 210BCD


April 6th
Literary Orange
1 PM Young Adult: The Awesome Age
Josephine Angelini, Cecil Castellucci, Jessi Kirby, Sarah Maas
Moderator: Allison Tran & Michelle Ann Dunphy

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11. Short Story - "The Ides of March" up on Rookie Magazine!

Hey all! I've got a new short story "The Ides of March" (and it is the Ides right now!) up at Rookie Magazine! Hope you will go read it! And just look at the awesome art work that they paired it with. swoon! thanks, Ana!

image

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12. Tin Star has a pub date! August 27th!

Tin Star has a pub date! August 27th! And it is now up on the internets for you to pre-order and add to your to read pile! It always feel like it's really real when it's up on goodreads!
B&N and Amazon !!!

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13. For your consdieration: my eligible short stories for hugo and nebula noms

Hello. it's been pointed out by Christopher Rowe and others that in the sci fi community we kind of have to remind people that we have stuff out there eligible to be nominated since so much of the awards are membership voted. So, taking a deep breath, here it goes.

For the Norton I have a YA hybrid novel The Year of the Beasts that is eligible. It's alternating chapters of prose / graphic novel. the prose is the story of two girls and the boys they like and the summer and the graphic novel is about a girl who is a Medusa who just wants to be a girl again (with a centaur, minotaur and mermaid friends)

I also have three short stories eligible for the Nebula and Hugo

A retelling of the Prince Lindwurm fairy tale "Brother. Prince. Snake" over at Tor.com

A zombie story "Always the Same. Till it's Not." over at Apex Magazine

And of course "The Marker" in Ellen Datlow and Terry Windling's fantastic AFTER anthology.

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14. the next big thing

My friend Jenn Fujikawa tagged me in this meme where you talk about a project you’ve been working on. She got it from our friend, the fabulous Sarah Kuhn and Amber Benson. I decided to answer questions about my newest book Odd Duck!

A little something about Jenn. She's a cook, a nerdy girl, a sassy mom, a designer. You should totally check out her recipie blog. If you've ever wanted to make things like wookie cookies or princess leia cupcakes, her blog is the place to go. Right now she's got a mochi book out. YUM.

Here are the medusa cupcakes she made for my book launch.
IMG_6178

The Next Big Thing: Odd Duck!

51wYk4ozhoL._SL500_AA300_

Where did the idea come from for the book?
I think everyone I know is a little bit odd.

What genre does your book fall under?
It’s a hybrid graphic novel picture book for kids of all ages. (6 – 106) It’s written by me and illustrated by the fabulous Sara Varon.

Which actors would you choose to play your characters in a movie 
rendition?
It’d be voice actors! Because I would want an animated movie. I think I’d choose my old pal Reno Wilson to voice Chad and Jennifer Hale, from my fave video game Mass Effect, to voice Theodora. To round it out, let’s say Dave Foley, Sean Cullen and Jane Lynch for Gabe, Max and Velma.

What is the one-sentence synopsis of your book?
Theodora is a normal duck, following her daily habits. Chad is a bit of a strange egg, chaotic and creative. But which of them is really the odd duck? (that’s from the Junior Library Guild page where it is a spring pick!)

When will this book be published?
It’s out on First Second in May 2013. You can pre-order it now. amazon barnes and noble powells indiebound

How long did it take you to write the first draft of your manuscript?
I originally wrote it as an easy reader. So it was all text. Then Sara Varon came on board and we decided to throw out the words and make it pictures. Sara broke down the text and then we worked together on the pacing and fleshing out what needed to be fleshed out. All in all it took about three years.

What other books would you compare this story to within your genre?
Any book where there are two mismatched best buds.
Ernie and Bert. Wallace and Gromit. Bink and Gollie. Elephant and Piggie.
Oscar and Felix.

Who or What inspired you to write this book?
Many years ago I was sitting at a dinner with author/artist Peter Reynolds. We started talking about the odd ducks we knew. I got an image of a duck swimming with a tea cup on her head. That’s when I came up with Theodora. I made everyone laugh at dinner with stories of Theodora. And what better way to ruffle her feathers then to have a new duck move in next door. . I loved the idea of Chad being loud and colorful and messy. I wanted to write a book about being okay with yourself being weird.


What else about your book might pique the reader’s interest?
What I like a lot about this book is that it really is for all ages. It works on three levels. Kids who can’t read can follow the pictures, which are adorable. Kids who can read can get more details about the story, not only in the regular text but in the asides that are in the pictures. And then I think that adults can enjoy it because because we as adults know exactly what it’s like to be a Theodora or a Chad.

Here are the other super talented people that Jenn tagged: Genevieve Tsai, Kristin Weber , Leslie Levings, Bonnie Burton



As for who I'm tagging to go next, I wanted to highlight some fantastic female writers/creators/artists that I adore and also call friends.

Jillian Lauren, Liza Palmer and Sherri L. Smith

Jillian Lauren is a sassy lady who writes non-fiction and fiction. She wrote the memoir, My Life as a Harem and the novel Pretty. She also performs. She just did a one woman show at the Edinburgh Fest! She keeps a great blog about motherhood, which I adore.

Liza Palmer has written five books. She's emmy nominated. She's best selling. She's sassy, funny, plays board games and is always a good time. She wrote More Like Her, A Field Guide to Burying your Parents, Seeing me Naked, Conversations with the Fat Girl and her most recent, Nowhere but You. Chuck her books into your bag and read them everywhere.

Sherri L Smith is an award winning YA author. She wrote one of my fave historical fiction YA books, Flygirl, which won the California Gold Medal. She's worked in comic books, has helped organize special effects, makes cool jewelery and is an all around great gal to go to a comic book convention with. Her new book Orleans is an amazing dystopian YA set in a post hurrican New Orleans. So. Good. She blogs over at the Middle Hundred.




And I’m going to back tag Sarah Kuhn and Amber Benson

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15. My 2012

My 2012 lit count

Novel. The Year of the Beasts illustrated by Nate Powell.

5 short stories.

"Always the Same. Till it's Not." Zombie Story Apex Magazine

"Wallflower" Vertigo Comics Ghosts #1 illustrated by Amy Reeder

"The Marker" in the anthology AFTER ed. by Ellen Datlow & Terri Windling

"Brother. Prince. Snake." A Prince Lindworm retelling on Tor.com

"To Grandmother's House" A Red Riding Hood retelling YA Review Net


Proud editor of the YA/C Section at the LA Review of Books . We had a great 2012. Including first ePub ht.ly/gsiPC . The one piece I wrote over LA Review of Books blog was about making art when going through trauma.

Also I loved being the Correspondence Coordinator for Letters for Kids at The Rumpus. So delighted by all the Letters for Kids for @The_Rumpus ht.ly/gsfGg more letters coming at you in 2013. Hope you will subscribe.

Creative plan for 2013. Write More books. More comics. More everything. And restart The Literary Diaspora @litdiaspora

Happy 2013, all!

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16. Frost and The Mailman

It's holiday time again! And just for you to download is a tiny little holiday story I wrote (originally for Vromans bookstore in 2010) Frost and The Mailman.

A mailman, Daniel Wasserman, and one of Santa's elves, Frost try to save Christmas after it's discovered that Santa's mail has been forwarded to the South Pole.


It's probably best read aloud to your little ones.

You can download it at Amazon Nook and Kobo *

frostmailman

cover by Jen Wang!

*p.s. if you email me proof that you downloaded it before 12/20 and a snail mail I will mail you a holiday card! IN THE MAIL!

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17. Letters for Kids

As I start to get more letters from authors to send out to you, I have started to liken the Letters For Kids as a sort of cool special literary magazine for kids where you can write back. I know we've got all sorts of subscribers that range in age from 6-66, which I think is amazing. One thing that is exciting for me is seeing kids or hearing about them becoming curious about the authors that are writing. I volunteer in an elementary school doing literacy and read aloud with first and second graders and I subscribed those classes to the letters and Ms. Lew and Ms. McCarty have started peppering their class libraries with books from the authors of the letters. I think that is so cool. Especially because so many of the authors that we've got writing are personal faves of mine. (I'm a big Standiford and Yolen fan.) (By the way, if you are a teacher, the letters seem to work great in a classroom environment.) (I've also heard from home schoolers that it is a nice thing.) Today the kids got the newest letter, from Susan Patron.

In September I was at the West Hollywood Book Fair where I met Stacy Bierlien and her daughter, a subscriber to the Rumpus Letters for Kids. Stacy's delightful daughter had already read some of the authors that had sent letters! So she already knew the authors that were writing. I love it that so many kids are so well read.

To date we've had letters from Natalie Standiford, Derek Taylor Kent, Jane Yolen and Kerry Madden, and those letters have been amazing. We've had an original short mini comic by Adam Rex that just blew me away. And if you subscribe, you've probably just gotten Susan Patron's letter about the talking to objects. But as I have been preparing the next round of letters I'm so excited about the pretty extraordinary things upcoming. We've got a really beautiful letter by Rebecca Stead about a wrenching moment dealing with an incident over a school lunch. If you're a comic book fan, Matthew Holm's upcoming letter with is a kind of breaking down of how a comic book is made. And Lisa Yee scribbles all over the page in her letter. I had to turn it around in my hand a bunch of times just so I could read it!

I hope you and yours are enjoying the Letters for Kids! And I hope you are writing the authors back! And if you haven't signed up yet. What are you waiting for? Sign up your kid, a kid you love, your kids classroom, or yourself.

And FYI, if you write me a letter. I will (almost) always write you back.

Love, Cecil

PO Box 29095, LA CA 90029

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18. zombie zombie zombie

Today, I caught it. I think it started as an itch. Like a song stuck in your head. But it was just moaning, moaning outside my window. Then I noticed that others were getting it around me. My mom. My dad. My brother. They were shuffling. It's the shuffle that gives it away. You think, "That person is not sick. That person wants to eat my brains."

It's Thanksgiving here in Canada. And I'm thankful that I've still got my capacities, at least for today. I don't want to be turned into one of them. Please, I'm small and stringy and more of a snack than a meal.

Let it stop. Let the leaves in the park be the only things that change anymore. I can't take it.

In my old life, before yesterday, I wrote a story about a different kind of zombie apocalypse. A hopeful one. As if that could be possible. Here it is. It's called Always the Same. Till it is Not - Apex Magazine October 2012 I hope you'll read it. If you're still out there and that you'll find some hope in it.

Meanwhile. Since the invasion has begun and the horde is coming for you, why not start yours sweetly, with a song. I can't get the Cranberries out of my head.

Posted via LiveJournal.app.

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19. YA Workshop

Hello All!
I'll be teaching a mini YA workshop with Writing Workshops Los Angeles 2 Sundays Oct 21 & Nov 4. Why not Kickstart your YA novel with me! You know you want to! It's a perfect way to get a head start for Nanowrimo if you're thinking of doing that!

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20. Vermin on the Mount LA !!!

Attention Los Angeles!  I'll be reading this Friday night August 3rd at Vermin on the Mount in Los Angeles at 826LA at 1714 Sunset at 7PM. Hope to see you there!



20120730-004108.jpg

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21. San Diego this Sunday! July 29th! Workshop! Vermin!

First off, I'll be teaching a YA writing workshop with SD Writers Ink. You can sign up and get that kick in the butt you need for starting your YA novel!

Sunday, July 29th 10 am - 2 PM

The InkSpot /Art Center Lofts
710 13th Street, Studio 210
San Diego, CA 92101

Then Sunday night in San Diego, I'll be reading at Vermin on the Mount!

hosted by the ever fabulous Jim Ruland - with Stacy Ardis Dyson, Andrew Printer, Carlos Kotkin, Heather Marie, Cecil Castellucci and April Ventura

7PM at 3rdSpace

4610 Park Blvd
San Diego, CA 92116

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22. Letters for Kids

I think it's long been known that I love mail. I love writing letters and receiving them. Therefore, I think you will understand when I announce with such happiness that I am the Children's Correspondence Coordinator for the Rumpus' new Letters For Kids!

Basically, you can subscribe your kid (or yourself) to receive two letters a month from middle grade authors. So far up on dock, we've got letters coming to you from people like Natalie Standiford, Lemony Snicket, Adam Rex, Rebecca Stead and more to be announced. Think of it as a way to introduce your wee ones to the joy of receiving mail. It's $4.50 a month. You can sign up your classroom or library, too! And you can even write back!

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23. Brother. Prince. Snake. a short story

Please enjoy my retelling of the Prince Lindworm fairy tale Brother. Prince. Snake. over at Tor.com

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24. My Comic Con Schedule 2012

Oh my lovely people who are also going to the Nerd Prom that is Comic Con! Won't you come and say hello?




Thursday, July 12


1:00-2:00 Progressive Politics in Comics— Can comics still inspire real-world change? Susie Cagle (AlterNet), Cecil Castellucci (The Year of the Beasts), Shannon Watters (Adventure Time), Stan Mack (Taxes, the Tea Party, and Those Revolting Rebels: A History in Comics of the American Revolution), and a surprise guest or two discuss the history and future of politically progressive comics with moderator Douglas Wolk (Reading Comics). Room 32AB


Friday, July 13


11:30-12:30 Remixed Fairy Tales and Superhero Lore— Between this year's Mirror Mask and Snow White and the Huntsman and forthcoming retellings of Beauty and the Beast and Hansel and Gretel -- not to mention recent reexaminations such as Soon I Shall Be Invincible and The Magicians -- the mythology of fairy tales and superheroes is embedded in our popular culture. But some of the characters aren't quite what they used to be. Discuss the enduring power of these archetypes and how they can also be reinterpreted with panelists Sarah Maas (Throne of Glass), Marissa Meyer (Cinder), Rae Carson (The Girl of Fire and Thorns), Paul Tobin (Prepare to Die), Tom King (A Once Crowded Sky), Michael Scott (The Enchantress), Tracy Hickman (Wayne of Gotham), and Cecil Castellucci (The Year of the Beasts). Moderated by David Mariotte of Mysterious Galaxy. Room 5AB


Sunday, July 15


11am Signing The Year of the Beasts w/ Nate Powell Macmillan Children's booth 1220


12:00-1:00 Kids Draw!— How do comics get made? Find out in this interactive program where kids create their own characters that four graphic novelists will integrate into a story. With authors Zack Giallongo (Broxo), Dave Roman and John Green (Teen Boat!), and Rafael Rosado (Giants Beware!). Moderated by Cecil Castellucci (LA Review of Books). Room 11AB





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25. ALA Schedule!

Hello All Librarians and Author friends!

At ALA:

I'm tabling in Artists Alley at Booth 480 all weekend! Come and say hi! I'll have all of my books for sale, swag from my older books (Geektastic pocket protectors! Beige Bookmarks! Plain Jane/Minx posters!) and I'll be raffling off two original limited edition prints by Nate Powell from The Year of the Beasts.

Behold the beauty of the print.



I'll also be on the Graphic Novel stage Fri. at 5:30 PM

And Sun. I'm on a panel at 4PM (Re)telling Stories Hilton Hotel Room AvilaB with a ton of coolio people.

Also on Sunday from 1-3 pm I'll have a special guest sitting with me at my table #480 Cylin Busby! She'll be there signing and giving away the ARC of her new novel Blink Once.

Please come and say hello! And bring me a coffee or a juice! :D

Can't wait to see you!

Love, Cecil

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