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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: cookies, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 26 - 50 of 52
26. Fusenews: Hotsy Totsy, Ducky, Spiffy, Etc.

When I first became interested in children’s literature I decided that it would be a good idea to teach myself about all the old greats of the picture book world.  A good idea, but self-teaching is inherently limited.  As such, I’ve missed a lot of folks. For example, until now “Saul Bass” meant nothing to me.  Yet after reading the Ward Jenkins post on the Rizzoli reprint of Henri’s Walk to Paris, that is one book I would love to get my sticky digits on.  Just gorgeous stuff.

I’ve noticed a couple of folks around the country working to make literary loving hip in the mind of the average consumer with varying degrees of success.  One project that has interested me, though, is this Litpunch idea the Twin Cities are engaged in.  Basically you get a card, you attend fun free literary events, and if you get your card punched twelve times you get a $15 gift card to a bookstore.  I do wish the libraries were involved in some manner but it’s a great notion.  Imagine if they did the same thing with children’s literature!  I await that happening someday.

  • This is impressive!  Want a fabulous list of in-print books set on every continent of the world?  And would you like such a list to also include activities and recipes and the like?  Then I think it’s time to take a trip to Read Around the World.  It’ll do your old heart good.  Promise.
  • Speaking of recipes, you know that fabulous book Press Here by Herve Tullet?  Well, would you fancy trying a mess of Press Here cookies?  Children’s Books for Grown-Ups has got the goods.  It’s part of a regular “Bookish Bites” series.  I’m seriously looking forward to how Natasha will tackle that upcoming Moomin birthday cake.  There but for the grace of parental challenges go I . . .
  • Once in a while at Hark, A Vagrant, Ms. Kate Beaton will reinterpret various Edward Gorey covers.  Here’s one she may have missed.  It appeared recently on the 50 Watt blog and features a Gorey spider.  Have you ever seen a Gorey spider?  Did you know that you were missing out?  That your life contained a gigantic Gorey-spider shaped void?

Well now you know.

  • Is texting “an ideal sp

    6 Comments on Fusenews: Hotsy Totsy, Ducky, Spiffy, Etc., last added: 9/12/2011
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27. Monstrous Banana Cookies .:. They Draw & Cook

 

Its been so looong, but lost of things have been happening, good things. But now things are back to normal, almost normal. This is my latest illustration for They Draw & Cook, for the cooking 4 kids contest. Hope you enjoy it and you should really try this one, its delicious.

Ha pasado mucho tiempo, pero muchas cosas han estado pasando, cosas buenas. Pero ahora las cosas están un poquito mas normales. Esta es mi última ilustración para They Draw & Cook para el concurso de cocinando para niños. Ojalá les guste y deberían intentar esta, es deliciosa.

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28. STORYTIME CORNER: COOKIES

Chocolate chip…white chocolate macadamia nut…peanut butter…oatmeal raisin…sugar…  Yep, we’re getting hungry too, given that laundry list of fabulous cookies!  What’s your favorite kind of cookie?

I love making a storytime theme out of things that I personally enjoy – it keeps things fresh after your 100th storytime, not to mention I think that your enthusiasm really shines through for a topic in which you’re personally invested.  So, if you’re like me, you can try a cookie-themed storytime:

SONG/RHYME:
Who Stole the Cookie from the Cookie Jar?

STORIES:

COOKIES: BITE-SIZE LIFE LESSONS by Amy Krouse Rosenthal, illustrated by Jane Dyer

COOKIEBOT! by Katie Van Camp, illustrated by Lincoln Agnew (watch the adorable book trailer)


IF YOU GIVE A MOUSE A COOKIE by Laura Numeroff, illustrated by Felicia Bond

CRAFT:

Food version – Use already-baked cookies and let kids decorate with sprinkles, frosting, chocolate chips, dried cranberries, raisins, and anything else delicious you can think of.

Non-food Version – Cut out circles of paper and let kids decorate their “cookies” with confetti, strips of paper, glitter (if your library allows it), stickers.

Photo source

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29. Back-to-School picture book roundup

Many school-related picture books have arrived on my desk in the last week or two, but these are the only two I've really liked. 

Milgrim, David. 2011. Eddie Gets Ready for School. New York: Cartwheel (Scholastic).

David Milgrim has a real flair for simplicity.  I've never reviewed them, but his Ready-to-Read books featuring Pip and Otto are my favorites for very early readers.  Eddie Gets Ready for School is not an easy reader, but it's masterful in its simplicity.  It's nothing more than a checked-off list, one or two items per page, of all the things Eddie "needs" to do before school,
Put cat in backpack
Hug Mom
Take cat out of backpack
Find something else for show & tell
Some items (Eddie choosing in turn, the dog, goldfish, bird, and flat screen TV for show & tell), don't make the written list and are expressed only in the crisply drawn cartoon images on white space.  Mom and the dog are featured throughout the story.  Mom is happy and supportive, although root beer and cartoons for breakfast does try her patience a bit. So what does Eddie finally choose for a snack and show & tell?  You'll never guess!  This is a very funny back-to-school gem!



Murray, Laura. 2011. The Gingerbread Man Loose in the School. Ill. by Mike Lowery. New York: Putnam.

This gingerbread man is not running away as fast he can; he's running to catch up!  The children have cooked him up at school but, oh no! He's left behind when it's time for recess, but he's a smart cookie.  He'll find them,
I'll run and I'll run,
as fast as I can.
I can catch them! I'm their
Gingerbread Man!

Along the way, he loses a toe,
I'll limp and I'll limp,
as fast as I can. ...
and almost ends up as someone's snack,
I plopped on a sandwich
and chips with a crunch
OH NO! I cried out.
I'm in somebody's lunch!
 The story is told entirely in rhyme and presented comic style with panels and word bubbles. Cute and simple.  Kids will eat this one up.

Librarians will want to remove the poster before circulating this one.  Teachers will want to hang it in the classroom.

Author Laura Murray's website has some great Gingerbread Man extras - and a RT script coming soon!

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30. it's a tea (with milk) and cookies kind of day...DONE!:)


i'm happy to say this piece is all done and ready to be shipped! it was a joy working on this and i truly think it is one of the cutest concepts i've had yet;) it is FOR SALE as a REPRODUCTION/PRINT in my etsy shop and can be found here http://www.etsy.com/listing/70175432/it-s-a-tea-with-milk-and-cookies-kind-of
i "heart" this piece!:)

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31. making progress...

i LOVE this piece and am enjoying EVERY second of painting it!:) ok...so as well all know, i am the world's worst photographer;) took this pic with my phone really quick so the colors are a bit "off". but, i'm getting there...:) can't wait to finish it!!!

1 Comments on making progress..., last added: 3/9/2011
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32. Fusenews: The YA Mafia is dead. Long live the YA Mafia.

Call him the Tupac Shakur of children’s books.  Or maybe that title should go to Margaret Wise Brown.  In any case, it seems that every ten years or so we get a new Shel Silverstein book or collection of poems entirely out of the blue (I’m counting Falling Up, and Runny Babbit when I say that).  At some point this will inevitably lead to an Elvis situation, wherein folks will start claiming that Silverstein never actually died and is currently holed up somewhere in Amherst, MA, biding his time, releasing his books on his own schedule.  This is, of course, wishful thinking on my part since Silverstein is the author who was alive during my lifetime that I would have most liked to have met.  Watch out, Steven Kellogg.  You’re #2.  In any case, here’s the scoop on the newest Silverstein.  The man’s still got it  / had it.

  • Sometimes you want to unlearn something you have learned.  Beware then, my readers.  Once you read this you can never go through life not knowing about it.
  • Now that is how it is done!  Over the Atlantic the British blog Playing by the book has posted a quite remarkable little piece on an exhibit currently showing at the Imperial War Museum in Britain (where I once bought this poster).  In the blog post How to explore war with children?, we are told that, “Once Upon a Wartime, an exhibition which opened earlier this month at London’s Imperial War Museum, takes five children’s novels about war and conflict and uses them as a starting point to explore what war can mean for children.”  The five books in question include War Horse by Michael Morpurgo, Carrie’s War by Nina Bawden, The Silver Sword by Ian Serraillier, The Machine Gunners by Robert Westall and Little Soldier by Bernard Ashley.  Of these I am ashamed to say I have only read Carrie’s War (which is brilliant).  The post then goes on to talk about the exhibits and shows copious photographs.  It’s enough to make you pine, once again, for England.  Thanks to Sara Lewis Holmes for the link.
  • I have this fantasy that someday I’ll conduct a video conversation with Travis Jonker where we converse entirely by holding up the titles of children’s books (after all, we know he’s ace with a video cam).  I think of such things when he makes similar projects look easy.  Take, for example, his latest book spine cento.  It’s all in preparation to get you guys excited about making your own book spine poems for Poetry Month.  I know I’m tempted.  Spine it up!
  • The Ancient Editor Rejects a Manuscript and in the process offers some very fine props to Mr. Dan Gutman.  Thanks to @medinger for th

    11 Comments on Fusenews: The YA Mafia is dead. Long live the YA Mafia., last added: 3/6/2011
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33. it's a tea (with milk) and cookies kind of day;)


ok...this could be one of my new favorites:) this is a sketch for a comissioned piece for the cousin of the little girl's room i just finished up last week-isabelle.
http://theenchantedeasel.blogspot.com/2011/02/isabelles-roomall-done.html
thank so much to liz for asking me to now adorn her niece's room with my work. i am beyond excited to do another piece for this wonderful family!:)
*a few background notes about this piece-mailee loves loves loves cows! her room is pink and brown AND they used to live in washington d.c.*
so i couldn't resist the cherry blossom trees (which are my favorite) and a sweet little pink and brown stuffed cow. besides, what little girl doesn't absolutely love to have tea parties with her stuffed animals/dolls?! i am super excited to start painting this in the next couple of days...:)

0 Comments on it's a tea (with milk) and cookies kind of day;) as of 3/2/2011 5:58:00 PM
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34. Cookies and Bunny


Nothing like freshly bake cookies and then the voice in your head says “Eat me, eat me!”.

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35. Five Macarons or Macaroons

37-5-Macarons
Used watercolour pencils for these, in attempt to play with the unfamiliar looser feel of brush and paint, while still managing to control finer details with the far more familiar pencils. I did several base washes for the background texture and used pencil on the final layers for the bitsy bits. Discovered that the quality of the watercolour paper makes a HUGE and wonderful difference too. Learning as I go along.

As for the macarons, I found them in a new stall at our Friday morning market. Such lovely vibrant colours. Had to buy them! Especially as they were obviously home-made and thus wobbly, wonky, slightly squished with bits falling off ... thus quite perfect as far as I was concerned.

My problem once I've finished any drawing is the design part of the whole process. As I have no formal training whatsoever, I find it truly difficult to figure out how to present my drawings so that they look appealing on the products posted for sale at the online stores. It's tough and sometimes takes far too long as I fiddle around with ideas. I normally end up uploading two designs: one of the drawing exactly as it is against a white background, boring but safe; and two, with whatever background I end up with -- here's what I did with these macarons:

37-5-Macarons-stripes

Not quite sure how well that works as I've been looking at it far too long and thus have lost all sense of judgement. Just plain lost all sense, really. Wish I could take some courses in basic design. Am exhausted now as I've been working pretty much non-stop for weeks. My nose has drawn blood from the grind-stone. I've a drawing in progress (faithful pencils again) that I shall complete slowly, but I may go back to doodling for a bit to give my fuzzy brain cell a chance to re-energise. Cheers.

5 Macarons and 5 Macarons stripes gifts and cards at Floating Lemons at Zazzle.

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36. Illustration Friday: "Sneaky"

He thought he was so sneaky, but nothing gets by Mom!
Sorry if you recognize this from a couple years ago, but it just seem to fits the theme this week perfectly!  If you missed it before, I hope you enjoy it now.

I work in pencil so much, I'm longing to do some color work.  Just don't have the time to set up for painting at the moment.  Maybe during the Christmas break...

3 Comments on Illustration Friday: "Sneaky", last added: 11/21/2010
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37. they draw and cook

Whew! I finally submitted a recipe to They Draw and Cook, a wonderful site, you should definitely visit.

They are getting published and if anyone who wants a shot at getting into the book needed to submit by TODAY! I only found out about the deadline on Friday, so I was pretty frantic!

So yay!

If you want you can click to get a better look.


7 Comments on they draw and cook, last added: 10/12/2010
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38. .: New Patterns on my site :.

I added a page (I Love Patterns) to my site with these new patterns, you can click on each thumbnail to see them bigger. The patterns are based on some portfolio pieces, I had a great time designing them, hope you like them.

Añadí una pagina (I Love Patterns) a mi sitio con estos nuevos repites, pueden hacer click en cada imagen para verla mas grande. Los repites están basados en piezas de mi portafolio, disfruté mucho diseñandolos, espero que les gusten.


Filed under: ilustracion illustration, patterns repites

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39. italy through cookies

I read Eat, Pray, Love several years ago while I was vacationing in Taiwan. It was a wonderful memoir that I truly enjoyed, and like many other fans, my favorite section was the one about Italy. Who doesn’t love the idea of reveling in a nation that is known for its pursuit of pleasures?

Unfortunately, I’ve never been to Italy. And although I’m looking forward to savoring Naples pizza, marveling over the mesmerizing architecture and indulging in decadent gelato someday (hopefully soon), I’ll take homemade biscotti any time, any day.

Biscotti

  • 1/4 cup vegetable oil, 1/4 cup applesauce*
  • 1 cup white sugar*
  • 3 1/4 cups all-purpose flour
  • 3 eggs
  • 1 tablespoon baking powder
  • 1/2 Tbs. almond extract, 1/2 Tbs. vanilla extract
  1. Preheat the oven to 375 degrees F (190 degrees C). Grease cookie sheets or line with parchment paper.
  2. In a medium bowl, beat together the oil, eggs, sugar and anise flavoring until well blended. Combine the flour and baking powder, stir into the egg mixture to form a heavy dough. Divide dough into two pieces. Form each piece into a roll as long as your cookie sheet. Place roll onto the prepared cookie sheet, and press down to 1/2 inch thickness.
  3. Bake for 25 to 30 minutes in the preheated oven, until golden brown. Remove from the baking sheet to cool on a wire rack. When The cookies are cool enough to handle, slice each one crosswise into 1/2 inch slices. Place the slices cut side up back onto the baking sheet. Bake for an additional 6 to 10 minutes on each side. Slices should be lightly toasted.

Note: You may be tempted to add more flour once you start rolling the dough–don’t. You may flour your kitchen surface or hands to avoid sticky flour syndrome, but try not to add anymore flour into the actual dough.

* I substituted half of the oil with applesauce. It’s undetectable and does not affect texture.
** I used a no-calorie sweetener substitute. It turns out well.

The cookies are slightly sweet, with a subtle almond fragrance that goes well with coffees and teas. You may also drizzle with chocolate and garnish with crushed nuts (see photo above), if you prefer.


6 Comments on italy through cookies, last added: 8/28/2010
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40.

SANTA SLIMS DOWN - A CHRISTMAS FANTASY
By Eleanor Tylbor


CAST OF CHARACTERS:

SANTA CLAUS – the jolly, old elf himself who ate one too many cookies
MRS. CLAUS – Santa's faithful wife, who is worried about Santa’s cholestrol
RUDOLPH AND THE REINDEER GANG

SCENE: SANTA'S WORKSHOP, TWO WEEKS BEFORE "THE" TRIP. SANTA IS CHECKING OVER HIS TOYS. THERE IS A KNOCK AT THE DOOR RUDOLPH, ACCOMPANIED BY DONNER AND BLITZEN BARGE IN

AT RISE: A MUCH MORE PLUMP THAN USUAL SANTA IS SITTING AT A TABLE FILLED WITH TOYS


SANTA
This is an expected surprise, boys. To what do I owe this visit?

RUDOLPH
(moving his antlers from side-to-side defiantly)
We're here to give you a message, Santa

RUDOLPH
It’s about food

SANTA
(eating one after the other)
You want one of these cookies? Why didn’t you say so? Plenty enough to go ‘round

RUDOLPH
Santa, there's something we really gotta tell you…

DONNER
- it's real important-like…

BLITZEN
…major important

RUDOLPH
(Turns around and addresses DONNER and BLITZEN)

Is there an echo, here? Did you not make me, Rudolph, the spokes-deer? Maybe one of youse wants’ta take over?


DONNER
And…you do a great job, Rudy. Super

BLITZEN
You our main reindeer, man!

RUDOLPH
I mean, if one of youse guys can say it better…

DONNER
No-no… You’re the best

RUDOLPH
So lemme do the job! Cheez – everyone wants'ta be a star… Now where was I? See Santa, we're worried!

DONNER AND BLITZEN
(together)
Real worried!

RUDOLPH
(whirling around)
Hello? D'ya mind?

SANTA nibbles on a cookie while watching a train run
around a track
SANTA
Oh my-oh-my! I love watching the train speed around the track. Um… Worried? About what, boys? Now just look at this train go. The elves finished it this morning

RUDOLPH
How can I say this nicely -

DONNER AND BLITZEN
Just tell him! You gotta!

RUDOLPH
(whirling around)
One more word from either of youse…

DONNER/BLITZEN
Sor-ree! We're just trying to help…


RUDOLPH
Well don't! You elected me head of the North Pole Reindeer Union so lemme do the job!

SANTA
What’s this all about, boys? Could somebody tell me?

RUDOLPH
I'm tryin' Santa, I'm really tryin’ if only these two big mouths would let me

BLITZEN
We promise we won't say another word, See? We’re zipping our mouths closed

DONNER
Maybe one word - two at the most. Sorry…

RUDOLPH
It's about your - um - well… Your shape

SANTA
(laughing)
My shape? I’m Santa! I’m supposed to look this way

RUDOLPH
It's um - very round

SANTA
(laughing)
This is not news, Rudolph. Now if you'll excuse me…I’m very busy here…

RUDOLPH
Much more than usual, Santa. Much… much… more

SANTA
I’ve always looked like this. You know that!

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41. Illustration Friday's Intricate

crashing into leaves is a very intricate process...
first, you'll need an awesome treehouse.
let me know when you have that, then we'll talk.

15 Comments on Illustration Friday's Intricate, last added: 4/6/2009
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42. Cookies and smoke

"Cat Poo Cookies"

I received a plate of these from someone who shall remain anonymous. A whole plate full! On a doily with tinsel even.
Now I ask you ~ does this look like cat poo, or does this look like cat poo? You be the judge.
(I happen to know they're actually chocolate and butterscotch and corn flakes, but if you didn't know...)

Here are some tips for the holidays, free to you my faithful readers:

Before you make that roaring holiday fire, be sure the damper is open in the chimney.
I will say that again. BE SURE THE DAMPER IS OPEN.

Because if it isn't, you will get a house full of smoke, and your smoke alarm will go off REALLY REALLY LOUD and scare the bejesus out of everyone, and you will be running back and forth trying to decide whether to throw water on the fire (which makes more smoke, who knew?), or get the ladder so you can reach the smoke alarm and yank the bloody batteries out to make it shut up, or open the door to let the smoke out, while cats are running for cover with their paws over their ears, and you wonder if the neighbors have called the fire department because surely they can hear the alarm and oh god you hope they don't come because you're in your nightgown and its not pretty.

Also, you will have soot marks on the bricks to clean up afterwards (except they won't be kinda blurry like this.)




Which brings me to my next tip ~
Don't lose the directions to your digital camera. If you do, after fiddling blindly with the controls and not having a clue what you're doing, you will end up with photos like this:



I swear to you, this is not photoshopped. I was trying to take a picture of the sooty bricks, and it gave me a message (which I've never seen before) that said "slow shutter" and it wouldn't take the picture, wouldn't take the picture, wouldn't take the picture, and then after about 20 seconds, with me moving the camera around, it finally "clicked" and this is what I got.
Its kinda cool, but don't ask me how I did it.


My other tip to you bakers is to not double a recipe that's already generous, because you will end up with way too many of whatever it is and unless you own a bakery or know a lot of people to give them away to, you will be saddled with enough peanut butter cookies to last until next Christmas.



This is what I have to show for my baking efforts. The aforesaid peanut butter cookies, real shortbread (all I have left are the 'edges' because I gave away all the 'inside' pieces), and killer chocolate cookies. The chocolate ones have pepper in them. I know! No, they don't taste like pepper. But they pack a whollop and are really like nothing I've ever tasted. They'd go well with a hearty Cabernet or just a plain glass of milk or a cup of strong coffee. Can you tell what my diet will be for the next few weeks? Gee, I hope Santa brings a Thighmaster.

And with that, I will leave you all for a few days of no blogging while I go eat cookies and "do" Christmas and enjoy peace and goodwill and hopefully smoke-free fires.

Merry Christmas and Happy Hannukah and good cheer for whatever else you do or don't choose to celebrate, everyone!

6 Comments on Cookies and smoke, last added: 12/25/2008
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43. Craving


An old painting from years ago for Bath & Body Works.
Kristi Valiant
http://kristivaliant.blogspot.com
www.kristivaliant.com

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44. Cassandra Clare, Author Extrordanaire, Answers Our 13 Evil Questions

We are happy to present to you an interview with Cassandra Clare, author of City of Bones and the upcoming City of Ashes (you can read our review here) Enjoy! (That was obnoxious, wasn't it? Enjoy? Since when do any of us say things like enjoy?)

Interviewingly yours,

PS City of Ashes comes out on March 25! Read it, it's good! Also, Cassandra Clare is going on tour soon-- look here for dates. And now, for our feature presentation...

1. What made you want to write urban fantasy/YA?

It is quite simply the best genre there is. Okay, maybe that's entirely subjective, but urban fantasy is my favorite genre. I like the incursion of magic and the supernatural into the world we know. Urban fantasy incorporates a lot of my favorite fictional tropes: the Secret World, the Secret Society, the Alternate History, even the Creepy Town or Creepy Neighborhood.

2. Zombies or unicorns?

Team Zombie.

3. You were a popular fan fiction author before you became a popular non-fan-fiction author. What's the biggest difference, for you, between writing fan fiction and writing original fiction?

Well, fanfiction is in large part a community experience — it's an act of fanship, of appreciation for a particular canon or media property. It's a dialogue, in a way, and the readers and writers of it are by and large the same people (I'm generalizing here.) Writing original fiction is not a community experience, not in the same way. It's not about sharing a world, but creating your own world. It requires you to exercise a different writing skillset than fanfiction does — worldbuilding, character creation, etc.

4. Who would win in a fight: Optimus Prime, or Sailor Moon?

Optimus Prime would crush Sailor Moon like a bug. Also I used to have a roommate who was in love with Optimus Prime. She used to claim that he was so good-looking. I was really disappointed when I found out he looked like a truck. I mean, EXACTLY like a truck.

5. Do you have any advice for aspiring authors?

A lot of people think "learning to write" is about acquiring this one monolithic skill, but it's actually about the acquisition (and hopefully mastery) of an interlocking set of skills. So you don't have to burst out of the gate perfect at everything. Maybe you're great at dialogue, but your pacing needs work, so work on that separately.

6. What was your favorite book as a teenager?

I would like to say it was something really awesome like Jane Eyre, and I did absolutely love Jane Eyre, but when I was thirteen it was totally Flowers in the Attic. Oh, what a bad book that was.

7. What was your favorite YA novel of 2007?

I'm going to answer the question "What was your favorite YA novel of 2007 that was not written by someone you know?" instead. In which case it was probably Skin Hunger by Kathleen Duey. A better title for it might have been 'You Are So Owned, Hogwarts' except I think that would infringe copyright. It's all about the most brutal magic school in history, where the professors basically murder the students.

8. What book-to-be-released-in-2008 are you most looking forward to?

The sequel to Octavian Nothing by MT Anderson is due out this year. Also Paper Towns by John Green.

9. Create your own question! And answer it, of course.

"Do you have a demon hand?"
"Yes."

10. If you were to take over the world, how would you do so?

I'm a big fan of slipping hallucinogenic drugs into the world's water supply and then taking advantage of the resulting confusion. And then I want to rule from one of those island strongholds that's shaped like a head, except I don't want it to be my head. I want it to be someone else's head.

11. Would you prefer to travel via magic carpet or flying motorcycle? Explicate.

Carpet, so I could nap while I fly. I'm all about those fully reclining airplane seats on overnight flights.

12. If you could spend a day with anybody (living/dead/fictional, etc.) who would it be and why?

My grandfather. He died right before I sold The Mortal Instruments and I'd like to be able to tell him how great everything's been going with it. That's why I dedicated the first book to him.

13. What is your favorite kind of cookie?

Snickerdoodles all the way.

2 Comments on Cassandra Clare, Author Extrordanaire, Answers Our 13 Evil Questions, last added: 3/13/2008
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45. I Feel I've Let You All Down. Yes, Even You.

Friends of the internet blog pages,

I apologize for my absence. It was like I showed up with promises of treats and other delights and left you hanging when I didn't show up with the box of goodies on Thursday thru today. It makes me feel like I'm an awful person and not a man of my word.

Well, it's like this...

Okay, so that's not going to really convey what's happening over here in the icy tundra I like to call home. Not even close. So, I'll just say this/these:

  • I'm crazy busy. Work is kicking me in the stomach and hitting me over the head with a shovel for good measure.

  • I'm spending nearly every moment of free time (except now) getting GOODHALO tip-top. Quality takes time, yo.

  • I did get a whole box o' books last week. Aw, yeah.

  • I'm trying to cook up a REALLY cool way of giving away a copy of my lil' kids book PATRICK'S SUPER SOCKS. I want it to be fantastic, I want it to be like the coolest contest ever. I don't want it to be a 'Caller 8' type of thing.

So, a bit of patience, okay? I'm only one man. A man with feelings. A man who gets hurt. And when you yell at me, I feel it...and I hurt.

Anyway. More later. Just don't do anything foolish like keep checking while there are cookies in the oven. For one thing, I wouldn't want you to burn those cookies.

Also, cookies are delicious.

I guess what I'm really trying to say is this: I like cookies.

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46. Sweethearts by Sara Zarr

Sweethearts by Sara Zarr is the story of a girl, Jennifer "Jenna" Harris, who once had a friend named Cameron Quick. They were both outcasts in elementary school-- Jennifer the fat girl, Cameron the weird boy. Then, suddenly Cameron moves away-- and Jennifer hears that he has died. Years later, Jennifer has become Jenna, a thin, popular, well-adjusted teen. She has never forgotten Cameron Quick, though, and imagine her suprise when he shows up out of the blue one day. Together, they must confront their past and their present-- and find some way to settle the "unfinished business" (as Jenna's mother calls it) between them.

As delectable as the cover looks, Sweethearts didn't quite satisfy me. There wasn't enough substance-- not much really happened. Scenes from Jenna's present life were interspersed with scenes from her past, including a particularly trumatic one that the book centers around. But, I mean... I feel callous saying this, but it just didn't seem trumatic enough. When you finally find out what happened to Jenna, it's sort of... anticlimactic. I told a librarian friend of mine this, and she said, "Yes, but that's how life is." She has a point-- life isn't always climactic. But life isn't always interesting, either.

Sweethearts is a very psycological book (there really isn't much in the way of plot). I like some books like this (Speak, for instance), but it can drag on after a while. Sweehearts didn't drag too much, but it didn't grab me and pull me in, either. It's very well-written, and makes me want to read Zarr's first book, Story of a Girl (which was nominated for the National Book Award). But Sweethearts just... wasn't my cup of tea. Or plate of cookies. Or something.

I give Sweethearts three out of five daggers.




Eating heart-shaped cookies, vaguely disappointed, and yours,

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47. Friday Procrastination: Link Love

I am so excited about Mickey Edwards and Judith Luna’s articles today that I almost don’t want to post my links of the week. I want you to stay on the blog and read all the great content we had this week. Seriously, how often do I get to post Philip Pullman, John L. Esposito and Patricia Aufderheide in one week! Okay, enough gloating. Links are below but please think twice before clicking away.

Can you help the New Yorker redesign Eustace Tilley?

Will you watch the Golden Globes press conference?

Gloria Steinem’s now famous Hillary crying op-ed. Slate’s snarky response. (more…)

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48. 13 Evil Questions for the fabulous Libba Bray

Hello, dearest readers. What follows is an interview with Libba Bray, author of the Gemma Doyle Trilogy. (The third book, The Sweet Far Thing, recently came out. You can see our review of it if you scroll down.) We asked her 13 questions, because 13 is a most excellent number. So, read on, the Dark Lord commands thee! (Warning: VERY LONG POST.)


Interviewingly yours,




1. What made you want to become a writer? Why did you choose to write YA/ historical fiction/ fantasy?

Hmmm, what made me want to be a writer? Could it have been the fabulous Special Writer Platform Shoes? The matching "Writer at Work" cape? The chance to RULE THE WORLD WITH METAPHOR AND SIMILE? Maybe not. After all, I've seen "The Incredibles." I know the cape thing is a bad idea.
I always enjoyed writing, but never took it too seriously, and then two things happened that made me realize writing was it for me. The first was my car accident at eighteen in which I lost my left eye and basically demolished my face and had to have it rebuilt. The only outlet I had for dealing with that was a little yellow journal. I wrote down everything I thought/felt/observed in that thing, and it was really empowering. It saved my life, actually. The other thing that made me realize I wanted to be a writer was writing a monologue for an original play that my friend Ed was putting together. The play, "One to the Sixth," was a collection of monologues written by various people, and I wrote a piece about a girl struggling with the not being beautiful in a world that values beauty. I turned it in to Ed, and he said, "Hey, this isn't bad. Why don't you write five or six more of these and we'll make a show out of it." I said okay, because sometimes I'm very agreeable, and that became my first play, "High Hopes and Heavy Sweatshirts." And that was it. I was hooked.
I don't know if I chose to write YA/historical fiction/fantasy or if it chose me. :-) I'm a sucker for anything Victorian and creepy. I just wanted to write the kind of stuff I enjoy reading and I hoped it wouldn't suck completely. Basically, I wanted to write a Victorian "Buffy the Vampire Slayer." I love writing YA. I really do. And I love getting the chance to talk with teens. People underestimate teens and it's really annoying that they do that. I think I've never really stopped being in touch with my fifteen-year-old self. We never really stop coming of age, do we?


2. How do you go about doing research for your books?

In a meandering way. I always think about what Tom Stoppard once said to someone. He said, "I only research what I need to know." That's sort of my policy, too, although along the way, I end up getting sucked into exploring other interesting tidbits. I start by googling subjects: women in Victorian-era England, say. Then I see what pops up. Sometimes that will lead me to books or periodicals that can be ordered. (I have an entire bookshelf dedicated to research books.) The Internet also led me to people who could help: Dr. Sally Mitchell of Temple University, Lee Jackson, a Victorian scholar and novelist in England, and Colin Gale, the archivist for Royal Bethlem Hospitalin London. I relied on the largesse and mad librarian skills of several librarian pals, notably Jen Hubert and Phil Swann. And I took a trip to England early on and went to the British Library to do some research. Below is my bibliography. Some of these sources I used quite a lot; others I used only a bit (or ended up using not at all.)

Daily Life in Victorian England, by Sally Mitchell (Dr. Mitchell is a professor at Temple University; she was very gracious in answering some of my questions.)

The New Girl: Girls' Culture in England 1880-1915, by Sally Mitchell

The Writer's Guide to Everyday Life in Regency and Victorian England from 1811-1901, by Kristine Hughes

What Jane Austen Ate and Charles Dickens Knew: From Fox Hunting to Whist-The Facts of Daily Life in Nineteenth-Century England, byDaniel Pool

The Victorians, by A.N. Wilson

The Queen's London : A Pictorial and Descriptive Record of the Streets, Buildings, Parks and Scenery of the Great Metropolis, 1896 (I actually got to handle this book at The British Library in London. I had to wear gloves so as not to ruin it.)

Essential Handbook of Victorian Etiquette, by Thomas E. Hill

Victorian London, by Lee Jackson (When it comes to Victorian England, Lee is the man. He and I struck up a correspondence, and he is as gracious as he is smart. He's also a good novelist.)

Moving Millions: A Pictorial History of London Transport, by Theo Barker (Bought this at the Transport Museum in London after taking a tour.)

Manners for Men, by Mrs. Humphrey

Manners for Women, by Mrs. Humphrey

Dickens Dictionary of London 1888, by Charles Dickens (Always nice when Mr. Dickens can be your tour guide...)

A World of Girls, L.T. Meade (A novel about schoolgirls written during the period. Dr. Mitchell turned me on to L.T. Meade.)

History of the Theatre, by Oscar G. Brockett (a former professor of mine at the University of Texas at Austin. Hook 'em Horns!)

The Great Mother, by Erich Neumann and Ralph Manheim

Man and His Symbols, by Carl Jung (I took this to the beach one day and my husband quipped, "A little light beach reading, eh?")

The Power of Myth, by Joseph Campbell

Paradise Lost, by John Milton ("Oh noes…they be stealin' my heaven bucket!" Sorry. Just a little I Can Has Cheezburger humor for you there...)

The Lady of Shalott, by Alfred Lord Tennyson

The Collected Poems of William Butler Yeats and Richard J. Finneran

The Bible

The Odyssey, by Homer

Myths of the Norsemen From the Eddas and Sagas, by H.A. Guerber (If you're looking for bloodthirsty, look to the ancient Norse. They can throwdown in the brutality department.)

Lonely Planet: Iceland

Discovery Channel's Insight Guides Iceland (When forming my ideas about the Winterlands, I looked to Iceland. It's so beautiful yet forbidding. And cold. And it comes with a Bjork soundtrack.)

How Young Ladies Became Girls: The Victorian Origins of American Girlhood, by Jane H. Hunter

Victorian London Street Life in Historic Photographs, by John Thomson

Presumed Curable: An Illustrated Casebook of Victorian Psychiatric Patients in Bethlem Hospital, by Colin Gale & Robert Howard (Colin Gale is the archivist at Royal Bethlem Hospital, a.k.a. Bedlam, and this book is both a fascinating and poignant look at mental illness in Victorian society. He, too, was enormously helpful to me during the writing of Rebel Angels.)
The Victorian Lady, by B. Rees

The Golden Bough, by Sir James Frazer

The Etiquette of Dress (some little book I picked up in England)

Customs & Etiquette of India, Venika KingslandFodor's Exploring India

Lonely Planet India (I have always longed to go to India; this only made my longing moreintense.)

"Advice and ambition in a girls' public day school: the case of Suton High School, 1884-1924," by Stephanie Spencer, King Alfred's College of Higher Education, Winchester, United Kingdom, Women's History Review, Volume 9, Number 1, 2000 (Periodicals are our friends, and you can order articles online to bedelivered to your own home — huzzah!)

Full Color Victorian Fashions, 1870-1893, edited by JoAnne Olian (Oooh, pretty, pretty... like paper dolls for grown-ups.)

The Temple and the Lodge, by Michael Baigent and Richard Leigh

Bulfinch's Mythology The Age of Fable, by Thomas Bulfinch

A Nietzsche Reader, by Friedrich Nietzsche

Siddartha, by Herman Hesse

City of Dreadful Delight: Narratives of Sexual Danger in Late-Victorian London, by Judith R. Walkowitz (Not, it turns out, sorelevant to my books but what a great title, eh?)

London, a Societal History, by Roy Porter

The Templars and the Assassins: The Militia of Heaven, by James Wasserman (I've also had a lifelong fascination with the Knights Templar {blame IVANHOE}, and used aspects of that to shape what I thought the Rakshana would be like. Also, don't mess with the Hassassins, aka, the Assassins. Just sayin'.)
Early Irish Myths and Sagas, Translated with an Introduction by Jeffrey Gantz


3. We noticed that you like Buffy. We love Buffy! In that vein, we were wondering what your favourite episode/season/character is and why. Also, Aislinn wants to know whether you like Spike or Angel better.

Wow, it's been ages since I watched "Buffy." I hope my memory serves. My favorite episodes were probably "Halloween," "Hush" (creepy!), "The Body," which broke my heart, and, of course, "Once More with Feeling."It's difficult to name a favorite character because I think part of what makes the show work so well is the interaction of all the characters, the ensemble nature. They work so beautifully as a whole. But Buffy herself was a fantastic character--flawed and vulnerable and sarcastic and searching. Sometimes you wanted to say, "You are so stupid! Stop that!" and other times you wanted to hug her and say,"You are so bad ass." I also loved Xander. He cracked me up. As for the Spike/Angel question, it's not even a contest with me: I am Team Spike all the way. Oh my. *fans self*


4. Zombies or Unicorns?

Zombies, all the way. Unicorns would only exist so that zombies could feast upon their flesh and fashion their horns into mod zombie breast plates.


5. What was your favorite YA novel of 2007?

Okay, bear in mind that I was in a cone of silence while speed-writing TSFT and that meant not much reading for me, which sucked big time. But I did get to break free for quick gulps of reading. My top four were Holly Black's IRONSIDE, Cassandra Clare's CITY OF BONES, Cecil Castellucci's BEIGE, and M. Sindy Fellin's TOUCHING SNOW. I have so much catching up to do. So, so many books to read.


6. Do you like Pina Coladas and getting caught in the rain?

Not nearly as much as a bar called O'Malley's where we'll plan our escape.


7. What was your favorite book when you were a teenager?

Oooh, so tough. I can't name just one. I loved Wuthering Heights, The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, and The Bell Jar. But there was something about Catcher in the Rye and Salinger in general that just did it for me at the time. I don't know why I identified so strongly with Holden then. I read the book again when I was an adult and went, "Man, this kid is annoying the crap out of me!" But at sixteen, it rocked my world.


8. What do you like most about being an author (other than writing/publishing books)?

Hands down: getting to meet and talk with teens. I love that readers come to my LJ and tell me what they like and don't like, their thoughts and feelings about life, their music/book/movie suggestions. I love that they are so thoroughly willing to be themselves and be honest and that, in turn, has made me brave enough to be more myself, too. Thanks for that.


9. If you could be asked any question, what would it be, and how would you answer? (The Create-Your-Own-Question Question! Hooray!)

That is one of the best questions I have ever been asked. I bow to your awesome powers of interview coolness.
Well, my pal Brenda has a game called, "Which actor & actress would play you in the movie version of your life?" She then likes to answer before you do. (It's her world, we just live in it.) She said the two people who would play me would be Teri Garr and Bill Murray. Actually, I thought that was pretty solid.


10. What advice would you give to aspiring writers?

Don't kill off the hot guy. :-)
I would say read everything so you know what's possible, but find your own voice, because no one will write quite like you do, and what is personal in our work is also what is most universal. All those thoughts/weaknesses/insecurities you'd rather not admit to are what make characters who are real and memorable. Remember, super heroes aren't half so interesting for what they *can* do--fly, control the weather, shoot webs, leap small buildings in a single bound, wear bitchin' tights--as for what leaves them most vulnerable: love, pride, self-doubt, anger--all that juicy human stuff. Don't be afraid to go there. In fact, it's your job to go there. My friend Jennifer Jacobson always asks herself, "Is it true yet? Is it true yet? Is it true yet?" I think that's a good question to keep asking yourself. Keep digging until you hit that emotional truth. You'll know when you've found it. Trust me.


11. Who's your favorite Disney princess? Your favorite Sailor Scout?

You're trying to hurt me, aren't you? Admit it. My favorite Disney princess is...wait can I be Maleficent? She's got a kick-ass wardrobe and she can be a dragon! No? I really have to pick a princess? Oh. Okay. I pick Belle. She's got some spunk, and I can't help it--I'm a sucker for the story. As for the other question, I am embarrassed to say that I know next to nothing about Sailor Scouts. But according to the online test I just took, I am Sailor Mercury. Why do I have the sudden urge to rewrite my entire series as Manga?


12. What's your next project (if you are permitted to disclose)?
My next book is called GOING BOVINE. It's an absurdist, dark comedy about Cameron, a sixteen-year-old guy with mad cow disease, who goes on a road trip with his friend, Gonzo, a death-obsessed video gaming dwarf, and a talking yard gnome named Balder who wants to be a Viking hero. They are sometimes joined by a punk rock angel named Dulcie who has a propensity for spray-painting her wings and a love of microwave popcorn. You know, the usual.


13. What's your favorite kind of cookie?

There are no unloved cookies. I want to adopt them all. But oatmeal chocolate chip gets the job done most days.

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49. How to Save Your Tail by Mary Hanson

In this Sheherazade type tale, Bob, a mouse, keeps telling stories to Muffin and Brutus, cats, so he will not be eaten.  The stories all feature a mouse as a main character in one of the more well known fairy tales from Cinderella to Jake and the Beanstalk.  They are fun because there is always a little twist to them, like Cinderella turning into a horse and Bob turning into the girl in a fancy outfit.  But are his storytelling skills enough to outwit the two cats? 

This was a cute, quick book.  For kids who like fairy tales and animal stories, it is a sure fire hit.  It is also short (merci a dieu! ) which is getting rarer and rarer in children’s lit these days. 

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50. THE CONTEST IS OFFICIALLY OVER

Alrighty, the contest is over and we had many close guesses!

We have 2 winners, both guessed 54.

There were, indeed, 54 cookies stacked on the platter.

The winners are m. and kymsart. I'll contact them privately and they can pick out their free print. I'll post their choices later in the week.

Thanks so much for participating in my silly but fun contests. I always have such a fun day, watching all the guesses come in.

Until Tomorrow:
Kim
Garden Painter

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