Are you looking for a fun family trip this summer? Don’t want to travel too far from home? This Land Is Your Land talks about many different landforms all over the United States. Read this book with your children to teach them about the diverse landscapes of our beautiful country, then pack up the car and head to the nearest (or farthest!) destination. Who says education has to stop in the summer?
Coastlines: Perhaps the easiest landform to reach for many, the United States coastline is over 95,000 miles long. Many people live on the coast – about 39% of the country’s population! The coast is a very popular tourist destination, and there are hundreds of beaches for people to travel to. Some of the best family beaches are located in the Outer Banks in North Carolina; Maui, Hawaii; Myrtle Beach, South Carolina; Destin, Florida; San Diego, California; and Ocean City, Maryland. There are beaches in every coastal state, though. Which beach is closest to you?
Mountains and hills: Mountains are also another popular place for tourists, especially those who enjoy activities such as hiking and
camping. Some states have more to offer than others when it comes to mountains. For example, the highest point in Florida is only 345 feet above sea level, whereas Alaska’s Mt. McKinley towers 20,320 feet above sea level. However, all 50 states have some sort of forest, lake, or other natural area where camping and nature walks are possible, so even those of you in the flatter states don’t have to miss out!
Plateaus and canyons: In the United States, plateaus are found mainly in the western states, where the Colorado Plateau is. Plateaus provide opportunities for hiking and climbing, and the Colorado Plateau contains the famous Colorado River and Grand Canyon. Many national parks are also in this area, including Zion and Mesa Verde, where you can find smaller plateaus and canyons.
Valleys: A valley is simply a place between mountains or hills, so even states such as Kansas, with very few hills, have some areas that lie lower than others. Beautiful valleys in the United States include the Sedona Verde Valley in Arizona, Napa Valley in California, the Waipi’o Valley in Hawaii, and the Shenandoah Valley in Virginia.
Plains: The plain region of the United States is called the Great Plains, which runs from Texas north to Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska, the Dakotas, and eastern Montana. The Great Plains are known for their extensive flat lands covered in tall grass, cattle ranches, and bison. Be careful here in the spring and summer – the Great Plains are located in Tornado Alley, where tornadoes happen most frequently!
Peninsulas: Arbordale Publishing is located near a well-known peninsula –Charleston, South Carolina! Many of the first towns settled in the United States are located on peninsulas, as they provide easy access by water to ships delivering people and supplies. Jamestown, Virginia and Boston, Massachusetts were first built on peninsulas. The entire state of Florida is a big peninsula!
Volcanoes: The west coast of the United States is located in what is
known as the “Ring of Fire,” an area where many volcanic eruptions and earthquakes occur due to the movement of the Earth’s tectonic plates. Active, potentially dangerous volcanoes in the United States include Kilauea Volcano in Hawaii, Mount St. Helens in Washington, Mount Hood in Oregon, Mount Shasta in California. While some of these volcanoes haven’t erupted in years, they are not considered dormant, meaning they could erupt at any time. A volcanic eruption would be an exciting sight to see, but be sure to keep your distance!
Islands and archipelagos: The most famous example of an island chain in the United States is Hawaii. Another is the Aleutian Islands in
Alaska. Since neither of these are especially accessible to the average Mackinac, Michigan; Whidbey Island, Washington; Mount Desert, Maine; Amelia Island, Florida; and Assateague Island, Virginia. Did you know that part of the biggest city in the United States is located on an island? Manhattan is surrounded by the Hudson River, the East River, and the Harlem River!
Learn more about these landforms in Catherine Ciocchi’s book This Land is Your Land!

In the last eight months, I've written, labeled, and mailed 1,662 May B. postcards. Yes, really.
Much of marketing a book is like throwing darts, but as I've learned, a personalized, audience-tweaked dart has more potential to hit the board than those thrown willy-nilly.
My audience:
Kansas schools and libraries
Why? May B. takes place in Kansas and is primarily a school and library market title. Also, Kansas Day is 1/29. Teachers are required to teach KS history on or around this day -- perfect for an early January release date!
Plains state/frontier/pioneer museums
Why? May B.'s focus on the frontier era will ide
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The holiday season is upon us, and that turns many minds to thoughts of spending time with loved ones. Below is an excerpt from Jimmy & Rosalynn Carter: The Georgia Years, 1924-1974 by E. Stanly Godbold, Jr. tracing the early romance of the former President and First Lady.
In the hot, dusty summer of 1945, people in Plains talked about the heat, the crops, and the war, unaware of an event on Main Street that three decades later would catapult their town onto the world stage. Jimmy Carter, the twenty-year-old eldest child of a prominent local family, was visiting his hometown before returning for his final year at the Naval Academy. As he drove down Main Street in a Ford car with a rumble seat, accompanied by his sister Ruth and her boyfriend, he glanced toward the Methodist church. There he spied a pretty young woman loitering on the steps. Petite Rosalynn Smith, with her large, warm, intelligent eyes, exuded a seductive shyness that captivated the Academy man. Graduated as valedictorian of her class at Plains High School, she had completed one year at a nearby junior college. Jimmy stopped the car, not knowing that Ruth and Rosalynn had conspired to set up the meeting. He invited Rosalynn to attend the movie at the Rylander Theater in nearby Americus that night. She accepted.
Rosalynn was seventeen and Jimmy twenty that night in 1945 when they had their first date. His white Navy uniform dazzled her, and he thought her ravishing in her blue dress that buttoned all the way down the front. Immediately after their first date, Jimmy told his mother that he had met the woman he intended to marry. Lillian disapproved. “Jimmy, she’s just a little girl! She’s Ruth’s friend,” she argued. Lillian thought that Jimmy was much more sophisticated than “naïve” Rosalynn Smith of Plains, Georgia.
Rosalynn’s father lacked the powerful personality and wealth of Earl Carter, and neither her mother nor any woman in Plains could equal Miss Lillian. Yet, connected by blood to the Wises, Murrays, Bells, and Smiths, her pedigree, ever so important in a small southern town, was superior to that of the Gordys or Carters. Because her father died when she was young and her mother remained imprisoned in shyness, Rosalynn had no influential, potent adults to push her into the world. What she had was a robust spirit, a vigorous will, an inquisitive intellect, an energetic mind, an unspoken ambition, a quiet faith, and a tough ability to succeed at whatever she undertook.
It would take Jimmy a decade of marriage to realize the complements to his lifestyle that Rosalynn brought to their union. On their first date, he saw a very pretty, smart, seductively shy girl who smiled at him. Rosalynn did not fall so quickly for him, but she later confessed that she had fallen in love with a picture of him in his uniform. She realized that the man in that uniform, who now said he loved her, had begun to see that world about which she only read and dreamed. The young lovers exchanged a flurry of letters, a correspondence that did not mention the major events of the day, but consisted of, according to Carter, “intimate love letters.”
World War II ended shortly after their courtship began. Rosalynn did not want Jimmy to go to war, but she remained reticent. He teased her about falling in love with his uniform, and he pretended to date other women. On at least one occasion, Jimmy did go out with another woman, and he suggested that Rosalynn see other men. When she reciprocated with letters about nonexistent boyfriends, he bristled, but they soon put aside their jealousies and committed to each other.
When Jimmy returned home on his Christmas leave in 1945, he and Rosalynn sang Christmas carols before open fires and attended church and parties together. Rosalynn beamed beside Jimmy in his dress blue uniform. He teased her mercilessly, a Carter family trait indicating aff
One thing I've had to review while working on first-round edits is grassland terminology (I know this is a thrilling topic and something you've been waiting all your lives to learn about, right?).
When I started my research, it all seemd pretty straightforward: a plain was a plain and a praire was a prairie. But here's where it gets confusing. As I mentioned Wednesday, the Interior Plains are made up of two distinct regions: prairies (wetter, more hilly, tall-grass) and plains (flatter, more arid). This plains region, also known as the Great Plains is -- you guessed it -- prairie land.
Interior Plains
The Great Plains
The Great Plains are made of mixed-grass and short-grass prairies.
MAY B. takes place in Thomas County, Kansas (south of the town of Colby), on the Great Plains, in short-grass country. It might sound simple, but it took me weeks to determine this!
What is the setting of your current work in progress?

I made this card for my boss, Chuck Abell who is probably the best principal alive! He's a great guy to work for and is always helpful. He is a remarkable boss :) (Just thought I might share with you guys.)
I think that's the only way to approach marketing your book. I like that. One postcard at a time. Whether that postcard be an actual postcard or not. One step at a time. Your book seems so perfect for the school and library market. Great job! Wow, that's a lot of writing!
Love that! One post card at a time. :)
So much work, Caroline! But all for good. Know there are others who will spread word about May B. for you also. I plan to write blog about it in the next few weeks because I was taken by the beauty, simplicity, and bravery in May B.
I feel my hands cramping up just thinking about preparing all of those postcards. What a lot of work. I'm glad the payoff has been worth it =)
It really has been empowering to think about marketing in this way. While I'll never know about results, I can be satisfied I've done my part.
Barbara, thank you. Really and truly, word of mouth is the gold.
inluvwithwords, thankfully I took a long time to do this: a couple dozen while my boys were at piano, a few more in the time between dropping off my boys at school and going to my weekly tutoring, etc.
I really like your grassroots approach, Caroline!! :-)
Brilliant and now as a fan of Laura Ingalls Wilder and having crossed Kansas in 1978 and seen a rattle snake there and a museum where everything was carved in stone, I could be hooked!
Thanks for sharing what you did and your thoughts on it. I think you did a great job getting May B. onto blogs.
I love your marketing ideas. I've bookmarked the bossy self-marketer. Thanks for sharing!
I love that you've really approached your marketing from multiple fronts, electronically, in person and with your personalized post cards. I think hand written mail catches people's attention because we get so little of it these days.
Saundra Mitchell's marketing guide is wonderful, even if choose not to go the postcard route. She's got dozens of other ideas, too.
Carole, confession: I've never been past Lawrence, Kansas.
This is so helpful. Thanks for sharing!
Thanks for sharing the work behind marketing your first book. I'm sending it to my friend, author Karen Day. Great info!!
Holy Cow!!! I'm sending out 250 and I was really patting myself on the back (with my sore fingers--I'm handwriting personal notes on each).
Way to go!!!
sf